DATA SHEET MOS INTEGRATED CIRCUIT µPD78363A,78365A,78366A,78368A 16/8-BIT SINGLE-CHIP MICROCONTROLLERS DESCRIPTION µPD78366A is provided with a high-speed, high-performance CPU and powerful operation functions. Unlike the existing µPD78328, µPD78366A is also provided with a high-resolution PWM signal output function which substantially contributes to improving the performance of the inverter control. A PROM model, µPD78P368A, is also available. Detailed functions, etc. are described in the following user’s manual. Be sure to read the manual to design systems. µPD78366A User’s Manual Hardware: U10205E µPD78356 User’s Manual : U12117E FEATURES • Internal 16-bit architecture, external 8-bit data bus • High-speed processing by pipeline control method and high- speed operating clock • Minimum instruction execution time: 125 ns (internal clock: at 16 MHz, external clock: 8 MHz) • • • • • Real-time pulse unit for inverter control 10-bit resolution A/D converter: 8 channels 8-/9-/10-/12-bit resolution variable PWM signal output function: 2 channels Powerful serial interface: 2 channels Internal memory: ROM: none (µPD78365A) 24K bytes (µPD78363A) 32K bytes (µPD78366A) 48K bytes (µPD78368A) RAM: 768 bytes (µPD78363A) 2K bytes (µPD78365A, 78366A, 78368A) APPLICATION EXAMPLES • Inverter air conditioner • Factory automation fields, such as industrial robots and machine tools. ORDERING INFORMATION Part Number µPD78363AGF-×××-3B9 Package Internal ROM 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Mask ROM µPD78365AGF-3B9 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) None µPD78366AGF-×××-3B9 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Mask ROM µPD78368AGF-×××-3B9 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Mask ROM Remark ××× indicates a ROM code suffix. Unless otherwise specified, the functions and performances of the µPD78366 are described throughout this document. The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Document No. U11109EJ2V0DS00 (2nd edition) Date Published September 1997 N Printed in Japan The mark shows major revised points. © © 1995 1995 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 78K/III Series Product Development µPD78372 subseries Reinforced timer, A/D added µPD78366A subseries (for control application in automotive appliance) Pulse output function for inverter control, expanded ROM, RAM µPD78363A µPD78365A µPD78366A µPD78368A µPD78P368A µPD78361A µPD78362A µPD78P364A (for inverter) µPD78356 subseries (for camera, HDD) µPD78352A subseries A/D, D/A relative instruction added, expanded ROM, RAM (for HDD) High-performance CPU, sum-of-products instruction added Reinforced timer and A/D, expanded ROM and RAM µ PD78334 subseries (for control application in OA and FA fields) µPD78322 subseries High-speed, multi-function, reinforced interrupt, 10-bit A/D (for control application in OA and FA fields) µ PD78312A subseries (for control application in OA and FA fields) 2 Pulse output function for inverter control µPD78328 subseries (for inverter) µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A PIN CONFIGURATION (TOP VIEW) • 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) P53/A11 P54/A12 P55/A13 P56/A14 P57/A15 P90/RD P91/WR P92 P93 ASTB P80/TO00 P81/TO01 P82/TO02 P83/TO03 P84/TO04 P85/TO05 µPD78363AGF-×××-3B9, 78365AGF-3B9, 78366AGF-×××-3B9, 78368AGF-×××-3B9 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 VSS 1 64 P52/A10 P00/RTP0 2 63 P51/A9 P01/RTP1 3 62 P50/A8 P02/RTP2 4 61 P47/AD7 P03/RTP3 5 60 P46/AD6 P04/PWM0 6 59 P45/AD5 P05/TCUD/PWM1 7 58 P44/AD4 P06/TIUD/TO40 8 57 P43/AD3 P07/TCLRUD WDTO 9 56 P42/AD2 10 55 P41/AD1 IC 11 54 P40/AD0 VDD 12 53 VSS VSS 13 52 VDD X1 14 51 AV DD X2 15 50 AV REF MODE1 16 49 P77/ANI7 RESET 17 48 P76/ANI6 P30/TXD0 18 47 P75/ANI5 P31/RXD0 19 46 P74/ANI4 P32/SO/SB0 20 45 P73/ANI3 P33/SI/SB1 21 44 P72/ANI2 P34/SCK 22 43 P71/ANI1 P35/TX D1 23 42 P70/ANI0 P36/RX D1 24 41 AV SS P25/INTP4 P24/INTP3/TI P23/INTP2 P22/INTP1 P21/INTP0 MODE0 P20/NMI VSS P17 P16 P15 P14 P13 P12 P11 P10 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Caution Connect the IC pin directly to VSS. Remark ××× indicates a ROM code suffix 3 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A P00-P07 : Port0 P10-P17 : Port1 P20-P25 : Port2 P30-P36 : Port3 P40-P47 : Port4 P50-P57 : Port5 P70-P77 : Port7 P80-P85 : Port8 P90-P93 : Port9 RTP0-RTP3 : Real-time Port NMI : Nonmaskable Interrupt INTP0-INTP4 : Interrupt From Peripherals TO00-TO05, TO04 : Timer Output 4 TI : Timer Input TIUD : Timer Input Up Down Counter TCUD : Timer Control Up Down Counter TCLRUD : Timer Clear Up Down Counter ANI0-ANI7 : Analog Input TXD0, TXD1 : Transmit Data RXD0, RXD1 : Receive Data SI : Serial Input SO : Serial Output SB0, SB1 : Serial Bus SCK : Serial Clock PWM0, PWM1 : Pulse Width Modulation Output WDTO : Watchdog Timer Ouput MODE0, MODE1 : Mode AD0-AD7 : Address/Data Bus A8-A15 : Address Bus ASTB : Address Strobe RD : Read Strobe WR : Write Strobe RESET : Reset X1, X2 : Crystal AV DD : Analog VDD AV SS : Analog VSS AV REF : Analog Reference Voltage VDD : Power Supply VSS : Ground IC : Internally Connected µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A FUNCTIONAL OUTLINE Item Product name µPD78365A ROM 24K bytes None RAM 768 bytes 2K bytes Memory space 64K bytes (externally expandable) General-purpose registers 8 bits × 16 × 8 banks Number of basic instructions 115 Instruction set • • • • • • I/O lines µPD78368A µPD78366A 125 ns (internal clock: 16 MHz, external clock: 8 MHz) Minimum instruction execution time Internal memory µPD78363A 32K bytes 48K bytes 16-bit transfer/operation Multiplication/division (16 bits × 16 bits, 32 bits ÷ 16 bits) Bit manipulation String Sum-of-products operation (16 bits × 16 bits + 32 bits) Relative operation Input 14 (of which 8 are shared with analog input) I/O 49 31 49 Real-time pulse unit • 16-bit timer × 1 10-bit dead time timer × 3 16-bit compare register × 4 2 kinds of output mode can be selected Mode 0, set-reset output: 6 channels Mode 1, buffer output: 6 channels • 16-bit timer × 1 16-bit compare register × 1 • 16-bit timer × 1 16-bit capture register × 1 16-bit capture/compare register × 1 • 16-bit timer × 1 16-bit capture register × 2 16-bit capture/compare register × 1 • 16-bit timer × 1 16-bit compare register × 2 16-bit resolution PWM output: 1 channel Real-time output port Pulse outputs associated with real-time pulse unit: 4 lines PWM unit 8-/9-/10-/12-bit resolution variable PWM output: 2 channels A/D converter 10-bit resolution, 8 channels Serial interface Dedicated baud rate generator UART (w/pin selection function): Clocked serial interface/SBI: 1 channel 1 channel Interrupt function • External: 6, internal: 14 (of which 2 are multiplexed with external) • 4 priority levels can be specified through software • 3 types of interrupt processing modes selectable (vectored interrupt, macro service, and context switching) Package 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Others • Watchdog timer • Standby function (HALT and STOP modes) 5 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A DIFFERENCES BETWEEN µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, AND 78368A Item Product name µPD78363A µPD78366A µPD78368A 48K bytes µPD78365A ROM 24K bytes 32K bytes None RAM 786 bytes 2K bytes Input 14 (of which 8 are multiplexed with analog input) I/O 49 31 Can be set in input or output mode in units of 8 bits. In external memory expansion mode, this port functions as multiplexed address/data bus (AD0-AD7). Always functions as multiplexed address/ data bus (AD0-AD7). Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. In external memory expansion mode, this port functions as address bus (A8-A15). Always functions as address bus (A8-A15) Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. In external memory expansion mode, P90 outputs RD strobe signal, and P91 outputs WR strobe signal. P90 always functions as RD strobe signal output pin, and P91 always functions as WR strobe signal output pin. P92 and P93 function as I/O port lines. Memory expansion mode register (MM) Sets port 4 in input or output mode in units of 8 bits. In external memory expansion mode, sets memory expansion width of ports 4 and 5. Always fixed to external memory expansion mode. Port 5 mode register (PM5) Sets port 5 in input or output mode in 1-bit units. None Setting of MODE0, MODE1 • In ordinary operation mode: MODE0, 1 = LL • Always set as follows: MODE0, 1 = HH Internal ROM I/O lines Port 4 (P40-P47) Port 5 (P50-P57) Port 9 (P90-P93) • In ROM-less mode: MODE0, 1 = HH 6 NMI 5 INTP 5 PROGRAMMABLE INTERRUPT CONTROLLER 4 BCU X1 MAIN RAM X2 RESET GENERAL REGISTERS 128 × 8 & DATA MEMORY 128 × 8 ASTB SYSTEM CONTROL ROM 24K × 8 32K × 8 48K × 8 ALU 7 TIMER/COUNTER UNIT (REAL-TIME PULSE UNIT) TCUD MICRO ROM PERIPHERAL RAM 512 × 8 1792 × 8 MODE1 MODE0 BUS CONTROL 8 A8-A15 & 8 AD0-AD7 PREFETCH CONTROL TCLRUD SCK SO/SB0 SI/B1 TX D RX D 2 SERIAL INTERFACE (SBI) (UART) A/D CONVERTER WATCHDOG TIMER PORT 2 6 8 8 8 7 6 8 8 P7 P6 P5 P4 P3 P2 P1 P0 P8 VDD VSS Remark The internal ROM and RAM capacities differ depending on the product. 2 4 WDTO PWM AV DD AV SS AV REF INTP2 REAL-TIME OUTPUT PORT ANI 4 4 2 8 RTP RWM 7 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A TIUD MICRO SEQUENCE CONTROL TI RD WR & & TO BLOCK DIAGRAM ROM/RAM EXU µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A CONTENTS 1. 2. 3. PIN FUNCTIONS ................................................................................................................................... 10 1.1 PORT PINS ..................................................................................................................................... 10 1.2 PINS OTHER THAN PORT PINS .................................................................................................. 11 1.3 PIN I/O CIRCUITS AND PROCESSING OF UNUSED PINS ....................................................... 13 CPU ARCHITECTURE ............................................................................................................ 15 2.1 MEMORY SPACE ........................................................................................................................... 15 2.2 DATA MEMORY ADDRESSING .................................................................................................... 18 2.3 PROCESSOR REGISTERS ........................................................................................................... 20 2.3.1 Control Registers ................................................................................................................. 21 2.3.2 General-Purpose Registers ..................................................................................................22 2.3.3 Special Function Registers (SFR) ........................................................................................23 FUNCTIONAL BLOCKS........................................................................................................... 29 3.1 EXECUTION UNIT (EXU) ............................................................................................................... 29 3.2 BUS CONTROL UNIT (BCU) ......................................................................................................... 29 3.3 ROM/RAM ....................................................................................................................................... 29 3.4 PORT FUNCTIONS ........................................................................................................................ 30 3.5 CLOCK GENERATOR CIRCUIT ................................................................................................... 32 3.6 REAL-TIME PULSE UNIT (RPU) .................................................................................................. 34 3.7 REAL-TIME OUTPUT PORT (RTP) .............................................................................................. 42 3.8 A/D CONVERTER .......................................................................................................................... 43 3.9 SERIAL INTERFACE ..................................................................................................................... 44 3.10 PWM UNIT ...................................................................................................................................... 46 3.11 WATCHDOG TIMER (WDT) .......................................................................................................... 47 4. INTERRUPT FUNCTIONS ................................................................................................................... 48 4.1 OUTLINE ......................................................................................................................................... 48 4.2 MACRO SERVICE .......................................................................................................................... 49 4.3 CONTEXT SWITCHING ................................................................................................................. 52 4.3.1 Context Switching Function by Interrupt Request ................................................................ 52 4.3.2 Context Switching Function by BRKCS Instruction ..............................................................53 4.3.3 Restoration from Context Switching .....................................................................................53 5. EXTERNAL DEVICE EXPANSION FUNCTION ............................................................................. 54 6. STANDBY FUNCTIONS ...................................................................................................................... 55 7. RESET FUNCTION ............................................................................................................................... 56 8. INSTRUCTION SET .............................................................................................................................. 57 9. EXAMPLE OF SYSTEM CONFIGURATION ........................................................................... 71 10. ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS ............................................................................................ 72 8 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 11. PACKAGE DRAWING .............................................................................................................. 83 12. RECOMMENDED SOLDERING CONDITIONS ...................................................................... 84 APPENDIX A. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN µPD78366A AND µPD78328 ................................... 85 APPENDIX B. TOOLS ..................................................................................................................... 86 B.1 DEVELOPMENT TOOLS ............................................................................................................... 86 B.2 EMBEDDED SOFTWARE .............................................................................................................. 91 9 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 1. PIN FUNCTIONS 1.1 PORT PINS Pin name I/O P00-P03 P04 P05 I/O Function Port 0. 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. P06 I/O Port 1. 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. Port 2. 6-bit input port. P21 P22 – NMI INTP0 INTP1 Input INTP2 P24 INTP3/TI P25 INTP4 Port 3. 7-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. P30 P31 P32 P33 I/O TXD0 RXD0 SO/SB0 SI/SB1 P34 SCK P35 TXD1 P36 RXD1 P40-P47 I/O Port 4. 8-bit I/O Port. Can be set in input or output mode in 8-bit units. AD0-AD7 P50-P57 I/O Port 5. 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. A8-A15 P70-P77 Input P80-P85 Port 7. 8-bit input port ANI0-ANI7 I/O Port 8. 6-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. TO00-TO05 I/O Port 9. 4-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. P90 P91 P92 P93 10 PWM0 TCUD/PWM1 TCLRUD P20 P23 RTP0-RTP3 TIUD/TO40 P07 P10-P17 Shared by: RD WR – – µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 1.2 PINS OTHER THAN PORT PINS (1/2) Pin name I/O Function Shared by: RTP0-RTP3 Output Real-time output port that outputs pulses in synchronization with trigger signal from real-time pulse unit. P00-P03 NMI INTP0 INTP1 Non-maskable interrupt request input. P20 External interrupt request input. P21 P22 Input INTP2 P23 INTP3 P24/TI INTP4 P25 External count clock input to timer 1. TI TCUD Input External count clock input to up/down counter (timer 4). TCLRUD TO00-TO05 Count operation selection control signal input to up/down counter (timer 4). TIUD Clear signal input to up/down counter (timer 4). Output Pulse output from real-time pulse unit. TXD0 Input Output Analog input to A/D converter. Serial data output of asynchronous serial interface. Input Serial data input of asynchronous serial interface. P07 P80-P85 P70-P77 P30 P31 P36 RXD1 SCK P06/TO40 P35 TXD1 RXD0 P05/PWM1 P06/TIUD TO40 ANI0-ANI7 P24/INTP3 I/O Serial clock input/output of clocked serial interface. P34 SI Input Serial data input of clocked serial interface in 3-line mode. P33/SB1 SO Ouput Serial data output of clocked serial interface in 3-line mode. P32/SB0 P32/SO SB0 I/O SB1 Serial data input/output of clocked serial interface in SBI mode. P04 PWM0 Output PWM signal output. Output Signal output indicating overflow of watchdog timer (generates nonmaskable interrupt). – Multiplexed address/data bus when memory is externally expanded. P40-P47 Address bus when memory is externally expanded. P50-P57 PWM1 WDTO AD0-AD7 I/O A8-A15 Outputs timing signal at which address information output from AD0-AD7 and A8-A15 pins to access external memory is to be latched. ASTB RD WR P33/SI Output P05/TCUD – Read strobe signal output to external memory. P90 Write strobe signal output to external memory. P91 11 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 1.2 PINS OTHER THAN PORT PINS (2/2) Pin name I/O Shared by: Input Control signal input to set operation mode. With µPD78363A, 78366A, and 78368A MODE0 and MODE1 are usually connected to VSS. With µPD78365A, MODE0 and MODE1 are always connected to V DD. – RESET Input System reset input – X1 Input – X2 – Crystal oscillator connecting pins for system clock. If a clock is externally supplied, input it to pin X1. Leave pin X2 open. AVREF Input A/D converter reference voltage input. – AVDD – A/D converter analog power supply. – AVSS – A/D converter GND. – VDD – Positive power supply – VSS – GND – IC – Internally connected. Connect this pin to VSS. – MODE0 MODE1 12 Function µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 1.3 PIN I/O CIRCUITS AND PROCESSING OF UNUSED PINS Table 1-1 shows the I/O circuit types of the respective pins, and recommended connections of the unused pins. Figure 1-1 shows the circuits of the respective pins. Table 1-1. Pin I/O Circuit Type and Recommended Connections of Unused Pins Pin I/O circuit type Recommended connections 5-A Input : Independently connect to VDD or VSS through resistor Output : Leave unconnected P00/RTP0-P03/RTP3 P04/PWM0 P05/TCUD/PWM1 P06/TIUD/TO40 P07/TCLRUD P10-P17 P20/NMI 2 P21/INTP0 P22/INTP1 Connect to VSS P23/INTP2 2-A P24/INTP3/TI P25/INTP4 P30/TXD0 5-A P31/RXD0 P32/SO/SB0 P33/SI/SB1 8-A P34/SCK Input : Independently connect to VDD or VSS through resistor Output : Leave unconnected P35/TXD1 P36/RXD1 5-A P40/AD0-P47/AD7 P50/A8-P57/A15 P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 9 Connect to VSS P80/TO00-P85/TO05 P90/RD 5-A P91/WR Input : Independently connect to VDD or VSS through resistor Output : Leave unconnected P92, P93 ASTB 5 WDTO 19 MODE0, MODE1 1 RESET 2 IC – Connect to VSS AVREF, AVSS AVDD Connect to VSS – Connect to VDD Connect to VSS 13 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 1-1. Pin I/O Circuits Type 1 VDD Type 5-A VDD Pull-up enable P-ch P-ch IN N-ch Data VDD P-ch Output disable N-ch IN/OUT Input enable Type 2 Type 8-A VDD Pull-up enable IN Schmitt trigger input with hysteresis characteristics Type 2-A P-ch Data VDD P-ch Output disable N-ch IN/OUT Type 9 Comparator VDD IN Pull-up enable P-ch P-ch N-ch + – Vref (Threshold voltage) IN Input enable Schmitt trigger input with hysteresis characteristics Type 5 Type 19 VDD Data Output disable Intput enable 14 P-ch IN/OUT OUT N-ch N-ch µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 2. CPU ARCHITECTURE 2.1 MEMORY SPACE The µPD78366A can access a memory space of 64K bytes. Figures 2-1 through 2-3 show the memory map. Figure 2-1. Memory Map (µPD78368A) MODE0, 1 = LL FFFFH FF00H Special function register (SFR) (256 × 8) FEFFH Main RAM (256 × 8) MODE0, 1 = HH ⋅ ROM-less mode FEFFH FE80H General-purpose register (128 × 8) FE25H FE06H Macro service control (32 × 8) FF00H Data memory FDFFH Peripheral RAM (1792 × 8) F700H F700H Data area (768 × 8) F6FFH Memory space (64 K × 8) BFFFH Program memory Data memory External memory Note (14080 × 8) Program area 1000H 0FFFH 0800H 07FFH C000H Program area BFFFH 0080H 007FH CALLT instruction table area (64 × 8) Program memory Data memory External memory (63232 × 8) CALLF instruction entry area (2048 × 8) Internal ROM (49152 × 8) 0FFFH 0040H 003FH Vector table area (64 × 8) 0000H 0000H 0000H Note Accessed in external memory expansion mode. Caution For word access (including stack operations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 15 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 2-2. Memory Map (µPD78365A, 78366A) MODE0, 1 = HH ⋅ µ PD78365A ⋅ µ PD78366A in ORM-less mode MODE0, 1 = LL ( µ PD78366A) FFFFH FF00H Special function register (SFR) (256 × 8) FEFFH Main RAM (256 × 8) FEFFH FE80H General-purpose register (128 × 8) FE25H FE06H Macro service control (32 × 8) FF00H Data memory FDFFH Peripheral RAM (1792 × 8) F700H F700H Data area (2048 × 8) F6FFH Memory space (64 K × 8) 7FFFH Program memory Data memory External memory Note (30464 × 8) Program area 1000H 0FFFH 0800H 07FFH 8000H Program area 7FFFH 0080H 007FH CALLT instruction table area (64 × 8) Program memory Data memory External memory (63232 × 8) CALLF instruction entry area (2048 × 8) Internal ROM (32768 × 8) 0FFFH 0040H 003FH Vector table area (64 × 8) 0000H 0000H 0000H Note Accessed in external memory expansion mode. Caution For word access (including stack operations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 16 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 2-3. Memory Map (µPD78363A) MODE0, 1 = LL FFFFH FF00H Special function register (SFR) (256 × 8) FEFFH Main RAM (256 × 8) MODE0, 1 = HH ⋅ ROM-less mode FEFFH FE80H General-purpose register (128 × 8) FE25H FE06H Macro service control (32 × 8) FF00H Data memory FDFFH Peripheral RAM (512 × 8) FC00H FC00H Data area (768 × 8) FBFFH Memory space (64 K × 8) 5FFFH Program memory Data memory External memory Note (39936 × 8) Program area 1000H 0FFFH 0800H 07FFH 6000H Program area 5FFFH 0080H 007FH CALLT instruction table area (64 × 8) Program memory Data memory External memory (64512 × 8) CALLF instruction entry area (2048 × 8) Internal ROM (24576 × 8) 0FFFH 0040H 003FH Vector table area (64 × 8) 0000H 0000H 0000H Note Accessed in external memory expansion mode. Caution For word access (including stack operations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 17 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 2.2 DATA MEMORY ADDRESSING The µPD78366A is provided with many addressing modes that improve the operability of the memory and can be used with high-level languages. Especially, an area of addresses F700H-FFFFH (In the µPD78363A, FC00H-FFFFH) to which the data memory is mapped can be addressed in a mode peculiar to the functions provided in this area, including special function registers (SFR) and general-purpose registers. Figure 2-4. Data Memory Addressing (µPD78368A) FFFFH FF20H FF1FH Special function register (SFR) SFR addressing FF00H FEFFH General-purpose register Register addressing Short direct addressing FE80H FE7FH FE20H FE1FH Main RAM FE00H FDFFH Peripheral RAM F700H F6FFH Direct addressing Register indirect addressing Based addressing Based indexed addressing Based indexed addressing (with displacement) External memory 6C00H BFFFH Internal ROM Note 0000H Note Is external memory in the ROMless mode. Caution For word access (including stack oprations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 18 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 2-5. Data Memory Addressing (µPD78365A, 78366A) FFFFH FF20H FF1FH Special function register (SFR) SFR addressing FF00H FEFFH General-purpose register Register addressing Short direct addressing FE80H FE7FH FE20H FE1FH Main RAM FE00H FDFFH Peripheral RAM F700H F6FFH Direct addressing Register indirect addressing Based addressing Based indexed addressing Based indexed addressing (with displacement) External memory 8000H 7FFFH Internal ROM Note 0000H Note Is external memory in the ROMless mode of the µPD78365A or µPD78366A. Caution For word access (including stack oprations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 19 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 2-6. Data Memory Addressing (µPD78363A) FFFFH FF20H FF1FH Special function register (SFR) SFR addressing FF00H FEFFH General-purpose register Register addressing Short direct addressing FE80H FE7FH FE20H FE1FH Main RAM FE00H FDFFH Peripheral RAM FC00H FBFFH Direct addressing Register indirect addressing Based addressing Based indexed addressing Based indexed addressing (with displacement) External memory 6000H 5FFFH Internal ROM Note 0000H Note Is external memory in the ROMless mode. Caution For word access (including stack oprations) to the main RAM area (FE00H-FEFFH), the address that specifies the operand must be an even value. 2.3 PROCESSOR REGISTERS The µPD78366A is provided with the following three types of processor registers: • Control registers • General-purpose registers • Special function registers (SFRs) 20 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 2.3.1 Control Registers (1) Program counter (PC) This is a 16-bit register that holds an address of the instruction to be executed next. (2) Program status word (PSW) This 16-bit register indicates the status of the CPU as a result of instruction execution. (3) Stack pointer (SP) This 16-bit register indicates the first address of the stack area (LIFO) of the memory. (4) CPU control word (CCW) This 8-bit register is used to control the CPU. Figure 2-7. Configuration of Control Registers 15 0 PC PSW SP 0 7 CCW Figure 2-8. Configuration of PSW 8 15 UF PSW RBS2 RBS1 RBS0 0 0 0 0 0 7 S Z UF RSS AC IE P/V 0 CY : User flag RBS0-RBS2: Register bank select flag S : Sign flag (MSB of execution result) Z : Zero flag RSS : Register set select flag AC : Auxiliary carry flag IE : Interrupt request enable flag P/V : Parity/overflow flag CY : Carry flag Figure 2-9. Configuration of CCW 0 7 CCW 0 0 TPF 0 0 0 0 TPF 0 : Table position flag 21 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 2.3.2 General-Purpose Registers The µPD78366A is provided with eight banks of general-purpose registers with one bank consisting of 8 words × 16 bits. Figure 2-10 shows the configuration of the general-purpose register banks. The generalpurpose registers are mapped to an area of addresses FE80H-FEFFH. Each of these registers can be used as an 8-bit register. In addition, two registers can be used as one 16-bit register pair (refer to Figure 2-11 ). These general-purpose registers facilitate complicated multitask processing. Figure 2-10. Configuration of General-Purpose Register Banks Bank 7 Bank 1 Bank 0 RP7 RP6 RP5 RP4 RP3 RP2 RP1 RP0 15 0 Figure 2-11. Processing Bits of General-Purpose Registers 8-bit processing FEFFH FE80H RBNK0 R15 R14 (FH) RP7 (EH) RBNK1 R13 R12 (DH) RP6 (CH) RBNK2 R11 R10 (BH) RP5 (AH) RBNK3 R9 R8 (9H) RP4 (8H) RBNK4 R7 R6 (7H) RP3 (6H) RBNK5 R5 R4 (5H) RP2 (4H) RBNK6 R3 R2 (3H) RP1 (2H) (1H) RP0 (0H) RBNK7 R1 7 22 16-bit processing R0 07 0 15 0 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 2.3.3 Special Function Registers (SFR) Special function registers (SFRs) are registers assigned special functions such as mode registers and control registers for internal peripheral hardware, and are mapped to a 256-byte address space at FF00H through FFFFH. Table 2-1 lists the SFRs. The meanings of the symbols in this table are as follows: • Symbol ................................... Indicates the mnemonic symbol for an SFR. This mnemonic can be coded in the operand field of an instruction. • R/W ........................................ Indicates whether the SFR can be read or written. R/W : Read/write R : Read only W : Write only • Bit units for manipulation ...... Indicates bit units in which the SFR can be manipulated. The SFRs that can be manipulated in 16-bit units can be coded as an sfrp operand. Specify an even address for these SFRs. The SFRs that can be manipulated in 1-bit units can be coded as the operand of bit manipulation instructions. • On reset ................................. Indicates the status of the register at RESET input. Cautions 1. Do not access the addresses in the range FF00H through FFFFH to which no special function register is allocated. If these addresses are accessed, malfunctioning may occur. 2. Do not write data to the read-only registers. Otherwise, the internal circuit may not operate normally. 3. When using read data as byte data, process undefined bit(s) first. 4. TOUT and TXS are write-only registers. Do no read these registers. 5. Bits 0, 1, and 4 of SBIC are write-only bits. When these bits are read, they are always "0". 23 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 2-1. List of Special Function Registers (1/5) Address FF00H Special function register (SFR) Port 0 Symbol Bit units for manipulation R/W P0 R/W On reset 1 bit 8 bits 16 bits ● ● – ● ● – ● ● – ● ● – ● ● – ● ● – ● ● – FF01H Port 1 P1 FF02H Port 2 P2 FF03H Port 3 P3 FF04H Port 4 P4Note FF05H Port 5 P5Note FF07H Port 7 P7 FF08H Port 8 P8 ● ● – FF09H Port 9 P9 ● ● – Compare register 00 CM00 – – ● Compare register 01 CM01 – – ● Compare register 02 CM02 – – ● R R/W R FF10H FF11H FF12H Undefined FF13H FF14H FF15H R/W FF16H Compare register 03 CM03 – – ● Buffer register CM00 BFCM00 – – ● Buffer register CM01 BFCM01 – – ● Buffer register CM02 BFCM02 – – ● – – ● FF17H FF18H FF19H FF1AH FF1BH FF1CH FF1DH FF1EH Timer register 0 TM0 FF20H Port 0 mode register PM0 ● ● – FF21H Port 1 mode register PM1 ● ● – FF23H Port 3 mode register PM3 ● ● – ×111 1111B FF25H Port 5 mode register PM5Note ● ● – FFH FF28H Port 8 mode register PM8 ● ● – ××11 1111B FF29H Port 9 mode register PM9 ● ● – ×××× 1111B Reload register DTIME – – ● Undefined Timer unit mode register 0 TUM0 ● ● – R 0000H FF1FH R/W FF2CH FFH FF2DH FF2EH R/W FF2FH 00H Timer unit mode register 1 TUM1 ● ● – Compare register 10 CM10 – – ● Undefined – – ● 0000H FF30H FF31H FF32H Timer register 1 FF33H Note Not provided for the µPD78365A. 24 TM1 R µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 2-1. List of Special Function Registers (2/5) Address Special function register (SFR) Symbol Bit units for manipulation R/W 8 bits 16 bits – – ● FF34H Capture/compare register 20 CC20 R/W On reset 1 bit FF35H Undefined FF36H – – ● TM2 – – ● 0000H BFCM03 – – ● Underfined Capture register 20 CT20 Timer register 2 FF37H R FF38H FF39H FF3AH Buffer register CM03 FF3BH FF3CH External interrupt mode register 0 INTM0 ● ● – FF3DH External interrupt mode register 1 INTM1 ● ● – FF40H Port 0 mode control register PMC0 ● ● – FF43H Port 3 mode control register PMC3 FF44H Pull-up resistor option register L PUOL FF45H Pull-up resistor option register H FF48H ● ● – ● ● – PUOH ● ● – Port 8 mode control register PMC8 ● ● – FF4EH Sampling control register 0 SMPC0 ● ● – FF4FH Sampling control register 1 SMPC1 ● ● – Capture/compare register 30 CC30 – – ● Capture register 30 CT30 – – ● Capture register 31 CT31 – – ● Timer register 3 TM3 – – ● CM40 – – ● R/W FF50H 00H ×000 0000B 00H ××00 0000B 00H FF51H FF52H Undefined FF53H FF54H R FF55H FF56H 0000H FF57H FF58H Compare register 40 FF59H R/W Undefined FF5AH Compare register 41 CM41 – – ● FF5BH FF5CH Timer register 4 TM4 R – – ● 0000H FF5DH FF5EH Timer control register 4 TMC4 R/W – ● – 00H FF5FH Timer out register TOUT W – ● – ××01 0101B FF60H Real-time output port register ● ● – Undefined FF61H Real-time output port mode register ● ● – RTP RTPM R/W FF62H Port read control register FF68H A/D converter mode register PRDC ● ● – ADM ● ● – 00H 25 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 2-1. List of Special Function Registers (3/5) Address Special function register (SFR) Symbol Bit units for manipulation R/W 8 bits 16 bits FF70H Slave buffer register 0 SBUF0 ● ● – FF71H Slave buffer register 1 SBUF1 ● ● – FF72H Slave buffer register 2 SBUF2 ● ● – FF73H Slave buffer register 3 SBUF3 ● ● – FF74H Slave buffer register 4 SBUF4 ● ● – FF75H Slave buffer register 5 SBUF5 ● ● – FF76H Master buffer register 0 MBUF0 ● ● – FF77H Master buffer register 1 MBUF1 ● ● – FF78H Master buffer register 2 MBUF2 ● ● – FF79H Master buffer register 3 MBUF3 ● ● – FF7AH Master buffer register 4 MBUF4 ● ● – R/W Undefined FF7BH Master buffer register 5 MBUF5 ● ● – FF7CH Timer control register 0 TMC0 ● ● – FF7DH Timer control register 1 TMC1 ● ● – FF7EH Timer control register 2 TMC2 ● ● – FF7FH Timer control register 3 TMC3 ● ● – FF80H Clocked serial interface mode register CSIM ● ● – FF82H Serial bus interface control register SBIC ● ● – FF84H Baud rate generator control register BRGC ● ● – FF85H Baud rate generator compare register BRG FF86H Serial I/O shift register SIO FF88H Asynchronous serial interface mode register ASIM FF8AH Asynchronous serial interface status register ASIS R/WNote R/W R – ● – ● – ● ● – 80H ● ● – 00H – ● – – ● – Undefined FF8CH Serial receive buffer: UART RXB FF8EH Serial transfer shift register: UART TXS FFA0H PWM control register 0 PWMC0 ● ● – FFA1H PWM control register 1 PWMC1 ● ● – FFA2H PWM register 0L PWM0L ● ● – PWM register 0 PWM0 – – ● W R/W FFA3H Note Bits 7 and 5 : read/write Bits 6, 3, and 2 : read-only Bits 4, 1, and 0 : write-only 00H ● FFA2H 26 On reset 1 bit Undefined 00H Undefined µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 2-1. List of Special Function Registers (4/5) Address FFA4H Special function register (SFR) PWM register 1L Symbol R/W PWM1L FFA4H Bit units for manipulation 8 bits 16 bits ● ● – – – ● ● ● – R/W PWM register 1 PWM1 On reset 1 bit Undefined FFA5H FFA8H In-service priority register FFAAH Interrupt mode control register IMC ● ● – 80H FFACH Interrupt mask register 0L MK0L ● ● – FFH Interrupt mask register 0 MK0 – – ● FFFFH Interrupt mask register 0H MK0H ● ● – FFH A/D conversion result register 0 ADCR0 – – ● ADCR0H – ● – ADCR1 – – ● ADCR1H – ● – ADCR2 – – ● ADCR2H – ● – ADCR3 – – ● ADCR3H – ● – ADCR4 – – ● ADCR4H – ● – ADCR5 – – ● ADCR5H – ● – ADCR6 – – ● ADCR6H – ● – ADCR7 – – ● ISPR FFACH R R/W 00H FFADH FFADH FFB0H FFB1H FFB1H A/D conversion result register 0H FFB2H A/D conversion result register 1 FFB3H FFB3H A/D conversion result register 1H FFB4H A/D conversion result register 2 FFB5H FFB5H A/D conversion result register 2H FFB6H A/D conversion result register 3 FFB7H R FFB7H A/D conversion result register 3H FFB8H A/D conversion result register 4 Undefined FFB9H FFB9H A/D conversion result register 4H FFBAH A/D conversion result register 5 FFBBH FFBBH A/D conversion result register 5H FFBCH A/D conversion result register 6 FFBDH FFBDH A/D conversion result register 6H FFBEH A/D conversion result register 7 FFBFH FFBFH A/D conversion result register 7H ADCR7H – ● – FFC0H Standby control register STBCNote – ● – FFC1H CPU control word ● ● – – ● – FFC2H Watchdog timer mode register CCW WDMNote R/W 0000 ×000B 00H Note Can be written when a special instruction is executed. 27 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 2-1. List of Special Function Registers (5/5) Address FFC4H Special function register (SFR) Memory expansion mode register Symbol Bit units for manipulation R/W 8 bits 16 bits MM ● ● – Note PWC – – ● C0AAH – ● ● – Undefined OVIC3 ● ● – FFC6H Programmable wait control register On reset 1 bit FFC7H FFD0H | External SFR area FFDFH FFE0H Interrupt control register (INTOV3) FFE1H Interrupt control register (INTP0/INTCC30) PIC0 ● ● – FFE2H Interrupt control register (INTP1) PIC1 ● ● – FFE3H Interrupt control register (INTP2) PIC2 ● ● – FFE4H Interrupt control register (INTP3/INTCC20) PIC3 FFE5H Interrupt control register (INTP4) PIC4 FFE6H Interrupt control register (INTTM0) FFE7H ● ● – ● ● – TMIC0 ● ● – Interrupt control register (INTCM03) CMIC03 ● ● – FFE8H Interrupt control register (INTCM10) CMIC10 ● ● – FFE9H Interrupt control register (INTCM40) CMIC40 ● ● – FFEAH Interrupt control register (INTCM41) CMIC41 ● ● – FFEBH Interrupt control register (INTSER) SERIC ● ● – FFECH Interrupt control register (INTSR) SRIC ● ● – FFEDH Interrupt control register (INTST) STIC ● ● – FFEEH Interrupt control register (INTCSI) CSIIC ● ● – FFEFH Interrupt control register (INTAD) ADIC ● ● – R/W Note The value of the MW register at reset time differs depending on the product. µPD78363A : 60H µPD78365A, 78366A : 20H µPD78368A 28 : 00H 43H µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3. FUNCTIONAL BLOCKS 3.1 EXECUTION UNIT (EXU) EXU controls address computation, arithmetic and logical operations, and data transfer through microprogram. EXU has an internal main RAM. This RAM can be accessed by instructions faster than the peripheral RAM. 3.2 BUS CONTROL UNIT (BCU) BCU starts necessary bus cycles according to the physical address obtained by the execution unit (EXU).If EXU does not request start of the bus cycle, an address is generated to prefetch an instruction. The prefetched op code is stored in an instruction queue. 3.3 ROM/RAM The internal ROM and RAM capacities differ depending on the product. The µPD78363A has a 24-KB ROM and a 512-B peripheral RAM. The µPD78366A has a 32-KB ROM and a 1792-B peripheral RAM. The µPD78368A has a 48-KB ROM and a 1792-B peripheral RAM. The µPD78365A does not have a ROM and only has a 1792-B peripheral RAM. Access to the ROM can be disabled by using the MODE0 and MODE1 pins, in which case an external memory of 64 KB can be accessed. 29 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.4 PORT FUNCTIONS The µPD78366A is provided with the ports shown in Figure 3-1 for various control operations. The functions of each port are listed in Table 3-1. These ports function not only as digital ports but also as input/output lines of the internal hardware. Figure 3-1. Port Configuration P00 P50 Port 0 Port 5 P07 P57 P10 P70-P77 Port 1 8 Port 7 P17 P80 P20 Port 8 Port 2 P85 P25 P90 P30 Port 9 P93 Port 3 P36 Port 4 30 8 P40-P47 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Table 3-1. Functions of Each Port Port Port 0 Port 1 Port function 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. Multiplexed function In control mode, serves as real-time output port (RTP), or input operation control signal of real-time pulse unit (RPU) and output PWM signal. — 6-bit input port. Inputs external interrupt and count pulse of real-time pulse unit (RPU) (fixed to the control mode). Port 3 7-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output in 1-bit units. In control mode, inputs/outputs signals of serial interfaces (UART, CSI). Port 4 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 8-bit units. Address data bus (AD0-AD7) when memory is externally expanded. Port 5 8-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. Address bus (A8-A15) when memory is externally expanded. Port 7 8-bit input port. Input analog signals to A/D converter (fixed to the control mode). Port 8 6-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. In control mode, outputs timer of real-time pulse unit (RPU). Port 9 4-bit I/O port. Can be set in input or output mode in 1-bit units. Outputs control signal when memory is externally expanded. Port 2 31 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.5 CLOCK GENERATOR CIRCUIT The clock generator circuit generates and controls the internal system clock (CLK) that is supplied to the CPU. Figure 3-2. Block Diagram of Clock Generator Circuit X1 X2 System cloock oscillator circuit Frequency divider Frequency divider f XX or fX 1/2 PLL control circuit 1/2 f CLK Internal system clock (CLK) STOP mode Remarks 1. fXX : crystal oscillation frequency 2. fX : external clock frequency 3. fCLK : internal system clock frequency By connecting an 8-MHz crystal resonator across the X1 and X2 pins, an internal system clock of up to 16 MHz (fCLK) can be generated. The system clock oscillation circuit oscillates by using the crystal resonator connected across the X1 and X2 pins. It stops oscillation in standby mode. An external clock can also be input. To do so, input the clock signal to the X1 pin and leave the X2 pin open. Caution 32 Do not set STOP mode when the external clock is used. µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-3. External Circuit of System Clock Oscillator Circuit (a) crystal oscillator (b) external clock µ PD78366A µ PD78366A VSS X1 X1 X2 Open X2 Cautions 1. Wire the portion enclosed by dotted line in Figure 3-3 as follows to avoid adverse influences due to wiring capacity when using the system clock oscillation circuit. • Keep the wiring length as short as possible. • Do not cross the wiring with the other signal line. Make sure that the wiring is not close to lines through which a high alternating current flows. • Always keep the ground point of the capacitor of the oscillation circuit at the same potential as VSS. Do not ground the circuit to a ground pattern through which a high current flows. • Do not extract signals from the oscillator circuit. 2. To input an external clock, do not connect a load such as wiring capacitance to the X2 pin. 33 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.6 REAL-TIME PULSE UNIT (RPU) The real-time pulse unit (RPU) can measure pulse intervals and frequencies, and output programmable pulses (six channels of PWM control signals). The RPU consists of five 16-bit timers (timers 0 through 4), of which one is provided with a 10-bit dead time timer, which is ideal for inverter control. In addition, a function to turn off the output by the software or an external interrupt is also provided. Each timer has the following features: • Timer 0 : Controls the PWM period of the TO00 through TO05 pins. In addition, operates as a general-purpose interval timer. Timer 0 has the following five operation modes: • General-purpose interval timer mode • PWM mode 0 (symmetrical triangular wave) • PWM mode 0 (asymmetrical triangular wave) • PWM mode 0 (saw-tooth wave) • PWM mode 1 • Timer 1 : Operates as a general-purpose interval timer. • Timers 2, 3 : Has a programmable input sampling circuit that rejects the noise of an input signal, and a capture function. • Timer 4 : Operates as a general-purpose timer or an up-down counter. When operating as a generalpurpose timer, controls the PWM cycle of the TO40 output pin. Timer 4 has the following two operation modes: • General-purpose timer mode • Up/down counter mode (UDC mode) 34 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A The RPU consists of the hardware shown in Table 3-2. Figures 3-4 through 3-12 show the block diagrams of the respective timers. Table 3-2. Configuration of Real-Time Pulse Unit (RPU) Timer register Timer 0 16-bit timer (TM0) Timer 1 16-bit timer (TM1) Timer 2 16-bit timer (TM2) 16-bit compare register (CM00) Compare register coincidence interrupt – 16-bit compare register (CM01) – 16-bit compare register (CM02) – 16-bit compare register (CM03) INTCM03 16-bit compare register (CM10) INTCM10 16-bit capture/compare register (CC20) INTCC20 Register 16-bit capture register (CT20) 16-bit capture/compare register (CC30) Timer 3 16-bit timer (TM3) 16-bit capture register (CT30) 16-bit capture register (CT31) Timer 4 16-bit timer (TM4) – Capture trigger Timer output Timer clear – 6 INTCM03 – – INTCM10 INTP3 – INTCC20 – INTCC30 INTCC30 INTP0 – INTP1 – INTP4 16-bit compare register (CM40) INTCM40 16-bit compare register (CM41) INTCM41 – 1 TCLRUD INTCM40 35 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-4. Block Diagram of Timer 0 (PWM mode 0 ... symmetrical triangular wave, asymmetrical triangular wave) BFCM03 CM03 fCLK fCLK/2 fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 INTCM03 16 TM0 INTTM0 U/D 16 UP = 0 DOWN = 1 fCLK DTIME ALVTO Output off function by external interrupt and software 10 BFCM00 CM00 R DTM0 Underflow R S S R S BFCM01 CM01 R DTM1 R S R S BFCM02 R DTM2 S R R S TM0 : Timer register ALVTO: Bit 2 of TUM0 register CM00-CM03 : Compare registers U/D DTIME : Reload register DTM0-DTM2 : Dead time timers Remark f CLK : internal system clock 36 TO02 (V phase) TO03 (V phase) Underflow S BFCM00-BFCM03 : Buffer registers TO01 (U phase) Underflow S CM02 TO00 (U phase) : Bit 3 of TMC0 register TO04 (W phase) TO05 (W phase) µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-5. Block Diagram of Timer 0 (PWM mode 0 ... saw-tooth wave) BFCM03 CM03 fCLK fCLK/2 fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 16 INTCM03 Clear TM0 fCLK DTIME ALVTO 16 Output off function by external interrupt and software 10 BFCM00 CM00 R DTM0 Underflow R S S R S BFCM01 CM01 R DTM1 R S R S BFCM02 R DTM2 S R R S : Timer register CM00-CM03 : Compare registers TO02 (V phase) TO03 (V phase) Underflow S TM0 TO01 (U phase) Underflow S CM02 TO00 (U phase) TO04 (W phase) TO05 (W phase) BFCM00-BFCM03 : Buffer registers DTIME : Reload register DTM0-DTM2 : Dead time timers ALVTO : Bit 2 of TUM0 register Remark f CLK : internal system clock 37 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-6. Block Diagram of Timer 0 (PWM mode 1) BFCM03 CM03 16 fCLK fCLK/2 fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 INTCM03 Clear TM0 fCLK DTIME 16 10 6-bit buffer register BFCM00 CM00 DTM0 T Underflow 6-bit buffer register MBUF1 SBUF1 MBUF0 SBUF0 MBUF3 SBUF3 MBUF2 BFCM01 CM01 DTM1 T Underflow SBUF2 MBUF5 SBUF5 MBUF4 SBUF4 BFCM02 CM02 DTM2 T Underflow TOUT 6-bit write-only register Output off function by external interrupt and software TO00 TO02 TO04 (U phase) (V phase) (W phase) TO01 TO03 TO05 (U phase) (V phase) (W phase) TM0 : Timer register CM00-CM03 : Compare registers BFCM00-BFCM03 : Buffer registers DTIME : Reload register DTM0-DTM2 : Dead time timers Remark f CLK : internal system clock 38 MBUF0-MBUF5 : Master buffer registers SBUF0-SBUF5 : Slave buffer registers TOUT : Timer out register µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-7. Block Diagram of Timer 0 (general-purpose interval timer mode) Master buffer register (MBUF0) Compare register CM03 INTCM03 16 6 Slave buffer register (SBUF0) Timer register TM0 6 Clear Timer out register (TOUT) Output off function by external interrupt and software TO00 TO02 TO04 TO01 TO03 TO05 Figure 3-8. Block Diagram of Timer 1 Clear fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 TI Timer register TM1 16 Compare register CM10 INTCM10 Remark fCLK: internal system clock 39 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-9. Block Diagram of Timer 2 Clear fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 fCLK/25 fCLK/26 fCLK/28 fCLK/29 fCLK/210 4-point sampling noise rejection circuit INTP3 fCLK fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 fCLK/26 fCLK/27 fCLK/28 CLR2 Timer register TM2 16 Capture/compare register CC20 INTP3/INTCC20 Capture register CT20 Remark fCLK: internal system clock Figure 3-10. Block Diagram of Timer 3 Clear fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 fCLK/25 fCLK/26 fCLK/28 Timer register TM3 CLR3 INTOV3 16 INTP0 4-point sampling noise rejection circuit Capture/compare register CC30 4-point sampling noise rejection circuit Capture register CT30 INTP1 4-point sampling noise rejection circuit Capture register CT31 INTP4 INTP0/INTCC30 fCLK fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 INTP1 fCLK fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 INTP4 fCLK fCLK/22 fCLK/23 fCLK/24 Remark fCLK: internal system clock 40 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-11. Block Diagram of Timer 4 (General-Purpose Timer Mode) Clear fCLK fCLK/2 fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 fCLK/32 Timer register TM4 INTCM40 16 Compare register CM40 ALV40 S Q TO40 R Compare register CM41 INTCM41 Remark fCLK: internal system clock Figure 3-12. Block Diagram of Timer 4 (UDC Mode) TCLRUD Clear fCLK/4 fCLK/8 fCLK/16 16 TIUD TCUD Up/down detector OVF UDF Timer register TM4 Pre-set Compare register CM40 INTCM40 Compare register CM41 INTCM41 Remark fCLK: internal system clock 41 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.7 REAL-TIME OUTPUT PORT (RTP) The real-time output port is a 4-bit port that can output the contents of the real-time output port register (RTP) in synchronization with the trigger signal from the real-time pulse unit (RPU). It can output synchronization pulses of multiple channels. Also, PWM modulation can be applied to P00-P03. Figure 3-13. Block Diagram of Real-Time Output Port Internal bus 4 RTP INTCM03 (from RPU) INTCM10 (from RPU) INTP0/INTCC30 (from RPU) Software trigger Output trigger control circuit 4 RTPM PWM0 PWM1 PWM signal control circuit Output latch (P03-P00) P03P02 P01P00 42 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.8 A/D CONVERTER The µPD78366A contains a high-speed, high-resolution 10-bit analog-to-digital (A/D) converter (conversion time 12.6 µs at an internal clock frequency of 16 MHz). Successive approximation type is adopted. This converter is provided with eight analog input lines (ANI0-ANI7) and can perform various operations as the application requires, in select, scan, and mixed modes. When A/D conversion ends, an internal interrupt (INTAD) occurs. This interrupt can start a macro service that executes automatic data transfer through hardware. Figure 3-14. Block Diagram of A/D Converter AV DD Sample & hold ANI0 AV REF ANI1 ANI4 Input curcuit ANI2 ANI3 Resistor string AV SS Comparator 0 ANI5 9 ANI6 10 SAR (10) ANI7 10 9 0 ADCR0 ADCR1 INTCM03 INTP2 ADCR2 Controller ADCR3 (Start trigger) ADCR4 ADCR5 ADM (8) ADCR6 ADCR7 8 10 Internal bus 43 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.9 SERIAL INTERFACE The µPD78366A is provided with the following two independent serial interfaces: • Asynchronous serial interface (UART) (with pin selection function) • Clocked serial interface • 3-line serial I/O mode • Serial bus interface mode (SBI mode) Since the µPD78366A contains a baud rate generator (BRG), any serial transfer rate can be set regardless of the operating clock frequency. The baud rate generator is a block to generate the shift clock for the transmit/ receive serial interface, and is used commonly with the two channels of the serial interfaces. The serial transfer rate can be selected in a range of 110 bps to 38.4 Kbps by the mode register. Figure 3-15. Block Diagram of Asynchronous Serial Interface Internal bus ASIM Receive RXB buffer RXE PS1 PS0 CL SL SPS SCK SPS TXD1 SPS Receive control parity check 1 — 16 44 PE FE OVE TXS Transfer shift register INTSER INTSR Transfer control parity append 1 — 16 INTST Selector TXD0 Receive shift register Selector RXD1 Selector ASIS RXD0 Transfer/ receive baud rate generator output fCLK/8 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Figure 3-16. Block Diagram of Clocked Serial Interface Internal bus 8 8 8 SBIC BSYE ACKD ACKE ACKT CMDD RELD CMDT RELT CSIM CTXE CRXE WUP MOD2 MOD1 MOD0 CLS1 CLS0 RELT CMDT MOD1 MOD2 0 7 Selector SI/SB1 Shift register (SIO) SO latch D Q SO/SB0 Selector Busy/ acknowledge detector circuit MOD1 MOD2 MOD1 Serial clock counter SCK WUP Interrupt signal generation control circuit INTCSI Selector Bus release/ command/ acknowledge detector circuit Serial clock control circuit 1/2 Baud rate generator (BRG) f CLK/8 f CLK/32 CLS0 CLS1 Figure 3-17. Block Diagram of Baud Rate Generator Internal bus 7 1 — 2 0 7 0 BRG BRGC TMBRG Prescaler Coincidence Clear f CLK/2 Serial interface 45 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.10 PWM UNIT The µPD78366A is provided with two lines that output 8-/9-/10-/12-bit resolution variable PWM signals. The PWM output can be used as a digital-to-analog conversion output by connecting an external lowpass filter, and ideal for controlling actuators such as motors. An output of between 244 Hz and 62.5 kHz can be obtaind, depending on the combination of the count clock (62.5 ns to 1 µs) and counter bit length (8, 9, 10, or 12) (at an internal clock frequency of 16 MHz). Figure 3-18. Block Diagram of PWM Unit 7 8 9 Overflow f CLK f CLK/2 f CLK/4 Counter (12) ALVn 11 f CLK/8 S 0-7 0-8 0-9 Coinci- f CLK/16 dence Comparator (12) Compare register CMPn (12) PWM buffer register n (12) Remark n = 0, 1 46 0-11 Q PWMn R µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 3.11 WATCHDOG TIMER (WDT) The watchdog timer is a free running timer equipped with a non-maskable interrupt function to prevent program hang-up or deadlock. When an error of the program is detected, the overflow interrupt (INTWDT) of the watchdog timer occurs and the watchdog timer output pin (WDTO) goes low. By connecting this output pin to the RESET pin, any malfunctioning of the application system due to program error can be prevented. Figure 3-19. Block Diagram of Watchdog Timer f CLK/29 f CLK/211 Watchdog timer (8 bits) Overflow S Q Clear f CLK/213 f CLK Clear WDTO R Timer (5 bits) Overflow WDT CLR WDT STOP INTWDT Oscillation stabilization time control circuit 47 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 4. INTERRUPT FUNCTIONS 4.1 OUTLINE The µPD78366A is provided with powerful interrupt functions that can process interrupt requests from the internal hardware peripherals and external sources. In addition, the following three interrupt processing modes are available. In addition, four levels of interrupt priority can be specified. • Vectored interrupt processing • Macro service • Context switching Table 4-1. Interrupt Sources Interrupt source Type Note Name Nonmaskable Source unit Vector table address External 0002H Trigger – NMI NMI pin input – INTWDT Watchdog timer WDT 0004H 0 INTOV3 Overflow of timer 3 RPU 0006H External/RPU 0008H 1 INTP0/INTCC30 INTP0 pin input/CC30 coincidence signal 2 INTP1 INTP1 pin input Macro service Context switching None None Provided Provided 000AH External 3 4 Maskable INTP2 INTP2 pin input INTP3/INTCC20 INTP3 pin input/CC20 coincidence signal 5 INTP4 INTP4 pin input 6 INTTM0 7 000CH External/RPU 000EH External 0010H Underflow of timer 0 0012H INTCM03 CM03 coincidence signal 0014H 8 INTCM10 CM10 coincidence signal 9 INTCM40 CM40 coincidence signal 0018H 10 INTCM41 CM41 coincidence signal 001AH 11 INTSER Receive error of UART 001CH 12 INTSR End of UART reception 13 INTST End of UART transfer 14 INTCSI End of CSI transfer/reception CSI 0022H 15 INTAD End of A/D conversion A/D 0024H – BRK BRK instruction – 003EH – BRKCS BRKCS instruction – – RPU UART 0016H 001EH 0020H None Software Provided None Exception – TRAP Reset – RESET Illegal op code trap – 003CH Reset input – 0000H None Note Default priority : Priority that takes precedence when two or more maskable interrupts occur at the same time. 0 is the highest priority, and 15 is the lowest. 48 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 4.2 MACRO SERVICE The µPD78366A has a total of five macro services. Each macro service is described below. (1) Counter mode: EVTCNT • Operation (a) Increments or decrements an 8-bit macro service counter (MSC). (b) A vector interrupt request is generated when MSC reaches 0. MSC +1/–1 • Application example: As event counter, or to measure number of times a value is captured (2) Block transfer mode: BLKTRS • Operation (a) Transfers data block between a buffer and a SFR specified by SFR pointer (SFRP). (b) The transfer source and destination can be in SFR or buffer area. The length of the transfer data can be specified to be byte or word. (c) The number of times the data is to be transferred (block size) is specified by MSC. (d) MSC is auto decremented by one each time the macro service has been executed. (e) When MSC reaches 0, a vector interrupt request is generated. SFRP –1 Buffer N MSC SFR Buffer 1 Internal bus • Application example: To transfer/receive data through serial interface 49 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A (3) Block transfer mode (with memory pointer): BLKTRS-P • Operation This is the block transfer mode in (2) above with a memory pointer (MEMP). The appended buffer area of MEMP can be freely set on the memory space. Remark Each time the macro service is executed, MEMP is auto incremented (by one for byte data transfer and by two for word data transfer). Buffer N SFRP –1 MSC MEMP +1/+2 SFR Buffer 1 Internal bus • Application example: Same as (2) (4) Data differential mode: DTADIF • Operation (a) Calculates the difference between the contents of SFR (current value) specified by SFRP and the contents of SFR saved to the last data buffer (LDB). (b) Stores the result of the calculation in a predetermined buffer area. (c) Stores the contents of the current value of the SFR in LDB. (d) The number of times the data is to be transferred (block size) is specified by MSC. Each time the macro service is executed, MSC is auto decremented by one. (e) When MSC reaches 0, a vector interrupt request is generated. Remark The differential calculation can be carried out only with 16-bit SFRs. SFRP –1 MSC LDB SFR Buffer N Differential calculation Buffer 1 Internal bus • Application example : To measure cycle and pulse width by the capture register of the real-time pulse unit (RPU) 50 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A (5) Data differential mode (with memory pointer): DTADIF-P • Operation This is the data differential mode in (4) above with memory pointer (MEMP). By appending MEMP, the buffer area in which the differential data is to be stored can be set freely on the memory space. Remarks 1. 2. The differential calculation can be carried out only with 16-bit SFRs. The buffer is specified by the result of operation by MEMP and MSCNote. MEMP is not updated after the data has been transferred. Note MEMP – (MSC × 2) + 2 SFRP Buffer N –1 MSC LDB SFR MEMP Buffer 1 Differential calculation Internal bus • Application example: Same as (4) 51 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 4.3 CONTEXT SWITCHING This function is to select a specific register bank through the hardware, and to branch execution to a vector address predetermined in the register bank. At the same time, it saves the present contents of the PC and PSW to the register bank when an interrupt occurs, or when the BRKCS instruction is executed. 4.3.1 Context Switching Function by Interrupt Request When a context switching enable flag corresponding to each maskable interrupt request is set to 1 in the EI (interrupt enable) status, the context switching function can be started. The context switching operation by an interrupt request is performed as follows: (1) When an interrupt request is generated, a register bank to which the context is to be switched is specified by the contents of the low-order 3 bits of the row address (even address) of the corresponding vector table. (2) A predetermined vector address is transferred to the PC in the register bank to which the context is to be switched, and the contents of the PC and PSW immediately before the switching takes place are saved to the register bank. (3) Execution branches to an address indicated by the contents of the PC newly set. Figure 4-1. Operation of Context Switching Register Bank RP0 PC RP1 Exchange RP2 Save RP3 RP4 PSW RP5 RP6 RP7 52 Register Bank (0-7) µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 4.3.2 Context Switching Function by BRKCS Instruction The context switching function can be started by the BRKCS instruction. The operation of context switching by an interrupt request is as follows: (1) An 8-bit register is specified by the operand of the BRKCS instruction, and the register bank to which the context is to be switched is specified by the contents of this register (only the low-order 3 bits of 8 bits are valid). (2) The vector address predetermined in the register bank to which the context is to be switched is transferred to the PC, and at the same time, the contents of the PC and PSW immediately before the switching takes place are saved to the register bank. (3) Execution branches to the contents of the PC newly set. 4.3.3 Restoration from Context Switching To restore from the switched context, one of the following two instructions are used. Which instruction is to be executed is determined by the source that has started the context switching. Table 4-2. Instructions to Restore from Context Switching Restore instruction Context switching starting source RETCS Occurrence of interrupt RETCSB Execution of BRKCS instruction 53 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 5. EXTERNAL DEVICE EXPANSION FUNCTION The µPD78366A can connect external devices (data memory, program memory, and peripheral devices) in addition to the internal ROM and RAM areas. To connect an external device, the address/data bus and read/ write strobe signals are controlled by using ports 4, 5, and 9. Table 5-1. Pin Function with External Device Connected Pin function with external device connected Pin Function Name P40-P47 Multiplexed address/data bus AD0-AD7 P50-P57 Address bus A8-A15 P90 Read strobe RD P91 Write strobe WR ASTB 54 Address strobe ASTB µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 6. STANDBY FUNCTIONS The µPD78366A is provided with standby functions to reduce the power consumption of the system. The standby functions can be effected in the following two modes: • HALT mode ..... In this mode, the operating clock of the CPU is stopped. By using this mode in combination with an ordinary operation mode, the µPD78366A operates intermittently to reduce the total power consumption of the system. • STOP mode .... In this mode, the oscillator is stopped, and therefore the entire system is stopped. Therefore, power consumption can be minimized with only a leakage current flowing. Each mode is set through software. Figure 6-1 shows the transition of the status in the standby modes (STOP and HALT modes). Figure 6-1. Transition of Standby Status Ordinary se t T OP I t pt rru nte di s ske cur ma oc NM d se ST SE se LT RE lea re re T lea SE se d RE HA Un STOP HALT 55 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 7. RESET FUNCTION When a low level is input to the RESET pin, the system is reset, and each hardware enters the initial status (reset status). When the RESET pin goes high, the reset status is released, and program execution is started. Initialize the contents of each register through program as necessary. Especially, change the number of cycles of the programmable wait control register as necessary. The RESET pin is equipped with a noise rejecter circuit of analog delay to prevent malfunctioning due to noise. Cautions 1. While the RESET pin is active (low level), all the pins go into a high-impedance state (except WDTO, AVREF, AVDD, AVSS, VDD, VSS, X1, and X2 pins). 2. When an external RAM is connected, do not connect a pull-up resistor to the P90/RD and P91/WR pins, because the P90/RD and P91/WR pins may go into a high-impedance state, resulting in destruction of the contents of the external RAM. In addition, signal contention occurs on the address/data bus, resulting in damage to the input/output circuit. Figure 7-1. Accepting Reset Signal RESET input Analog delay Rejected as noise Analog delay Analog delay Reset accepted Reset released To effect reset on when power is applied, make sure that sufficient time elapses to stabilize the oscillation after the power is applied until the reset signal is accepted, as shown in Figure 7-2. Figure 7-2. Reset on Power Application VDD RESET Oscillation stabilization time Analog delay Reset released 56 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 8. INSTRUCTION SET Write an operand in the operand field of each instruction according to the description of the instruction (for details, refer to the Assembler Specifications). Some instructions have two or more operands. Select one of them. Uppercase characters, +, –, #, $, !, [, and ] are keywords and must be written as is. Write an appropriate numeric value or label as immediate data. To write a label, be sure to write #, $, !, [, or ]. Table 8-1. Operand Representation and Description Representation Description r r1 r2 R0, R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R6, R7, R8, R9, R10, R11, R12, R13, R14, R15 R0, R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R6, R7 C, B rp rp1 rp2 RP0, RP1, RP2, RP3, RP4, RP5, RP6, RP7 RP0, RP1, RP2, RP3, RP4, RP5, RP6, RP7 DE, HL, VP, UP sfr sfrp Special function register symbol (Refer to Table 2-1.) Special function register symbol (register that can be manipulated in 16-bit units. Refer to Table 2-1.) post RP0, RP1, RP2, RP3, RP4, RP5/PSW, RP6, RP7 (More than one symbol can be written. However, RP5 can be written only for PUSH and POP instructions, and PSW can be written only for PUSHU and POPU instructions.) mem [DE], [HL], [DE+], [HL+], [DE–], [HL–], [VP], [UP] [DE + A], [HL + A], [DE + B], [HL + B], [VP + DE], [VP + HL] [DE + byte], [HL + byte], [VP + byte], [UP + byte], [SP + byte] word[A], word[B], word[DE], word[HL] saddr saddrp FE20H-FF1FH immediate data or label FE20H-FF1EH immediate data (however, bit0 = 0) or label (manipulated in 16-bit units) $ addr16 ! addr16 0000H-FDFFH immediate data or label; relative addressing 0000H-FDFFH immediate data or label; immediate addressing (However, up to FFFFH can be written for MOV instruction. Only FE00H-FEFFH can be written for MOVTBLW instruction.) 800H-FFFH immediate data or label addr11 addr5 ; ; ; ; register indirect mode based indexed mode based mode indexed mode 40H-7EH immediate data (however, bit0 = 0)Note or label word byte bit n 16-bit immediate data or label 8-bit immediate data or label 3-bit immediate data or label 3-bit immediate data (0-7) Note Do not access bit0 = 1 (odd address) in word units. Remarks 1. rp and rp1 are the same in terms of register name that can be written but are different in code to be generated. 2. r, r1, rp, rp1, and post can be written in absolute name (R0-R15, RP0-RP7) and function name (X, A, C, B, E, D, L, H, AX, BC, DE, HL, VP, and UP). 3. Immediate addressing can address the entire space. Relative addressing can address only a range of –128 to +127 from the first address of the next instruction. 57 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic 8-bit data transfer MOV XCH Operand Byte Operation r1, #byte 2 r1 ← byte saddr, #byte 3 (saddr) ← byte sfrNote , 3 sfr ← byte r, r1 2 r ← r1 A, r1 1 A ← r1 A, saddr 2 A ← (saddr) saddr, A 2 (saddr) ← A saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) A, sfr 2 A ← sfr sfr, A 2 sfr ← A #byte A, mem 1-4 A ← (mem) mem, A 1-4 (mem) ← A A, [saddrp] 2 A ← ((saddrp)) [saddrp], A 2 ((saddrp)) ← A A, !addr16 4 A ← (addr16) !addri16, A 4 (addr16) ← A PSWL, #byte 3 PSWL ← byte PSWH, #byte 3 PSWH ← byte PSWL, A 2 PSWL ← A PSWH, A 2 PSWH ← A A, PSWL 2 A ← PSW L A, PSWH 2 A ← PSW H A, r1 1 A ↔ r1 r, r1 2 r ↔ r1 A, mem 2-4 A ↔ (mem) A, saddr 2 A ↔ (saddr) A, sfr 3 A ↔ sfr A, [saddrp] 2 A ↔ ((saddrp)) saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) ↔ (saddr) S Z AC P/V CY × × × × × × × × × × Note When STBC or WDM is written as sfr, this instruction is treated as a dedicated instruction whose number of bytes is different from that of this instruction. Remark For symbols in flag, refer to the table below. Symbol (Blank) 58 Remarks No change 0 Cleared to 0 1 Set to 1 × Set/cleared according to result P P/V flag functions as parity flag V P/V flag operates as overflow flag R Value previously saved is restored 16-bit data transfer Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic MOVW XCHW 8-bit operation ADD ADDC Operand Byte Operation rp1, #word 3 rp1 ← word saddrp, #word 4 (saddrp) ← word sfrp, #word 4 sfrp ← word rp, rp1 2 rp ← rp1 AX, saddrp 2 AX ← (saddrp) saddrp, AX 2 (saddrp) ← AX saddrp, saddrp 3 (saddrp) ← (saddrp) AX, sfrp 2 AX ← sfrp sfrp, AX 2 sfrp ← AX rp1, !addr16 4 rp1 ← (addr16) !addr16, rp1 4 (addr16) ← rp1 AX, mem 2-4 AX ← (mem) mem, AX 2-4 (mem) ← AX AX, saddrp 2 AX ↔ (saddrp) AX, sfrp 3 AX ↔ sfrp saddrp, saddrp 3 (saddrp) ↔ (saddrp) rp, rp1 2 rp ↔ rp1 S Z AC P/V CY AX ↔ (mem) AX, mem 2-4 A, #byte 2 A, CY ← A + byte × × × V × saddr, #byte 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) + byte × × × V × sfr, #byte 4 sfr, CY ← sfr + byte × × × V × r, r1 2 r, CY ← r + r1 × × × V × A, saddr 2 A, CY ← A + (saddr) × × × V × A, sfr 3 A, CY ← A + sfr × × × V × saddr, saddr 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) + (saddr) × × × V × A, mem 2-4 A, CY ← A + (mem) × × × V × mem, A 2-4 (mem), CY ← (mem) + A × × × V × A, #byte 2 A, CY ← A + byte + CY × × × V × saddr, #byte 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) + byte + CY × × × V × sfr, #byte 4 sfr, CY ← sfr + byte + CY × × × V × r, r1 2 r, CY ← r + r1 + CY × × × V × A, saddr 2 A, CY ← A + (saddr) + CY × × × V × A, sfr 3 A, CY ← A + sfr + CY × × × V × saddr, saddr 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) + (saddr) + CY × × × V × A, mem 2-4 A, CY ← A + (mem) + CY × × × V × mem, A 2-4 (mem), CY ← (mem) + A + CY × × × V × 59 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic 8-bit operation SUB SUBC AND 60 Operand Byte Operation S Z AC P/V CY A, #byte 2 A, CY ← A – byte × × × V × saddr, #byte 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) – byte × × × V × sfr, #byte 4 sfr, CY ← sfr – byte × × × V × r, r1 2 r, CY ← r – r1 × × × V × A, saddr 2 A, CY ← A – (saddr) × × × V × A, sfr 3 A, CY ← A – sfr × × × V × saddr, saddr 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) – (saddr) × × × V × A, mem 2-4 A, CY ← A – (mem) × × × V × mem, A 2-4 (mem), CY ← (mem) – A × × × V × A, #byte 2 A, CY ← A – byte – CY × × × V × saddr, #byte 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) – byte – CY × × × V × sfr, #byte 4 sfr, CY ← sfr – byte – CY × × × V × r, r1 2 r, CY ← r – r1 – CY × × × V × A, saddr 2 A, CY ← A – (saddr) – CY × × × V × A, sfr 3 A, CY ← A – sfr – CY × × × V × saddr, saddr 3 (saddr), CY ← (saddr) – (saddr) – CY × × × V × A, mem 2-4 A, CY ← A – (mem) – CY × × × V × mem, A 2-4 (mem), CY ← (mem) – A – CY × × × V × A, #byte 2 A ← A ∧ byte × × P saddr, #byte 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∧ byte × × P sfr, #byte 4 sfr ← sfr ∧ byte × × P r, r1 2 r ← r ∧ r1 × × P A, saddr 2 A ← A ∧ (saddr) × × P A, sfr 3 A ← A ∧ sfr × × P saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∧ (saddr) × × P A, mem 2-4 A ← A ∧ (mem) × × P mem, A 2-4 (mem) ← (mem) ∧ A × × P Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic 8-bit operation OR XOR CMP Operand Byte Operation S Z AC P/V CY A, #byte 2 A ← A ∨ byte × × P saddr, #byte 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∨ byte × × P sfr, #byte 4 sfr ← sfr ∨ byte × × P r, r1 2 r, ← r ∨ r1 × × P A, saddr 2 A ← A ∨ (saddr) × × P A, sfr 3 A ← A ∨ sfr × × P saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∨ (saddr) × × P A, mem 2-4 A ← A ∨ (mem) × × P mem, A 2-4 (mem) ← (mem) ⁄ A × × P A, #byte 2 A ← A ∨ byte × × P saddr, #byte 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∨ byte × × P sfr, #byte 4 sfr ← sfr ∨ byte × × P r, r1 2 r ← r ∨ r1 × × P A, saddr 2 A ← A ∨ (saddr) × × P A, sfr 3 A ← A ∨ sfr × × P saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) ∨ (saddr) × × P A, mem 2-4 A ← A ∨ (mem) × × P mem, A 2-4 (mem) ← (mem) ∨ A × × P A, #byte 2 A – byte × × × V × saddr, #byte 3 (saddr) – byte × × × V × sfr, #byte 4 sfr – byte × × × V × r, r1 2 r – r1 × × × V × A, saddr 2 A – (saddr) × × × V × A, sfr 3 A – sfr × × × V × saddr, saddr 3 (saddr) – (saddr) × × × V × A, mem 2-4 A – (mem) × × × V × mem, A 2-4 (mem) – A × × × V × 61 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic 16-bit operation Multiplication /division Operation S Z AC P/V CY 3 AX, CY ← AX + word × × × V × saddrp, #word 4 (saddrp), CY ← (saddrp) + word × × × V × sfrp, #word 5 sfrp, CY ← sfrp + word × × × V × rp, rp1 2 rp, CY ← rp + rp1 × × × V × AX, saddrp 2 AX, CY ← AX + (saddrp) × × × V × AX, sfrp 3 AX, CY ← AX + sfrp × × × V × saddrp, saddrp 3 (saddrp), CY ← (saddrp) + (saddrp) × × × V × AX, #word 3 AX, CY ← AX – word × × × V × saddrp, #word 4 (saddrp), CY ← (saddrp) – word × × × V × sfrp, #word 5 sfrp, CY ← sfrp – word × × × V × rp, rp1 2 rp, CY ← rp – rp1 × × × V × AX, saddrp 2 AX, CY ← AX – (saddrp) × × × V × AX, sfrp 3 AX, CY ← AX – sfrp × × × V × saddrp, saddrp 3 (saddrp), CY ← (saddrp) – (saddrp) × × × V × AX, #word 3 AX – word × × × V × saddrp, #word 4 (saddrp) – word × × × V × sfrp, #word 5 sfrp – word × × × V × rp, rp1 2 rp – rp1 × × × V × AX, saddrp 2 AX – (saddrp) × × × V × AX, sfrp 3 AX – sfrp × × × V × saddrp, saddrp 3 (saddrp) – (saddrp) × × × V × MULU r1 2 AX ← AX × r1 DIVUW r1 2 AX (quotient), r1 (remainder) ← AX ÷ r1 MULUW rp1 2 AX (high-order 16 bits), rp1 (low-order 16 bits) ← AX × rp1 DIVUX rp1 2 AXDE (quotient), rp1 (remainder) ← AXDE ÷ rp1 MULW rp1 2 AX (high-order 16 bits), rp1 (low-order 16 bits) ← AX × rp1 MACW n 3 AXDE ← (B) × (C) + AXDE B ← B + 2, C ← C + 2, n ← n – 1 End if n = 0 or P/V = 1 × × × V × n 3 AXDE ← (B) × (C) + AXDE B ← B + 2, C ← C + 2, n ← n – 1 if overflow (P/V = 1) then AXDE ← 7FFFFFFFH if underflow (P/V = 1) then AXDE ← 80000000H end if n = 0 or P/V = 1 × × × V × [DE + ], [HL + ] 4 AX ← AX + | (DE) – (HL) | DE ← DE + 2 HL ← HL + 2 C ← C – 1 end if C = 0 or cy = 1 × × × V × SUBW CMPW Sum-of-products operation with saturation MACSW Relative operation Sum-of- Signed products multiplioperation cation Byte AX, #word ADDW 62 Operand SACW Table shift Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic MOVTBLW !addr16, n Increment/decrement INC DEC INCW BCD adjustment Shift rotate DECW Data conversion Operand Byte 4 Operation S Z AC P/V CY (addr16 + 2) ← (addr16), n ← n – 1 addr16 ←addr16 – 2, End if n = 0 r1 1 r1 ← r1 + 1 × × × V saddr 2 (saddr) ← (saddr) + 1 × × × V r1 1 r1 ← r1 – 1 × × × V saddr 2 (saddr) ← (saddr) – 1 × × × V rp2 1 rp2 ← rp2 + 1 saddrp 3 (saddrp) ← (saddrp) + 1 rp2 1 rp2 ← rp2 – 1 saddrp 3 (saddrp) ← (saddrp) – 1 ROR r1, n 2 (CY, r17 ← r1 0, r1m–1 ← r1m ) × n times P × ROL r1, n 2 (CY, r10 ← r1 7, r1m+1 ← r1m) × n times P × RORC r1, n 2 (CY ← r10, r17 ← CY, r1m–1 ← r1m) × n times P × ROLC r1, n 2 (CY ← r17, r10 ← CY, r1m+1 ← r1m ) × n times P × SHR r1, n 2 (CY ← r10, r17 ← 0, r1m–1 ← r1m) × n times × × 0 P × SHL r1, n 2 (CY ← r17, r10 ← 0, r1m+1 ← r1m ) × n times × × 0 P × SHRW rp1, n 2 (CY ← rp10, rp115 ← 0, rp1m–1 ← rp1m) × n times × × 0 P × SHLW rp1, n 2 (CY ← rp115 , rp10 ← 0, rp1m+1 ← rp1m ) × n times × × 0 P × ROR4 [rp1] 2 A3–0 ← (rp1)3–0, (rp1)7–4 ← A3–0, (rp1)3–0 ← (rp1)7–4 ROL4 [rp1] 2 A3–0 ← (rp1)7–4, (rp1)3–0 ← A3–0, (rp1)7–4 ← (rp1)3–0 2 Decimal Adjust Accumelator × × 0 P × 1 When A7 = 0, X ← A, A ← 00H When A7 = 1, X ← A, A ← FFH ADJBA ADJBS CVTBW Remarks 1. n of the shift rotate instruction indicates the number of times the shift rotate instruction is executed. 2. The address of the table shift instruction ranges from FE00H to FEFFH. 63 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Bit manipulation Z AC P/V CY CY, saddr.bit 3 CY ← (saddr.bit) × CY, sfr.bit 3 CY ← sfr.bit × CY, A.bit 2 CY ← A.bit × CY, X.bit 2 CY ← X.bit × CY, PSWH.bit 2 CY ← PSWH.bit × CY, PSWL.bit 2 CY ← PSW L.bit × saddr.bit, CY 3 (saddr.bit) ← CY sfr.bit, CY 3 sfr.bit ← CY A.bit, CY 2 A.bit ← CY X.bit, CY 2 X.bit ← CY PSWH.bit, CY 2 PSWH.bit ← CY PSWL.bit, CY 2 PSWL.bit ← CY CY, saddr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∧ (saddr.bit) × CY, /saddr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∧ (saddr.bit) × CY, sfr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∧ sfr.bit × CY, /sfr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∧ sfr.bit × CY, A.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ A.bit × CY, /A.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ A.bit × CY, X.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ X.bit × CY, /X.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ X.bit × CY, PSWH.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ PSWH.bit × CY, /PSWH.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ PSWH.bit × CY, PSWL.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ PSWL.bit × CY, /PSWL.bit 2 CY ← CY ∧ PSWL.bit × CY, saddr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ (saddr.bit) × CY, /saddr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ (saddr.bit) × CY, sfr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ sfr.bit × CY, /sfr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ sfr.bit × CY, A.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ A.bit × CY, /A.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ A.bit × CY, X.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ X.bit × CY, /X.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ X.bit × CY, PSWH.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWH.bit × CY, /PSWH.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWH.bit × CY, PSWL.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWL.bit × CY, /PSWL.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWL.bit × MOV1 AND1 OR1 64 Operation × × × × Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Z AC P/V CY CY, saddr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ (saddr.bit) × CY, sfr.bit 3 CY ← CY ∨ sfr.bit × CY, A.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ A.bit × CY, X.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ X.bit × CY, PSWH.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWH.bit × CY, PSWL.bit 2 CY ← CY ∨ PSWL.bit × saddr.bit 2 (saddr.bit) ← 1 sfr.bit 3 sfr.bit ← 1 A.bit 2 A.bit ← 1 X.bit 2 X.bit ← 1 PSWH.bit 2 PSWH.bit ← 1 PSWL.bit 2 PSWL.bit ← 1 saddr.bit 2 (saddr.bit) ← 0 sfr.bit 3 sfr.bit ← 0 A.bit 2 A.bit ← 0 X.bit 2 X.bit ← 0 PSWH.bit 2 PSWH.bit ← 0 PSWL.bit 2 PSWL.bit ← 0 saddr.bit 3 (saddr.bit) ← (saddr.bit) sfr.bit 3 sfr.bit ← sfr.bit A.bit 2 A.bit ← A.bit X.bit 2 X.bit ← X.bit PSWH.bit 2 PSWH.bit ← PSWH.bit PSWL.bit 2 PSWL.bit ← PSWL.bit SET1 CY 1 CY ← 1 1 CLR1 CY 1 CY ← 0 0 NOT1 CY 1 CY ← CY × XOR1 SET1 Bit manipulation Operation CLR1 NOT1 × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × 65 Call/return Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Z !addr16 3 (SP – 1) ← (PC + 3)H, (SP – 2) ← (PC + 3)L, PC ← addr16, SP ← SP – 2 CALLF !addr11 2 (SP – 1) ← (PC + 2)H , (SP – 2) ← (PC + 2)L, PC15 – 11 ← 00001, PC10 – 0 ← addr11, SP ← SP – 2 CALLT [addr5] 1 (SP – 1) ← (PC + 1)H, (SP – 2) ← (PC + 1)L, PCH ← (TPF, 00000000, addr5 + 1), PCL ← (TPF, 00000000, addr5 ), SP ← SP – 2 rp1 2 (SP – 1) ← (PC + 2)H, (SP – 2) ← (PC + 2)L, PCH ← rp1 H, PCL ← rp1 L, SP ← SP – 2 [rp1] 2 (SP – 1) ← (PC + 2)H, (SP – 2) ← (PC + 2)L, PCH ← (rp1 + 1), PCL ← (rp1), SP ← SP – 2 BRK 1 (SP – 1) ← PSWH, (SP – 2) ← PSW L (SP – 3) ← (PC + 1)H, (SP – 4) ← (PC + 1)L, PCL ← (003EH), PCH ← (003FH), SP ← SP – 4, IE ← 0 RET 1 PCL ← (SP), PCH ← (SP + 1), SP ← SP + 2 RETB 1 PCL ← (SP), PCH ← (SP +1) PSWL ← (SP + 2), PSWH ← (SP + 3) SP ← SP + 4 R R R R R RETI 1 PCL ← (SP), PCH ← (SP + 1) PSWL ← (SP + 2), PSWH ← (SP + 3) SP ← SP + 4 R R R R R sfrp 3 (SP – 1) ← sfrH (SP – 2) ← sfrL SP ← SP – 2 post 2 {(SP – 1) ← postH, (SP – 2) ← post L, SP ← SP – 2} × n times PSW 1 (SP – 1) ← PSWH, (SP – 2) ← PSWL, SP ← SP – 2 post 2 {(UP – 1) ← postH, (UP – 2) ← post L, UP ← UP – 2} × n times sfrp 3 sfrL ← (SP) sfrH ← (SP + 1) SP ← SP + 2 post 2 {postL ← (SP), postH ← (SP + 1), SP ← SP + 2} × n times PSW 1 PSWL ← (SP), PSWH ← (SP + 1), SP ← SP + 2 R R R R R post 2 {postL ← (UP),postH ← (UP + 1), UP ← UP + 2} × n times SP, #word 4 SP ← word SP, AX 2 SP ← AX AX, SP 2 AX ← SP INCW SP 2 SP ← SP + 1 DECW SP 2 SP ← SP – 1 CALL PUSHU POP POPU MOVW Remark n of the stack manipulation instruction is the number of registers written as post. 66 AC P/V CY CALL PUSH Stack manipulation Operation Unconditional Special Instructions branch µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Z AC P/V CY CHKL sfr 3 (pin level) ∨ (signal level before output buffer) × × P CHKLA sfr 3 A ← (pin level) ∨ (signal level before output buffer) × × P !addr16 3 PC ← addr16 rp1 2 PCH ← rp1H, PCL← rp1L [rp1] 2 PCH ← (rp1 + 1), PCL ← (rp1) $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if CY = 1 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if CY = 0 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if Z = 1 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if Z = 0 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if P/V = 1 $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if P/V = 0 BN $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if S = 1 BP $addr16 2 PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if S = 0 BGT $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if (P/V ∨ S) ⁄ Z = 0 BGE $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if P/V ∨ S= 0 BLT $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if P/V ∨ S = 1 BLE $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if (P/V ∨ S) ⁄ Z = 1 BH $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if Z ∨ CY = 0 BNH $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if Z ∨ CY = 1 saddr.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if (saddr.bit) = 1 sfr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if sfr.bit = 1 A.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if A.bit = 1 X.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if X.bit = 1 PSWH.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWH.bit = 1 PSWL.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWL.bit = 1 saddr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if (saddr.bit) = 0 sfr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if sfr.bit = 0 A.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if A.bit = 0 X.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if X.bit = 0 PSWH.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWH.bit = 0 PSWL.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWL.bit = 0 BR BC BL BNC BNL BZ BE BNZ BNE BV BPE BNV BPO Conditional branch Operation BT BF 67 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte Z AC P/V CY × × × × × × × × × × 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if (saddr.bit) = 1 then reset (saddr.bit) sfr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if sfr.bit = 1 then reset sfr.bit A.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if A.bit = 1 then reset A.bit X.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if X.bit = 1 then reset X.bit PSWH.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWH.bit = 1 then reset PSWH.bit PSWL.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWL.bit = 1 then reset PSWL.bit saddr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if (saddr.bit) = 0 then set (saddr.bit) sfr.bit, $addr16 4 PC ← PC + 4 + jdisp8 if sfr.bit = 0 then set sfr.bit A.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if A.bit = 0 then set A.bit X.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if X.bit = 0 then set X.bit PSWH.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWH.bit = 0 then set PSW H.bit PSWL.bit, $addr16 3 PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if PSWL.bit = 0 then set PSWL.bit r2, $addr16 2 r2 ← r2 – 1, then PC ← PC + 2 + jdisp8 if 2 ≠ 0 saddr, $addr16 3 (saddr) ← (saddr) – 1, then PC ← PC + 3 + jdisp8 if (saddr) ≠ 0 BRKCS RBn 2 PCH ↔ R5, PCL ↔ R4, R7 ← PSWH, R6 ← PSWL, ← RBS2 – 0 ← n, RSS ← 0, IE ← 0 RETCS !addr16 3 PCH ← R5, PCL ← R4, R5, R4 ← addr16 PSWH ← R7, PSWL ← R6 R R R R R RETCSB !addr16 4 PCH ← R5, PCL ← R4, R5, R4 ← addr16 PSWH ← R7, PSWL ← R6 R R R R R Conditional branch BFSET DBNZ Context switching S saddr.bit, $addr16 BTCLR 68 Operation Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Z AC P/V CY [DE+], A 2 (DE+) ← A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE–], A 2 (DE–) ← A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) ← (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) ← (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE+], A 2 (DE+) ↔ A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE–], A 2 (DE–) ↔ A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) ↔ (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) ↔ (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 [DE+], A 2 (DE+) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 0 × × × V × [DE–], A 2 (DE–) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 0 × × × V × [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) – (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 0 × × × V × [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) – (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 0 × × × V × [DE+], A 2 (DE+) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 1 × × × V × [DE–], A 2 (DE–) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 1 × × × V × [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) – (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 1 × × × V × [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) – (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or Z = 1 × × × V × [DE+], A 2 (DE+) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 0 × × × V × [DE–], A 2 (DE–) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 0 × × × V × [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) – (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 0 × × × V × [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) – (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 0 × × × V × MOVM MOVBK XCHM XCHBK CMPME String Operation CMPBKE CMPMNE CMPBKNE CMPMC CMPBKC 69 Instructions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Flag Mnemonic Operand Byte S Z AC P/V CY [DE+], A 2 (DE+) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 1 × × × V × [DE–], A 2 (DE–) – A, C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 1 × × × V × [DE+], [HL+] 2 (DE+) – (HL+), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 1 × × × V × [DE–], [HL–] 2 (DE–) – (HL–), C ← C – 1 End if C = 0 or CY = 1 × × × V × STBC, #byte 4 STBC ← byteNote WDM, #byte 4 WDM ← byteNote 1 RSS ← RSS RBn 2 RBS2 – 0 ← n, RSS ← 0 RBn, ALT 2 RBS2 – 0 ← n, RSS ← 1 NOP 1 No Operation EI 1 IE ← 1 (Enable Interruptt) DI 1 IE ← 0 (Disable Interrupt) String CMPMNC CMPBKNC MOV CPU control Operation SWRS SEL Note If the op code of the STBC register and WDM register manipulation instructions is wrong, an op code trap interrupt occurs. Operation on trap: (SP – 1) ← PSWH, (SP – 2) ← PSWL, (SP – 3) ← (PC – 4)H, (SP – 4) ← (PC – 4)L, PCL ← (003CH), PCH ← (003DH), SP ← SP – 4, IE ← 0 70 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 9. EXAMPLE OF SYSTEM CONFIGURATION Controlling outdoor apparatus of inverter air conditioner µ PD78366A Real-time pulse unit CM03 Dead time setting register U/D 16-bit timer CM00 Pulse generation circuit CM01 CM02 (Analog signal) U TO00 U TO01 V TO02 V TO03 W TO04 W TO05 Inverter AC power supply monitor External temperature Thermal exchange temperature Outlet temperature ANI0 ANI1 ANI2 ANI3 ANI4 ROM 32K bytes 10-bit A/D converter RAM 2K bytes Generalpurpose port P40 P41 P42 P43 Inlet temperature DC monitor Compressor motor temperature monitor NMI INTP1 Programmable interrupt controller Real-time output port P00 P01 P02 P03 4-way valve 2-way valve Outdoor fan motor Stepping motor (electronic expansion valve) RX D Indoor apparatus controller TX D Serial interface 71 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 10. ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS Absolute Maximum Ratings (T A = 25 ˚C) Parameter Symbol Rating Unit V DD –0.5 to +7.0 V AV DD –0.5 to V DD + 0.5 V AV SS –0.5 to +0.5 V –0.5 to V DD + 0.5 V –0.5 to V DD + 0.5 V Note 20 mA Output pins other than those in the note 4.0 mA Total of all output pins 200 mA All output pins –3.0 mA Total of all output pins –25 mA AV SS – 0.5 to AV DD + 0.5 V AV REF AV SS – 0.5 to AV DD + 0.5 V Operating ambient temperature TA –40 to +85 ˚C Storage temperature T stg –60 to +150 ˚C Power supply voltage Input voltage VI Output voltage VO Low-level output current I OL High-level output current I OH Analog input voltage V IAN A/D converter reference input voltage Test conditions Pins other than P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 pins Note P00/RTP0-P03/RTP3, P04/PWM0, P05/TCUD/PWM1, P06/TIUD/TO40, P07/TCLRUD, P10-P17, and P80/TO00-P85/TO05 pins. Caution Product quality may suffer if the absolute rating is exceeded for any parameter, even momentarily. In other words, an absolute maxumum rating is a value at which the possibility of psysical damage to the product cannnot be ruled out. Care must therefore be taken to ensure that the these ratings are not exceeded during use of the product. Recommended Operating Conditions Oscillation frequency TA V DD 3 MHz ≤ f XX ≤ 8 MHz –40 to +85 ˚C +5.0 V ± 10 % Capacitance (T A = 25 ˚C, V SS = VDD = 0 V) Parameter 72 Symbol Test conditions MIN. TYP. MAX. Unit Input capacitance CI f = 1 MHz 20 pF Output capacitance CO 0 V except measured pins 20 pF I/O capacitance C IO 20 pF µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Oscillator Characteristics (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, V SS = 0 V) Resonator Ceramic resonator or crystal resonator Recommended circuit VSS X1 C1 Parameter MIN. MAX. Unit Oscillation frequency (f XX) 3 8 MHz X1 input frequency (f X) 3 8 MHz X1 rise/fall time (t XR, t XF) 0 30 ns X1 input high-/low-level width (t WXH , t WXL ) 40 170 ns X2 C2 External clock X1 X2 Leave unconnected HCMOS inverter Caution When using system clock oscillation circuits, to reduce the effect of the wiring capacitouce, etc, wire the area indicated by dotted-line as follows: • Make the wiring as short as possible. • Do not allow the wiring to intersect other signal lines. Keep it away from other lines in which varying high currents flow. • Make sure that the ground point of the oscillation circuit capacitor is always at the same electric potential as VSS. Do not allow the wiring to be grounded to a ground pattern in which very high currents are flowing. • Do not extract signals from the oscillation circuit. 73 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A DC Characteristics (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, V SS = 0 V) Parameter Symbol Low-level input voltage V IL1 Note 1 V IL2 High-level input voltage Low-level output voltage High-level output voltage Test conditions MIN. TYP. MAX. Unit 0 0.8 V Note 2 0 0.2V DD V V IH1 Note 1 2.2 V V IH2 Note 2 0.8V DD V V OL1 Note 3 I OL = 2.0 mA 0.45 V V OL2 Note 4 I OL = 15 mA 1.5 V V OL3 Note 5 I OL = 10 mA 1.5 V V OH I OH = –400 µ A V DD – 1.0 V Input leakage current I LI 0 V ≤ V I ≤ V DD, AV DD = V DD ±10 µA Output leakage current I LO 0 V ≤ V O ≤ V DD , AV DD = V DD ±10 µA V DD supply current I DD1 Operating mode 70 120 mA I DD2 HALT mode 45 70 mA Data retention voltage V DDDR STOP mode Data retention current I DDDR STOP mode Pull-up resistance RL 2.5 V V DDDR = 2.5 V 2 10 µA V DDDR = 5.0 V ± 10 % 10 50 µA 60 150 kΩ VI = 0 V 15 Notes 1. Pins other than those specified in Note 2. 2. RESET, X1, X2, P20/NMI, P21/INTP0, P22/INTP1, P23/INTP2, P24/INTP3/TI, P25/INTP4, P32/ SO/SB0, P33/SI/SB1 and P34/SCK pins. 3. Pins other than those specified in Notes 4 and 5. 4. P80/TO00-P85/TO05 pins (When I OL = 15 mA is in operation, up to three pins can be ON simultaneously.) 5. P00/RTP0-P03/RTP3, P04/PWM0, P05/TCUD/PWM1, P06/TIUD/TO40 and P07/TCLRUD pins (When I OL = 10 mA is in operation, up to four pins can be ON simultaneously.) as well as P10-P17 pins (When I OL = 10 mA is in operation, up to four pins can be ON simultaneously.). Caution When the P80-P85, P00-P07, and P10-P17 pins are not used under the conditions specified in Notes 4 and 5, they have the same characteristics as in Note 3. 74 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A AC Characteristics (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, V SS = 0 V, C L = 100 pF, f XX = 8 MHz) Read/Write Operation (when general-purpose memory is connected) Parameter Symbol Test conditions MIN. MAX. Unit 166.7 ns System clock cycle time t CYK 62.5 Address setup time (vs. ASTB ↓) t SAST 7 ns Address hold time (vs. ASTB ↓) t HSTA 11 ns RD ↓ → address float time t FRA 24 ns Address → data input time t DAID 100 ns RD ↓ → data input time t DRID 49 ns ASTB ↓ → RD ↓ delay time t DSTR 15 ns Data hold time (vs. RD ↑) t HRID 0 ns RD ↑ → address active time t DRA 17 ns RD low-level width tWRL 63 ns ASTB high-level width t WSTH 14 ns WR ↓ → data output time t DWOD ASTB ↓ → WR ↓ delay time t DSTW 15 ns WR ↑ → ASTB ↑ delay time t DWST 78 ns Data setup time (vs. WR ↑) t SODW 57 ns Data hold time (vs. WR ↑) t HWOD 8 ns WR low-level width t WWL 63 ns 21 ns t CYK-dependent Bus Timing Definition Parameter Arithmetic expression MIN./MAX. Unit t SAST (0.5 + a) T – 24 MIN. ns t HSTA 0.5T – 20 MIN. ns t WSTH (0.5 + a) T – 17 MIN. ns t DSTR 0.5T – 16 MIN. ns t WRL (1.5 + n) T – 30 MIN. ns t DAID (2.5 + a + n) T – 56 MAX. ns t DRID (1.5 + n) T – 44 MAX. ns t DRA 0.5T – 14 MIN. ns t DSTW 0.5T – 16 MIN. ns t DWST 1.5T – 15 MIN. ns t WWL (1.5 + n) T – 30 MIN. ns t DWOD 0.5T – 10 MAX. ns t SODW (1 + n) T – 5 MIN. ns Remarks 1. T = t CYK = 1/f CLK (f CLK refers to the internal system clock frequency.) 2. a becomes 1 when the address wait is inserted. Otherwise, it becomes 0. 3. n refers to the number of wait cycles that is inserted by specifying the PWC register. 4. Only the bus timings indicated in this table depend on t CYK. 75 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Serial Operation (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, VDD = +5 V ± 10 %, VSS = 0 V) Parameter Symbol Serial clock cycle time t CYSK Serial clock low-level t WSKL width Serial clock high-level t WSKH width Test conditions MIN. MAX. Unit SCK output Internal 8 dividing 500 ns SCK input External clock 500 ns SCK output Internal 8 dividing 210 ns SCK input External clock 210 ns SCK output Internal 8 dividing 210 ns SCK input External clock 210 ns SI setup time (vs. SCK ↑) t SRXSK 80 ns SI hold time (vs. SCK ↑) t HSKRX 80 ns SCK ↓ → SO delay time t DSKTX R = 1 kΩ, C = 100 pF 210 ns Up/Down Counter Operation (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, V SS = 0 V) Parameter TIUD high-/low-level Symbol tWTIUH, t WTIUL MAX. Unit 2T ns Mode 4 4T ns t WTCUH, t WTCUL Other than mode 4 2T ns Mode 4 4T ns 2T ns width TCLRUD high-/low-level width t WCLUH, tWCLUL TCUD setup time (vs. TIUD ↑) t STCU Mode 3 T ns TCUD hold time (vs. TIUD ↑) t HTCU Mode 3 T ns TIUD setup time (vs. TCUD) t S4TIU Mode 4 2T ns TIUD hold time (vs. TCUD) t H4TIU Mode 4 2T ns TIUD & TCUD cycle time t CYC Other than mode 4 4 MHz t CYC4 Mode 4 2 MHz Remark T = tCYK = 1/fCLK (fCLK refers to the internal system clock frequency.) 76 MIN. Other than mode 4 width TCUD high-/low-level Test conditions µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Other Operations (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, VSS = 0 V) Parameter Symbol Test conditions MIN. MAX. Unit NMI high-/low-level width t WNIH, t WNIL 2 µs RESET high-/low-level width t WRSH, t WRSL 1.5 µs Ts = T 250 ns Ts = 4T 1.0 µs Ts = 8T 2.0 µs Ts = 16T 4.0 µs Ts = T 250 ns Ts = 4T 1.0 µs Ts = 8T 2.0 µs Ts = 16T 4.0 µs Ts = T 250 ns Ts = 4T 1.0 µs Ts = T 250 ns Ts = 4T 1.0 µs Ts = 8T 2.0 µs Ts = 16T 4.0 µs Ts = 64T 16.0 µs Ts = 128T 32.0 µs Ts = 256T 64.0 µs Ts = T 250 ns Ts = 4T 1.0 µs Ts = 8T 2.0 µs Ts = 16T 4.0 µs INTP0 high-/low-level t WI0H, t WI0L width INTP1 high-/low-level t WI1H, t WI1L width INTP2 high-/low-level t WI2H, t WI2L width INTP3(TI) high-/low- t WI3H, t WI3L level width INTP4 high-/low-level width t WI4H, t WI4L Remarks 1. T = t CYK = 1/f CLK (f CLK refers to the internal system clock frequency.) 2. Ts refers to the input sampling frequency. INTP0-INTP4 can be selected to programmable. 77 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A A/D Converter Characteristics (T A = –40 to +85 ˚C, V DD = +5 V ± 10 %, VSS = AV SS = 0 V, V DD – 0.5 V ≤ AV DD ≤ V DD) Parameter Symbol Test conditions MIN. Resolution Total TYP. 10 error Note 1 Conversion time Sampling time t CONV t SAMP Zero-scale error Note 1 error Note 1 Nonlinearity error Note 1 Analog input voltage Note 2 V IAN Analog input impedance R AN 4.5 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±0.4 %FSR 3.4 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±0.7 %FSR ±1/2 LSB 62.5 ns ≤ t CYK < 80 ns 208 t CYK 80 ns ≤ t CYK ≤ 166.6 ns 169 t CYK 62.5 ns ≤ t CYK < 80 ns 24 t CYK 80 ns ≤ t CYK ≤ 166.6 ns 20 t CYK 4.5 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±2.5 LSB 3.4 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±4.5 LSB 4.5 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±2.5 LSB 3.4 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±4.5 LSB 4.5 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±2.5 LSB 3.4 V ≤ AV REF ≤ AV DD ±1.5 ±4.5 LSB AVREF + 0.3 V –0.3 When not sampling 10 When sampling Reference voltage AV REF AV REF1 current AI REF AV DD supply current AI DD A/D converter data retention current AI DDDR Unit bit Quantization error Full-scale MAX. Note 3 3.4 Operating mode STOP mode MΩ AV DDDR = 2.5 V AV DDDR = 5 V ± 10 % AV DD V 1.0 3.0 mA 2.0 6.0 mA 2 10 µA 10 50 µA Notes 1. The quantization error is excluded. 2. When –0.3 V ≤ V IAN ≤ 0 V, the conversion result becomes 000H. When 0 V < V IAN < AV REF , the conversion is performed with the 10-bit resolution. When AV REF ≤ V IAN ≤ +0.3 V, the conversion result becomes 3FFH. 3. The analog input impedance at the time of sampling is the same as the equivalent circuit shown below. (The values in the diagram are TYP. values; they are not guaranteed values) 1 kΩ Analog input pin 25 pF (Input capacitance included) 78 4 pF µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Cautions 1. When using the P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 pins for both digital and analog inputs, the previously described characteristics are not guaranteed. Therefore, ensure that all of the eight P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 pins are used either for analog input or digital input. 2. When using the P70/ANI0-P77/ANI7 pins as digital input, make sure to set that AVDD = V DD , and AV SS = V SS. AC Timing Test Point VDD 0.8 VDD or 2.2 V 0.8 VDD or 2.2 V Test point 0.2 VDD or 0.8 V 0.2 VDD or 0.8 V 0V 79 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Read Operation tCYK (CLK) A8-A15 (Output) High-order address tDAID tSAST AD0-AD7 (Input/output) Hi-Z High-order address Hi-Z Low-order address (Output) Hi-Z Data (Input) tWSTH Low-order address (Output) tHRID ASTB (Output) tHSTA tFRA RD (Output) tDSTR tDRID tDRA tWRL Write Operation (CLK) A8-A15 (Output) High-order address High-order address tSAST AD0-AD7 (Output) Low-order address (Output) Undefined Data (Output) tWSTH tHWOD ASTB (Output) tHSTA tDWST WR (Output) tDSTW tDWOD tSODW tWWL 80 Low-order address (Output) Hi-Z µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Serial Operation tCYSK tWSKH tWSKL SCK tDSKTX SO SI tSRXSK tHSKRX Up/Down Counter (Timer 4) Input Timing tWTIUH TIUD tWTIUL tSTCU tHTCU tWTCUL TCUD tWTCUH tWCLUH TCLRUD tWCLUL TIUD tS4TIU tH4TIU tS4TIU tH4TIU TCUD 81 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Interrupt Input Timing tWNIH tWNIL 0.8 VDD NMI 0.2 VDD tWInH tWInL 0.8 VDD INTPn 0.2 VDD Remark n = 0 to 4 Reset Input Timing tWRSH tWRSL 0.8 VDD RESET 0.2 VDD 82 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 11. PACKAGE DRAWING 80 PIN PLASTIC QFP (14×20) A B 41 40 64 65 F Q 5°±5° S D C detail of lead end 25 24 80 1 G H I M J M P K N L P80GF-80-3B9-2 NOTE Each lead centerline is located within 0.15 mm (0.006 inch) of its true position (T.P.) at maximum material condition. ITEM MILLIMETERS INCHES A 23.6 ± 0.4 0.929 ± 0.016 B 20.0 ± 0.2 0.795 +0.009 –0.008 C 14.0 ± 0.2 0.551+0.009 –0.008 D 17.6 ± 0.4 0.693 ± 0.016 F 1.0 0.039 G 0.8 0.031 H 0.35 ± 0.10 0.014 +0.004 –0.005 I 0.15 0.006 J 0.8 (T.P.) 0.031 (T.P.) K 1.8 ± 0.2 0.071 –0.009 L 0.8 ± 0.2 0.031+0.009 –0.008 M 0.15+0.10 –0.05 0.006+0.004 –0.003 N 0.15 0.006 P 2.7 0.106 Q 0.1 ± 0.1 0.004 ± 0.004 S 3.0 MAX. 0.119 MAX. +0.008 83 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A 12. RECOMMENDED SOLDERING CONDITIONS These products should be soldered and mounted under the conditions recommended below. For details of recommended soldering conditions, refer to the information document Semiconductor Device Mounting Technology Manual (C10535E). For soldering methods and conditions other than those recommended, please contact your NEC sales representative. Table 12-1. Surface Mount Type Soldering Conditions µ PD78363AGF-×××-3B9: 80-Pin Plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) µ PD78365AGF-3B9 : 80-Pin Plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) µ PD78366AGF-×××-3B9: 80-Pin Plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) µ PD78368AGF-×××-3B9: 80-Pin Plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Soldering method Soldering conditions Recommended condition symbol Infrared reflow Package peak temperature: 235 ˚C, Duration: 30 sec. max. (210 ˚C or above) Number of times: 3 max. IR35-00-3 VPS Package peak temperature: 215 ˚C, Duration: 40 sec. max. (200 ˚C or above) Number of times: 3 max. VP15-00-3 Wave soldering Solder bath temperature: 260 ˚C or less, Time: 10 sec. max., Number of times: 1, Pre-heating temperature: 120 ˚C max. (Package surface temperature) WS60-00-1 Partial heating Pin temperature: 300 ˚C or less Duration: 3 sec. max. (per side of device) – Caution Use of more than one soldering method should be avoided (except in the case of partial heating). 84 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A APPENDIX A. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN µPD78366A AND µPD78328 Product name µPD78366A Item Minimum instruction execution time Internal memory 125 ns µPD78328 internal clock : 16 MHz external clock : 8 MHz 250 ns ROM 32K bytes 16K bytes RAM 2K bytes 512 bytes Memory space 64K bytes (can be externally expanded) General-purpose registers 8 bits × 16 × 8 banks Number of basic instructions 115 Instruction set • • • • 111 16-bit transfer/operation Multiplication/division (16 bits × 16 bits, 32 bits ÷ 16 bits) Bit manipulation String • Sum-of-products operation (16 bits × 16 bits + 32 bits) • Relative operation I/O lines internal clock : 8 MHz, external clock : 16 MHz — Input 14 (of which 8 are multiplexed with analog input) 11 (of which 8 are multiplexed with analog input) I/O 49 41 Real-time pulse unit • • • • • 16-bit timer × 5 16-bit compare register × 7 16-bit capture register × 3 16-bit capture/compare register × 2 Two output modes selectable Mode 0, set-reset output : 6 channels Mode 1, buffer output : 6 channels • • • • 16-bit timer × 3 16-bit compare register × 14 16-bit capture/compare register × 1 Two output modes selectable Mode 0, set-reset output : 6 channels toggle output : 1 channel Mode 1, buffer output : 8 channels • 16-bit resolution PWM output: 1 channel Real-time output port 4 (buffer output in 4-bit units) 4/8 (buffer output in 4-/8-bit units) PWM unit 8-/9-/10-/12-bit resolution variable PWM output: 2 channels 8-bit resolution PWM output: 1 channel A/D converter 10-bit resolution, 8 channels Serial interface Dedicated baud rate generator UART (with pin selection function) : 1 channel Clocked serial interface/SBI : 1 channel Dedicated baud rate generator UART : 1 channel Clocked serial interface/SBI : 1 channel Interrupt function • External: 6, internal: 14 (2 multiplexed with external) • 4 programmable priority levels • External: 4, internal: 17 • 3 programmable priority levels • Three processing selectable (vectored interrupt/macro service/context switching) Test source None Internal: 1 PLL control circuit Provided (external 8 MHz → internal: 16 MHz) None Package • 80-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) • 64-pin plastic shrink DIP • 64-pin plastic QFP (14 × 20 mm) Others • Watchdog timer • Standby functions (HALT mode, STOP mode) 85 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A APPENDIX B. TOOLS B.1 DEVELOPMENT TOOLS The following development tools are available to support the system development using µPD78366A : Language Processor 78K/III series relocatable assembler (RA78K3) A relocatable assembler, that can be used commonly for the 78K/III series products. Since this assembler is provided with macro functions, it enhances the developmnt efficency. A structured assembler, that can explicitly describe the program control structure, is also supplied, so that the program productivity and maintainability can be improved. Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/ATTM and its OS Order code (product name) 3.5" 2HD µS5A13RA78K3 5" 2HD µS5A10RA78K3 3.5" 2HC µS7B13RA78K3 5" 2HC µS7B10RA78K3 MS-DOSTM PC DOSTM compatible model 78K/III series C compiler (CC78K3) Supply media HP9000 series 700TM HP-UXTM DAT µS3P16RA78K3 SPARC stationTM SunOSTM Cartridge tape µS3K15RA78K3 NEWSTM NEWS-OSTM (QIC-24) µS3R15RA78K3 This is a C compiler that can be commonly used for 78K/III series. This program converts the program written in C language to object codes microcomputer can execute. When using this compiler, the 78K/III series relocatable assembler (RA78K3) is necessary. Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/AT and its OS Supply media Order code (product name) 3.5" 2HD µS5A13CC78K3 5" 2HD µS5A10CC78K3 3.5" 2HC µS7B13CC78K3 5" 2HC µS7B10CC78K3 MS-DOS PC DOS compatible model HP9000 series 700 HP-UX DAT µS3P16CC78K3 SPARC station SunOS Cartridge tape µS3K15CC78K3 NEWS NEWS-OS (QIC-24) µS3R15CC78K3 Remark The operations of the relocatable assembler and C compiler are guaranteed only on the specified host machine and OS described above. 86 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Hardware PROM Writing Tools PG-1500 This is a PROM programmer that can program PROM-contained single-chip microcontrollers in standalone mode or under control of a host machine when the accessory board and an optional programmer adapter are connected. It can also program representative PROMs from 256K-bit to 4M-bit models. PA-78P368GF PA-78P368KL PROM programmer adapters that writes a program to the µPD78P368A on a general-purpose PROM programmer such as the PG-1500. PA-78P368GF : for µPD78P368AGF PA-78P368KL : for µPD78P368AKL PG-1500 controller Connects the PG-1500 and a host machine with a serial intrface and a parallel interface to control the PG-1500 from the host machine. Software Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/AT and OS Supply media Order code (part number) 3.5" 2HD µS5A13PG1500 5" 2HD µS5A10PG1500 3.5" 2HC µS7B13PG1500 3.5" 2HC µS7B10PG1500 MS-DOS PC DOS compatible machines Remark The operation of the PG-1500 controller is guaranteed only on the above host machine and OS. Hardware Debugging Tools (When IE Controller Is Used) IE-78350-R In-circuit emulator that can be used to develop and debug application systems. Connected to a host machine for debugging. IE-78365-R-EM1 I/O emulation board that emulates the peripheral functions of the target device such as I/O ports. Emulation probe that connects the IE-78350-R to the target system. One conversion socket, EV-9200G-80 EV-9200G-80, used to connect the target system is supplied as an accessory. EP-78365GF-R IE-78350-R control program (IE controller) Program that controls the IE-78350-R on the host machine. It can automatically execute commands, enhancing debugging efficiency. Software Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/AT and compatible machines OS Supply media Order code (part number) 3.5" 2HD µS5A13IE78365A 5" 2HD µS5A10IE78365A 3.5" 2HC µS7B13IE78365A 3.5" 2HC µS7B10IE78365A MS-DOS PC DOS Remark The operation of the IE controller is guaranteed only on the above host machine and OS. 87 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Development Tool Configuration (When Using IE Controller) Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC series EWS RS-232-C IE-78350-R in-circuit emulator + IE-78365-R-EM1 I/O emulation board (optional) Software Emulation probe RS-232C PROM programmer Relocatable assembler C compiler PG-1500 controller EP-78365GF-R + Conversion socket for connecting the emulation probe and the target systemNote PG-1500 IE controller EV-9200G-80 Built-in PROM models µ PD78P368AGF µ PD78P368AKL + + Programmer adapter PA-78P368GF PA-78P368KL Note A socket is provided with the emulation probe. Remarks 1. Host machine and PG-1500 can be directly connected by RS-232-C. 2. 3.5-inch FD represents the supply media of software in this figure. 88 Target system µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Hardware Debugging Tools (When Integrated Debugger Is Used) IE-784000-R In-circuit emulation that can be used to develop and debug the application system. Connected to a host machine for debugging. IE-78350-R-EM-A Emulation board that emulates the peripheral functions of the target device such as I/O ports. IE-78365-R-EM1 I/O emulation board that emulates the peripheral functions of the target device such as I/O ports. EP-78365GF-R Emulation probe connecting the IE-784000-R to the target system. One conversion socket, EV9200G-80, used to connect the target system is supplied as an accessory. EV-9200G-80 IE-70000-98-IF-B Interface adapter to connect PC-9800 series (except notebook type personal computer) as the host machine. Interface adapter and cable to connect PC-9800 series notebook type personal computer as the host machine. IE-70000-PC-IF-B Interface adapter and cable to connect IBM PC as the host machine. IE-78000-R-SV3 Interface board to connect EWS as the host machine. IE-70000-98N-IF Integrated debugger Program controlling the in-circuit emulator for the 78K/III series. Used in combination with a device file (DF78365). Can debug a program coded in the C language, structured assembly (ID78K3) language, or assembly language at source program level. Can also split the screen of the host machine into windows on each of which information is displayed, enhancing debugging efficiency. Host machine Order code (part number) OS µSAA13ID78K3 µSAA10ID78K3 IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS 3.5" 2HC µSAB13ID78K3 + Windows 5" 2HC µSAB10ID78K3 machines (Japanese Windows) IBM PC/AT and compatible 3.5" 2HC µSBB13ID78K3 machines (English Windows) 5" 2HC µSBB10ID78K3 File containing information peculiar to device. Use in combination with an assembler (RA78 K3), C compiler (CC78K3), and integrated debugger (ID78K3). Host machine Order code (part number) OS Supply media PC-9800 series MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD µS5A13DF78365 5" 2HD µS5A10DF78365 IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS 3.5" 2HC µS7B13DF78365 machines 5" 2HC µS7B10DF78365 Software PC-9800 series Device File (DF78365) Supply media MS-DOS + WindowsTM 3.5" 2HD 5" 2HD Remark The operation of the integrated debugger and device file is guaranteed only on the above host machine and OS. 89 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Development Tool Configuration (When Using Integrated Debugger) Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/AT EWS IE-70000-98-IF-B IE-70000-98N-IF IE-70000-PC-IF-B IE-784000-R in-circuit emulator + IE-78350-R-EM-A emulation board (optional) Emulation probe + IE-78365-R-EM1 I/O emulation board (optional) Software RS-232C EP-78365GF-R Relocatable assembler C compiler PG-1500 controller + Conversion socket for connecting the emulation probe and the target systemNote PROM programmer PG-1500 Integrated Device file debugger Built-in PROM models EV-9200G-80 µ PD78P368AGF µ PD78P368AKL + + Programmer adapter PA-78P368GF PA-78P368KL Note A socket is provided with the emulation probe. Remarks 1. Desk top-type PC represents host machine in this figure. 2. 3.5-inch FD represents the supply media of software in this figure. 90 Target system µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A B.2 EMBEDDED SOFTWARE The following embedded software is available for enhancing the efficiency of program development and maintenance. REAL-TIME OS Real-time OS (RX78K/III)Note RX78K/III is intended to implement a multi-tasking environment for use in the control field where real-time capability is a must. It can allocate the idle time of the CPU to other processing to improve the overall performance of the system. RX78K/III provides system calls conforming to the µITRON specification. The RX78K/III package supplies a tool (configurator) to create the nucleus of RX78K/III and multiple information tables. Host machine PC-9800 series IBM PC/AT and compatible machines Order code (part number) OS Supply media MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD Pending PC DOS 5" 2HD 3.5" 2HC Pending Pending 5" 2HC Pending Note Under development Caution Before purchasing this product, you are requested to conclude a contract licensing use by filling out a specified form. Remark When using the RX78K/III real-time OS, the RA78K3 assembler package (optional) is necessary. 91 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Fuzzy Inference Development Support System Fuzzy knowledge data Program that supports input/editing and evaluation (simulation) of fuzzy knowledge (fuzzy rules and membership functions). creation tool Host machine Order code (part number) (FE9000, FE9200) OS Supply media µS5A13FE9000 µS5A10FE9000 IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS µS7B13FE9200 + machines Windows 5" 2HC µS7B10FE9200 Program that converts the fuzzy knowledge data obtained by using the fuzzy knowledge data Translator creation tool into assembler source program for the RA78K/III. (FT78K3)Note Host machine Order code (part number) OS Supply media PC-9800 series MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD µS5A13FT78K3 5" 2HD µS5A10FT78K3 IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS 3.5" 2HC µS7B13FT78K3 machines 5" 2HC µS7B10FT78K3 Fuzzy inference module Program that executes fuzzy inference when linked with the fuzzy knowledge data converted by the translator. (FI78K/III)Note Host machine Order code (part number) OS Supply media µS5A13FI78K3 PC-9800 series MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD 5" 2HD µS5A10FI78K3 IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS 3.5" 2HC µS7B13FI78K3 machines 5" 2HC µS7B10FI78K3 Fuzzy inference debugger Support software that evaluates and adjusts the fuzzy knowledge data at the hardware level by using an in-circuit emulator. (FD78K/III) Host machine Order code (part number) OS Supply media PC-9800 series MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD µS5A13FD78K3 µS5A10FD78K3 5" 2HD IBM PC/AT and compatible PC DOS 3.5" 2HC µS7B13FD78K3 µS7B10FD78K3 machines 5" 2HC PC-9800 series MS-DOS 3.5" 2HD 5" 2HD 3.5" 2HC Note Under development 92 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A [MEMO] 93 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A NOTES FOR CMOS DEVICES 1 PRECAUTION AGAINST ESD FOR SEMICONDUCTORS Note: Strong electric field, when exposed to a MOS device, can cause destruction of the gate oxide and ultimately degrade the device operation. Steps must be taken to stop generation of static electricity as much as possible, and quickly dissipate it once, when it has occurred. Environmental control must be adequate. When it is dry, humidifier should be used. It is recommended to avoid using insulators that easily build static electricity. Semiconductor devices must be stored and transported in an anti-static container, static shielding bag or conductive material. All test and measurement tools including work bench and floor should be grounded. The operator should be grounded using wrist strap. Semiconductor devices must not be touched with bare hands. Similar precautions need to be taken for PW boards with semiconductor devices on it. 2 HANDLING OF UNUSED INPUT PINS FOR CMOS Note: No connection for CMOS device inputs can be cause of malfunction. If no connection is provided to the input pins, it is possible that an internal input level may be generated due to noise, etc., hence causing malfunction. CMOS device behave differently than Bipolar or NMOS devices. Input levels of CMOS devices must be fixed high or low by using a pull-up or pull-down circuitry. Each unused pin should be connected to V DD or GND with a resistor, if it is considered to have a possibility of being an output pin. All handling related to the unused pins must be judged device by device and related specifications governing the devices. 3 STATUS BEFORE INITIALIZATION OF MOS DEVICES Note: Power-on does not necessarily define initial status of MOS device. Production process of MOS does not define the initial operation status of the device. Immediately after the power source is turned ON, the devices with reset function have not yet been initialized. Hence, power-on does not guarantee out-pin levels, I/O settings or contents of registers. Device is not initialized until the reset signal is received. Reset operation must be executed immediately after power-on for devices having reset function. 94 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A Regional Information Some information contained in this document may vary from country to country. Before using any NEC product in your application, please contact the NEC office in your country to obtain a list of authorized representatives and distributors. They will verify: • Device availability • Ordering information • Product release schedule • Availability of related technical literature • Development environment specifications (for example, specifications for third-party tools and components, host computers, power plugs, AC supply voltages, and so forth) • Network requirements In addition, trademarks, registered trademarks, export restrictions, and other legal issues may also vary from country to country. NEC Electronics Inc. (U.S.) NEC Electronics (Germany) GmbH NEC Electronics Hong Kong Ltd. Santa Clara, California Tel: 800-366-9782 Fax: 800-729-9288 Benelux Office Eindhoven, The Netherlands Tel: 040-2445845 Fax: 040-2444580 Hong Kong Tel: 2886-9318 Fax: 2886-9022/9044 NEC Electronics (Germany) GmbH Duesseldorf, Germany Tel: 0211-65 03 02 Fax: 0211-65 03 490 NEC Electronics Hong Kong Ltd. Velizy-Villacoublay, France Tel: 01-30-67 58 00 Fax: 01-30-67 58 99 Seoul Branch Seoul, Korea Tel: 02-528-0303 Fax: 02-528-4411 NEC Electronics (France) S.A. NEC Electronics Singapore Pte. Ltd. Spain Office Madrid, Spain Tel: 01-504-2787 Fax: 01-504-2860 United Square, Singapore 1130 Tel: 253-8311 Fax: 250-3583 NEC Electronics (France) S.A. NEC Electronics (UK) Ltd. Milton Keynes, UK Tel: 01908-691-133 Fax: 01908-670-290 NEC Electronics Italiana s.r.1. Milano, Italy Tel: 02-66 75 41 Fax: 02-66 75 42 99 NEC Electronics Taiwan Ltd. NEC Electronics (Germany) GmbH Scandinavia Office Taeby, Sweden Tel: 08-63 80 820 Fax: 08-63 80 388 Taipei, Taiwan Tel: 02-719-2377 Fax: 02-719-5951 NEC do Brasil S.A. Sao Paulo-SP, Brasil Tel: 011-889-1680 Fax: 011-889-1689 J96. 8 95 µPD78363A, 78365A, 78366A, 78368A MS-DOS and windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United states and/or other countries. PC/AT and PC DOS are trademarks of IBM Corporation. HP9000 series 700 and HP-UX are trademarks of Hewlett-Packard Company. SPARCstation is a trademark of SPARC International, Inc. SunOS is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc. NEWS and NEWS-OS are trademarks of Sony Corporation. TRON is an abbreviation of The Realtime Operating system Nucleus. ITRON is an abbreviation of Industrial TRON. The export of these products from Japan is regulated by the Japanese government. The export of some or all of these products may be prohibited without governmental license. To export or re-export some or all of these products from a country other than Japan may also be prohibited without a license from that country. Please call an NEC sales representative. Lisence not needed : µPD78365A The customer must judge the need for license : µPD78363A, 78366A, 78368A No part of this document may be copied or reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of NEC Corporation. NEC Corporation assumes no responsibility for any errors which may appear in this document. NEC Corporation does not assume any liability for infringement of patents, copyrights or other intellectual property rights of third parties by or arising from use of a device described herein or any other liability arising from use of such device. No license, either express, implied or otherwise, is granted under any patents, copyrights or other intellectual property rights of NEC Corporation or others. While NEC Corporation has been making continuous effort to enhance the reliability of its semiconductor devices, the possibility of defects cannot be eliminated entirely. To minimize risks of damage or injury to persons or property arising from a defect in an NEC semiconductor device, customers must incorporate sufficient safety measures in its design, such as redundancy, fire-containment, and anti-failure features. NEC devices are classified into the following three quality grades: "Standard", "Special", and "Specific". The Specific quality grade applies only to devices developed based on a customer designated "quality assurance program" for a specific application. The recommended applications of a device depend on its quality grade, as indicated below. Customers must check the quality grade of each device before using it in a particular application. Standard: Computers, office equipment, communications equipment, test and measurement equipment, audio and visual equipment, home electronic appliances, machine tools, personal electronic equipment and industrial robots Special: Transportation equipment (automobiles, trains, ships, etc.), traffic control systems, anti-disaster systems, anti-crime systems, safety equipment and medical equipment (not specifically designed for life support) Specific: Aircrafts, aerospace equipment, submersible repeaters, nuclear reactor control systems, life support systems or medical equipment for life support, etc. The quality grade of NEC devices is "Standard" unless otherwise specified in NEC's Data Sheets or Data Books. If customers intend to use NEC devices for applications other than those specified for Standard quality grade, they should contact an NEC sales representative in advance. Anti-radioactive design is not implemented in this product. M4 96.5 2