Copyright ©2008 by Zilog, Inc. All rights reserved.
www.zilog.com
PS015313-0508
Product Specification
eZ80Acclaim!® Flash Microcontrollers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
PS015313-0508
DO NOT USE IN LIFE SUPPORT
LIFE SUPPORT POLICY
ZILOG'S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE
SUPPORT DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS PRIOR WRITTEN APPROVAL OF
THE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL OF ZILOG CORPORATION.
As used herein
Life support devices or systems are devices which (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body, or (b)
support or sustain life and whose failure to perform when properly used in accordance with instructions for
use provided in the labeling can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. A
critical component is any component in a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be
reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system or to affect its safety or
effectiveness.
Document Disclaimer
©2008 by Zilog, Inc. All rights reserved. Information in this publication concerning the devices,
applications, or technology described is intended to suggest possible uses and may be superseded. ZILOG,
INC. DOES NOT ASSUME LIABILITY FOR OR PROVIDE A REPRESENTATION OF ACCURACY
OF THE INFORMATION, DEVICES, OR TECHNOLOGY DESCRIBED IN THIS DOCUMENT.
ZILOG ALSO DOES NOT ASSUME LIABILITY FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INFRINGEMENT RELATED IN ANY MANNER TO USE OF INFORMATION, DEVICES, OR
TECHNOLOGY DESCRIBED HEREIN OR OTHERWISE. The information contained within this
document has been verified according to the general principles of electrical and mechanical engineering.
Zilog is a registered trademark of Zilog, Inc. in the United States and in other countries. eZ80Acclaim!,
eZ80, and Z80 are trademarks or registered trademarks of Zilog Inc. All other product or service names are
the property of their respective owners.
Warning:
PS015313-0508 Revision History
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
iii
Revision History
Each instance in Revision History reflects a change to this document from its previous
revision. For more details, refer to the corresponding pages and appropriate links given in
the table below.
Date
Revision
Level Section Description
Page
No
May 2008 13 Zilog Debug
Interface, ZDI-
Supported Protocol,
Figure 37 Typical
ZDI Debug Setup
Replaced ZPAK II with USB Smart Cable
Updated for Style guide
162,
163,
162
All
May 2007 12 Electrical
Characteristics
Serial Peripheral
Interface
Updated Table 144
Added note for SPI module
222
130
February
2007
11 Electrical
Characteristics
Updated Figure 53, Figure 54, and Figure 55.225,
226,
227
March
2005
10 Added registered trademark to eZ80® and eZ80Acclaim!®All
October
2004
09 Formatted to current publication standards All
Timer Control
Register
Clarified RST_EN descriptions. 81
Figure 58 Corrected CS rise time label from T8 to T6. 230
Figure 60 Corrected CS rise time label from T8 to T6. 233
Real-Time Clock
Oscillator and
Source Selection
Clarified language describing RTC drive frequency. 89
PS015313-0508 Table of Contents
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
iv
Table of Contents
Architectural Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Pin Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Pin Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Register Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
eZ80® CPU Core . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Reset Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Power-On Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Voltage Brownout Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Low-Power Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
SLEEP Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
HALT Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
General-Purpose Input/Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
GPIO Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
GPIO Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
GPIO Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
GPIO Control Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Interrupt Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Maskable Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Nonmaskable Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Chip Selects and Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Memory and I/O Chip Selects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Memory Chip Select Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
I/O Chip Select Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
WAIT Input Signal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Chip Selects During Bus Request/Bus Acknowledge Cycles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Bus Mode Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
eZ80 Bus Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Z80 Bus Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
IntelTM Bus Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Motorola Bus Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Chip Select Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Watchdog Timer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Watchdog Timer Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
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Watchdog Timer Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Watchdog Timer Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Programmable Reload Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Programmable Reload Timers Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Programmable Reload Timer Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Programmable Reload Timer Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Real-Time Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Real-Time Clock Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Real-Time Clock Alarm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Real-Time Clock Oscillator and Source Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Real-Time Clock Battery Backup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Real-Time Clock Recommended Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Real-Time Clock Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
UART Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
UART Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
UART Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
UART Recommended Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Baud Rate Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
BRG Control Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
UART Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Infrared Encoder/Decoder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
Transmit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Receive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Receiver Frequency Divider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Jitter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Infrared Encoder/Decoder Signal Pins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Loopback Testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Serial Peripheral Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
SPI Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
SPI Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
SPI Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
SPI Baud Rate Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI Configured as the Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI Configured as a Slave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
SPI Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
I2C Serial I/O Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
I2C General Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Transferring Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143
Clock Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144
Operating Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
I2C Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
Zilog Debug Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
ZDI-Supported Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
ZDI Clock and Data Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
ZDI Start Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
ZDI Register Addressing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
ZDI Write Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166
ZDI Read Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Operation of the eZ80F92 Device During ZDI Breakpoints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
Bus Requests During ZDI DEBUG Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169
ZDI Write Only Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170
ZDI Read Only Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171
ZDI Register Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171
On-Chip Instrumentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
Introduction to On-Chip Instrumentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
OCI Activation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
OCI Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
OCI Information Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
Random Access Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
RAM Control Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
Flash Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
Flash Memory Arrangement in eZ80F92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
Flash Memory Arrangement in the eZ80F93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
Flash Memory Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
Programming Flash Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Erasing Flash Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
Flash Control Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
eZ80®CPU Instruction Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Op-Code Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
On-Chip Oscillators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
20 MHz Primary Crystal Oscillator Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
32 kHz Real-Time Clock Crystal Oscillator Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
Electrical Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
DC Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
POR and VBO Electrical Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Typical Current Consumption Under Various Operating Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . 224
AC Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229
External Memory Read Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230
External Memory Write Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231
External I/O Read Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
External I/O Write Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
Wait State Timing for Read Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Wait State Timing for Write Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
General Purpose I/O Port Input Sample Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
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External Bus Acknowledge Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
External System Clock Driver (PHI) Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
Zilog Debug Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Packaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Ordering Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
Part Number Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243
Customer Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
1
Architectural Overview
Zilog’s eZ80F92 device is a high-speed single-cycle instruction-fetch microcontroller with
a maximum clock speed of 20 MHz. It is the first member of Zilog’s new eZ80Acclaim!®
product family, which offers on-chip Flash program memory.
The eZ80F92 device can operate in Z80® compatible addressing mode (64 KB) or full
24-bit addressing mode (16 MB). The rich peripheral set of the eZ80F92 device makes
it suitable for a variety of applications including industrial control, embedded communica-
tion, and point-of-sale terminals.
Additionally, Zilog offers the eZ80F93 device, which features scaled-down mem-
ory options. For clarity, this document refers to both devices collectively as the
eZ80F92 device, unless otherwise specified.
Features
The features of eZ80F92/eZ80F93 device include:
Single-cycle instruction fetch, high-performance, pipelined eZ80® CPU core1
eZ80F92 contains 128 KB Flash memory and 8 KB SRAM
eZ80F93 contains 64 KB Flash memory and 4 KB SRAM
Low power features including SLEEP mode, HALT mode, and selective peripheral
power-down control
Two UARTs with independent baud rate generators
SPI with independent clock rate generator
I2C with independent clock rate generator
IrDA-compliant infrared encoder/decoder
New DMA-like CPU instructions for efficient block data transfer
Glueless external peripheral interface with 4 Chip Selects, individual Wait State
generators, and an external WAIT input pin—supports Z80-, Intel-, and Motorola-
style buses
Fixed-priority vectored interrupts (both internal and external) and interrupt controller
Real-Time Clock with on-chip 32 kHz oscillator, selectable 50/60 Hz input, and
separate VDD pin for battery backup
Six 16-bit Counter/Timers with clock dividers and direct input/output drive
1. For simplicity, the term eZ80® CPU is referred to as CPU for the bulk of this document.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
2
Watchdog Timer (WDT)
24 bits of General-Purpose I/O and ZDI debug interfaces
100-pin LQFP package
3.0–3.6 V supply voltage with 5 V tolerant inputs
Operating Temperature Range:
Standard: 0 ºC to +70 ºC
Extended: –40 ºC to +105 ºC
All signals with an overline are active Low. For example, B/W, for which WORD
is active Low, and B/W, for which BYTE is active Low.
Power connections follow these conventional descriptions:
Block Diagram
Figure 1 on page 3 displays the block diagram of the eZ80F92 processor.
Connection Circuit Device
Power VCC VDD
Ground GND VSS
Note:
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
3
Figure 1.eZ80F92 Block Diagram
eZ80®
JTAG/ZDI
Debug
Interface
JTAG / ZDI Signals (5)
I
2
C
Serial
Interface
SCL
SDA
SPI
Serial
Parallel
Interface
SCK
SS
MISO
MOSI
UART
Universal
Asynchronous
CTS0/1
DCD0/1
DSR0/1
DTR0/1
RI0/1
RTS0/1
RXD0/1
TXD0/1
Receiver/
Transmitter
(2)
Crystal
X
IN
X
OUT
PHI
Oscillator
and
System Clock
Generator
GPIO
8-bit General
Purpose
I/O Port
(3)
PB[7:0]
PC[7:0]
PD[7:0]
Real-Time
Clock and
Programmable
Reload
Timer/Counter
(6)
WDT
Watchdog
Timer
Chip Select
&
Wait State
Generator
CS0
CS1
CS2
CS3
CPU
Controller
DATA[7:0]
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
ADDR[23:0]
BUSACK
BUSREQ
WAIT
INSTRD
IORQ
NMI
MREQ
RD
RESET
WR
Interrupt
Controller
Interrupt
Vector
[7:0]
Bus
T0_IN
T4_OUT
T5_OUT
RTC_XIN
RTC_XOUT
32 kHz
Oscillator
RTC_VDD
HALT_SLP
IrDA
Encoder/
Decoder
IR_TxD
IR_RxD
T1_IN
T2_IN
T3_IN
128 KB/64 KB
Flash
Memory
8 KB/4 KB
SRAM
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
4
Pin Description
Figure 2 displays the pin layout of the eZ80F92 device in the 100-pin LQFP package.
Table 1 on page 5 lists the pins and their functions.
Figure 2.100-Pin LQFP Configuration of the eZ80F92 Device
PD7/RI0
PD6/DCD0
PD5/DSR0
PD4/DTR0
PD3/CTS0
PD2/RTS0
PD1/RxD0/IR_RxD
PD0/TxD0/IR_TxD
VDD
TDI
TRIGOUT
TCK
TMS
VSS
RTC_VDD
RTC_XOUT
RTC_XIN
VSS
VDD
BUSACK
BUSREQ
NMI
RESET
PHI
SCL
SDA
VSS
PB7/MOSI
PB6/MISO
PB5/T5_OUT
PB4/T4_OUT
PB3/SCK
PB2/SS
PB1/T1_IN
PB0/T0_IN
VDD
XOUT
XIN
VSS
PC7/RI1
PC6/DCD1
PC5/DSR1
PC4/DTR1
PC3/CTS1
PC2//RTS1
PC1/RxD1
PC0/TxD1
ADDR0
ADDR1
ADDR2
ADDR3
ADDR4
ADDR5
VDD
VSS
ADDR6
ADDR7
ADDR8
ADDR9
ADDR10
ADDR11
ADDR12
ADDR13
ADDR14
VDD
VSS
ADDR15
ADDR16
ADDR17
ADDR18
ADDR19
ADDR20
ADDR21
ADDR22
ADDR23
CS0
CS1
CS2
CS3
VDD
VSS
DATA0
DATA1
DATA2
DATA3
DATA4
DATA5
DATA6
DATA7
VDD
VSS
IORQ
MREQ
RD
WR
INSTRD
WAIT
100-Pin LQFP
1
10
80
90
100
TDO
VDD
HALT_SLP
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
76
77
78
79
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
11
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
21
25
24
23
22
30
40
50
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
26
27
28
29
51
60
59
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
61
70
69
68
67
66
65
64
63
62
71
75
74
73
72
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
5
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
1 ADDR0 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
2 ADDR1 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
3 ADDR2 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
4 ADDR3 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
5 ADDR4 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
6
6 ADDR5 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
7V
DD Power Supply Power Supply.
8V
SS Ground Ground.
9 ADDR6 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
10 ADDR7 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
11 ADDR8 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
12 ADDR9 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
7
13 ADDR10 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
14 ADDR11 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
15 ADDR12 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
16 ADDR13 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
17 ADDR14 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
18 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
19 VSS Ground Ground.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
8
20 ADDR15 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
21 ADDR16 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
22 ADDR17 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
23 ADDR18 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
24 ADDR19 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
9
25 ADDR20 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
26 ADDR21 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
27 ADDR22 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
28 ADDR23 Address Bus Bidirectional Configured as an output in normal
operation. The address bus selects a
location in memory or I/O space to be read
or written. Configured as an input during
bus acknowledge cycles. Drives the Chip
Select/Wait State Generator block to
generate Chip Selects.
29 CS0 Chip Select 0 Output, Active Low CS0 Low indicates that an access is
occurring in the defined CS0 memory or
I/O address space.
30 CS1 Chip Select 1 Output, Active Low CS1 Low indicates that an access is
occurring in the defined CS1 memory or
I/O address space.
31 CS2 Chip Select 2 Output, Active Low CS2 Low indicates that an access is
occurring in the defined CS2 memory or
I/O address space.
32 CS3 Chip Select 3 Output, Active Low CS3 Low indicates that an access is
occurring in the defined CS3 memory or
I/O address space.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
10
33 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
34 VSS Ground Ground.
35 DATA0 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The eZ80Acclaim!®
drives these lines only during Write cycles
when the CPU is the bus master.
36 DATA1 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
37 DATA2 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
38 DATA3 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
39 DATA4 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
40 DATA5 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
41 DATA6 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
42 DATA7 Data Bus Bidirectional The data bus transfers data to and from I/O
and memory devices. The CPU drives these
lines only during Write cycles when the
CPU is the bus master.
43 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
44 VSS Ground Ground.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
11
45 IORQ Input/Output
Request
Bidirectional, Active
Low
IORQ indicates that the CPU is accessing a
location in I/O space. RD and WR indicate
the type of access. It is an input in bus
acknowledge cycles.
46 MREQ Memory
Request
Bidirectional, Active
Low
MREQ Low indicates that the CPU is
accessing a location in memory. The RD,
WR, and INSTRD signals indicate the type
of access. It is an input in bus acknowledge
cycles.
47 RD Read Output, Active Low RD Low indicates that the CPU is reading
from the current address location. This pin
is tristated during bus acknowledge cycles.
48 WR Write Output, Active Low WR indicates that the CPU is writing to the
current address location. This pin is tristated
during bus acknowledge cycles.
49 INSTRD Instruction
Read Indicator
Output, Active Low INSTRD (with MREQ and RD) indicates the
CPU is fetching an instruction from memory.
This pin is tristated during bus acknowledge
cycles.
50 WAIT WAIT Request Input, Active Low Driving the WAIT pin Low forces the CPU to
wait additional clock cycles for an external
peripheral or external memory to complete
its Read or Write operation.
51 RESET System Reset Schmitt Trigger Input,
Active Low
This signal is used to initialize the CPU.
This input must be Low for a minimum of 3
system clock cycles, and must be held Low
until the clock is stable. This input includes
a Schmitt trigger to allow RC rise times.
52 NMI Nonmaskable
Interrupt
Schmitt Trigger Input,
Active Low
The NMI input is a higher priority input than
the maskable interrupts. It is always
recognized at the end of an instruction,
regardless of the state of the interrupt
enable control bits. This input includes a
Schmitt trigger to allow RC rise times.
53 BUSREQ Bus Request Input, Active Low External devices can request the CPU to
release the memory interface bus for their
use, by driving this pin Low.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
12
54 BUSACK Bus
Acknowledge
Output, Active Low The CPU responds to a Low on BUSREQ,
by tristating the address, data, and control
signals, and by driving the BUSACK line
Low. During bus acknowledge cycles
ADDR[23:0], IORQ, and MREQ are inputs.
55 HALT_SLP HALT and
SLEEP
Indicator
Output, Active Low A Low on this pin indicates that the CPU
has entered either HALT or SLEEP mode
because of execution of either a HALT or
SLP instruction.
56 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
57 VSS Ground Ground.
58 RTC_XIN Real-Time
Clock Crystal
Input
Input This pin is the input to the low-power
32 kHz crystal oscillator for the Real-Time
Clock.
59 RTC_XOUT Real-Time
Clock Crystal
Output
Bidirectional This pin is the output from the low-power
32 kHz crystal oscillator for the Real-Time
Clock. This pin is an input when the RTC is
configured to operate from 50/60 Hz input
clock signals and the 32 kHz crystal
oscillator is disabled.
60 RTC_VDD Real-Time
Clock Power
Supply
Power supply for the Real-Time Clock and
associated 32 kHz oscillator. Isolated from
the power supply to the remainder of the
chip. A battery can be connected to this pin
to supply constant power to the Real-Time
Clock and 32 kHz oscillator.
61 VSS Ground Ground.
62 TMS JTAG Test
Mode Select
Input JTAG Mode Select Input.
63 TCK JTAG Test
Clock
Input JTAG and ZDI clock input.
64 TRIGOUT JTAG Test
Trigger Output
Output Active High trigger event indicator.
65 TDI JTAG Test
Data In
Bidirectional JTAG data input pin. Functions as ZDI data
I/O pin when JTAG is disabled.
66 TDO JTAG Test
Data Out
Output JTAG data output pin.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
13
67 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
68 PD0 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
TxD0 UART
Transmit Data
Output This pin is used by the UART to transmit
asynchronous serial data. This signal is
multiplexed with PD0.
IR_TxD IrDA Transmit
Data
Output This pin is used by the IrDA encoder/
decoder to transmit serial data. This signal
is multiplexed with PD0.
69 PD1 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
RxD0 Receive Data Input This pin is used by the UART to receive
asynchronous serial data. This signal is
multiplexed with PD1.
IR_RxD IrDA Receive
Data
Input This pin is used by the IrDA encoder/
decoder to receive serial data. This signal is
multiplexed with PD1.
70 PD2 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
RTS0 Request To
Send
Output, Active Low Modem control signal from UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PD2.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
14
71 PD3 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
CTS0 Clear To Send Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART. This
signal is multiplexed with PD3.
72 PD4 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
DTR0 Data Terminal
Ready
Output, Active Low Modem control signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PD4.
73 PD5 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
DSR0 Data Set
Ready
Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PD5.
74 PD6 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
DCD0 Data Carrier
Detect
Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PD6.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
15
75 PD7 GPIO Port D Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port D pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port D is multiplexed
with one UART.
RI0 Ring Indicator Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART. This
signal is multiplexed with PD7.
76 PC0 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
TxD1 Transmit Data Output This pin is used by the UART to transmit
asynchronous serial data. This signal is
multiplexed with PC0.
77 PC1 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
RxD1 Receive Data Input This pin is used by the UART to receive
asynchronous serial data. This signal is
multiplexed with PC1.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
16
78 PC2 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
RTS1 Request To
Send
Output, Active Low Modem control signal from UART. This
signal is multiplexed with PC2.
79 PC3 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
CTS1 Clear To Send Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PC3.
80 PC4 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
DTR1 Data Terminal
Ready
Output, Active Low Modem control signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PC4.
81 PC5 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
DSR1 Data Set
Ready
Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PC5.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
17
82 PC6 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
DCD1 Data Carrier
Detect
Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART. This
signal is multiplexed with PC6.
83 PC7 GPIO Port C Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port C pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output. Port C is multiplexed
with one UART.
RI1 Ring Indicator Input, Active Low Modem status signal to the UART.
This signal is multiplexed with PC7.
84 VSS Ground Ground.
85 XIN System Clock
Oscillator Input
Input This pin is the input to the onboard crystal
oscillator for the primary system clock. If an
external oscillator is used, its clock output
should be connected to this pin. When a
crystal is used, it should be connected
between XIN and XOUT.
86 XOUT System Clock
Oscillator
Output
Output This pin is the output of the onboard crystal
oscillator. When used, a crystal should be
connected between XIN and XOUT.
87 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
18
88 PB0 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
T0_IN Timer 0 In Input Alternate clock source for Programmable
Reload Timers 0 and 2. This signal is
multiplexed with PB0.
89 PB1 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
T1_IN Timer 1 In Input Alternate clock source for Programmable
Reload Timers 1 and 3. This signal is
multiplexed with PB1.
90 PB2 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
SS Slave Select Input, Active Low The slave select input line is used to select
a slave device in SPI mode. This signal is
multiplexed with PB2.
91 PB3 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
SCK SPI Serial
Clock
Bidirectional SPI serial clock. This signal is multiplexed
with PB3.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
19
92 PB4 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each Port
B pin, when programmed as output, can be
selected to be an open-drain or open-
source output.
T4_OUT Timer 4 Out Output Programmable Reload Timer 4 timer-out
signal. This signal is multiplexed with PB4.
93 PB5 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
T5_OUT Timer 5 Out Output Programmable Reload Timer 5 timer-out
signal. This signal is multiplexed with PB5.
94 PB6 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
MISO Master In,
Slave Out
Bidirectional The MISO line is configured as an input
when the CPU is an SPI master device and
as an output when CPU is an SPI slave
device. This signal is multiplexed with PB6.
95 PB7 GPIO Port B Bidirectional This pin can be used for general-purpose
I/O. It can be individually programmed as
input or output and can also be used
individually as an interrupt input. Each
Port B pin, when programmed as output,
can be selected to be an open-drain or
open-source output.
MOSI Master Out,
Slave In
Bidirectional The MOSI line is configured as an output
when the CPU is an SPI master device and
as an input when the CPU is an SPI slave
device. This signal is multiplexed with PB7.
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
20
Pin Characteristics
Table 2 lists the characteristics of each pin in the eZ80F92 device’s 100-pin LQFP pack-
age.
96 VDD Power Supply Power Supply.
97 VSS Ground Ground.
98 SDA I2C Serial Data Bidirectional This pin carries the I2C data signal.
99 SCL I2C Serial
Clock
Bidirectional This pin is used to receive and transmit the
I2C clock.
100 PHI System Clock Output This pin is an output driven by the internal
system clock.
Table 2. Pin Characteristics of the eZ80F92 Device
Pin
No Symbol Direction
Reset
Direction
Active
Low/High
Tristate
Output
Pull
Up/Down
Schmitt
Trigger
Input
Open Drain/
Source
1 ADDR0 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
2 ADDR1 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
3 ADDR2 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
4 ADDR3 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
5 ADDR4 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
6 ADDR5 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
7V
DD
8V
SS
9 ADDR6 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
10 ADDR7 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
11 ADDR8 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
12 ADDR9 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
13 ADDR10 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
14 ADDR11 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
15 ADDR12 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
Table 1. 100-Pin LQFP Pin Identification of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin No Symbol Function Signal Direction Description
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
21
16 ADDR13 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
17 ADDR14 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
18 VDD
19 VSS
20 ADDR15 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
21 ADDR16 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
22 ADDR17 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
23 ADDR18 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
24 ADDR19 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
25 ADDR20 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
26 ADDR21 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
27 ADDR22 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
28 ADDR23 I/O O N/A Yes No No No
29 CS0 OOLowNoNoNo No
30 CS1 OOLowNoNoNo No
31 CS2 OOLowNoNoNo No
32 CS3 OOLowNoNoNo No
33 VDD
34 VSS
35 DATA0 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
36 DATA1 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
37 DATA2 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
38 DATA3 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
39 DATA4 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
40 DATA5 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
41 DATA6 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
42 DATA7 I/O I N/A Yes No No No
43 VDD
Table 2. Pin Characteristics of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin
No Symbol Direction
Reset
Direction
Active
Low/High
Tristate
Output
Pull
Up/Down
Schmitt
Trigger
Input
Open Drain/
Source
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
22
44 VSS
45 IORQ I/O O Low Yes No No No
46 MREQ I/O O Low Yes No No No
47 RD O O Low Yes No No No
48 WR O O Low Yes No No No
49 INSTRD OOLowNoNoNo No
50 WAIT I I Low N/A No No N/A
51 RESET IILowN/ANoYesN/A
52 NMI IILowN/ANoYesN/A
53 BUSREQ I I Low N/A No No N/A
54 BUSACK OOLowNoNoNo No
55 HALT_SLP OOLowNoNoNo No
56 VDD
57 VSS
58 RTC_XIN I I N/A N/A No No N/A
59 RTC_XOUT I/O U N/A N/A No No No
60 RTC_VDD
61 VSS
62 TMS I I N/A N/A Up No N/A
63 TCK I I Rising (In)
Falling (Out)
N/A Up No N/A
64 TRIGOUT O O High No No No No
65 TDI I/O I N/A Yes No No No
66 TDO O U N/A Yes No No No
67 VDD
68 PD0 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
69 PD1 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
70 PD2 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
Table 2. Pin Characteristics of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin
No Symbol Direction
Reset
Direction
Active
Low/High
Tristate
Output
Pull
Up/Down
Schmitt
Trigger
Input
Open Drain/
Source
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
23
71 PD3 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
72 PD4 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
73 PD5 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
74 PD6 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
75 PD7 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
76 PC0 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
77 PC1 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
78 PC2 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
79 PC3 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
80 PC4 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
81 PC5 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
82 PC6 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
83 PC7 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
84 VSS
85 XIN I I N/A N/A No No N/A
86 XOUT OON/ANoNoNo No
87 VDD
88 PB0 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
89 PB1 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
90 PB2 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
91 PB3 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
92 PB4 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
93 PB5 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
94 PB6 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
95 PB7 I/O I N/A Yes No No OD & OS
96 VDD
97 VSS
98 SDA I/O I N/A Yes Up No OD
Table 2. Pin Characteristics of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin
No Symbol Direction
Reset
Direction
Active
Low/High
Tristate
Output
Pull
Up/Down
Schmitt
Trigger
Input
Open Drain/
Source
PS015313-0508 Architectural Overview
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
24
99 SCL I/O I N/A Yes Up No OD
100 PHI O O N/A Yes No No No
Note: I = Input, O = Output, I/O = Input and Output, U = Undefined.
Table 2. Pin Characteristics of the eZ80F92 Device (Continued)
Pin
No Symbol Direction
Reset
Direction
Active
Low/High
Tristate
Output
Pull
Up/Down
Schmitt
Trigger
Input
Open Drain/
Source
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
25
Register Map
All on-chip peripheral registers are accessed in the I/O address space. All I/O operations
employ 16-bit addresses. The upper byte of the 24-bit address bus is undefined during all
I/O operations (ADDR[23:16] = UU). All I/O operations using 16-bit addresses within the
range 0080h00FFh are routed to the on-chip peripherals. External I/O Chip Selects are
not generated if the address space programmed for the I/O Chip Selects overlaps the
0080h00FFh address range.
Registers at unused addresses within the 0080h00FFh range assigned to on-chip periph-
erals are not implemented. Read access to such addresses returns unpredictable values and
Write access produces no effect. Table 3 lists the register map for the eZ80F92 device.
Table 3. Register Map
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
Programmable Reload Counter/Timers
0080 TMR0_CTL Timer 0 Control Register 00 R/W 82
0081 TMR0_DR_L Timer 0 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR0_RR_L Timer 0 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
0082 TMR0_DR_H Timer 0 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR0_RR_H Timer 0 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
0083 TMR1_CTL Timer 1 Control Register 00 R/W 82
0084 TMR1_DR_L Timer 1 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR1_RR_L Timer 1 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
0085 TMR1_DR_H Timer 1 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR1_RR_H Timer 1 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
0086 TMR2_CTL Timer 2 Control Register 00 R/W 82
0087 TMR2_DR_L Timer 2 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR2_RR_L Timer 2 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
0088 TMR2_DR_H Timer 2 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR2_RR_H Timer 2 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
0089 TMR3_CTL Timer 3 Control Register 00 R/W 82
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
26
008A TMR3_DR_L Timer 3 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR3_RR_L Timer 3 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
008B TMR3_DR_H Timer 3 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR3_RR_H Timer 3 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
008C TMR4_CTL Timer 4 Control Register 00 R/W 82
008D TMR4_DR_L Timer 4 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR4_RR_L Timer 4 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
008E TMR4_DR_H Timer 4 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR4_RR_H Timer 4 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
008F TMR5_CTL Timer 5 Control Register 00 R/W 82
0090 TMR5_DR_L Timer 5 Data Register—Low Byte 00 R 83
TMR5_RR_L Timer 5 Reload Register—Low Byte 00 W 84
0091 TMR5_DR_H Timer 5 Data Register—High Byte 00 R 84
TMR5_RR_H Timer 5 Reload Register—High Byte 00 W 85
0092 TMR_ISS Timer Input Source Select Register 00 R/W 86
Watchdog Timer
0093 WDT_CTL Watchdog Timer Control Register100/20 R/W 74
0094 WDT_RR Watchdog Timer Reset Register XX W 75
General-Purpose Input/Output Ports
009A PB_DR Port B Data Register2XX R/W 43
009B PB_DDR Port B Data Direction Register FF R/W 44
009C PB_ALT1 Port B Alternate Register 1 00 R/W 44
009D PB_ALT2 Port B Alternate Register 2 00 R/W 44
009E PC_DR Port C Data Register2XX R/W 43
009F PC_DDR Port C Data Direction Register FF R/W 44
00A0 PC_ALT1 Port C Alternate Register 1 00 R/W 44
00A1 PC_ALT2 Port C Alternate Register 2 00 R/W 44
00A2 PD_DR Port D Data Register2XX R/W 43
00A3 PD_DDR Port D Data Direction Register FF R/W 44
Table 3. Register Map (Continued)
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
27
00A4 PD_ALT1 Port D Alternate Register 1 00 R/W 44
00A5 PD_ALT2 Port D Alternate Register 2 00 R/W 44
Chip Select/Wait State Generator
00A8 CS0_LBR Chip Select 0 Lower Bound Register 00 R/W 67
00A9 CS0_UBR Chip Select 0 Upper Bound Register FF R/W 68
00AA CS0_CTL Chip Select 0 Control Register E8 R/W 69
00AB CS1_LBR Chip Select 1 Lower Bound Register 00 R/W 67
00AC CS1_UBR Chip Select 1 Upper Bound Register 00 R/W 68
00AD CS1_CTL Chip Select 1 Control Register 00 R/W 69
00AE CS2_LBR Chip Select 2 Lower Bound Register 00 R/W 67
00AF CS2_UBR Chip Select 2 Upper Bound Register 00 R/W 68
00B0 CS2_CTL Chip Select 2 Control Register 00 R/W 69
00B1 CS3_LBR Chip Select 3 Lower Bound Register 00 R/W 67
00B2 CS3_UBR Chip Select 3 Upper Bound Register 00 R/W 68
00B3 CS3_CTL Chip Select 3 Control Register 00 R/W 69
On-Chip RAM Control
00B4 RAM_CTL RAM Control Register 80 R/W 192
00B5 RAM_ADDR_U RAM Address Upper Byte Register FF R/W 192
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Block
00B8 SPI_BRG_L SPI Baud Rate Generator Register—Low
Byte
02 R/W 136
00B9 SPI_BRG_H SPI Baud Rate Generator Register—
High Byte
00 R/W 136
00BA SPI_CTL SPI Control Register 04 R/W 137
00BB SPI_SR SPI Status Register 00 R 137
00BC SPI_TSR SPI Transmit Shift Register XX W 139
SPI_RBR SPI Receive Buffer Register XX R 139
Infrared Encoder/Decoder Block
00BF IR_CTL Infrared Encoder/Decoder Control 00 R/W 129
Table 3. Register Map (Continued)
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
28
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter 0 (UART0) Block
00C0 UART0_RBR UART 0 Receive Buffer Register XX R 112
UART0_THR UART 0 Transmit Holding Register XX W 112
UART0_BRG_L UART 0 Baud Rate Generator Register—
Low Byte
02 R/W 110
00C1 UART0_IER UART 0 Interrupt Enable Register 00 R/W 113
UART0_BRG_H UART 0 Baud Rate Generator Register—
High Byte
00 R/W 111
00C2 UART0_IIR UART 0 Interrupt Identification Register 01 R 114
UART0_FCTL UART 0 FIFO Control Register 00 W 115
00C3 UART0_LCTL UART 0 Line Control Register 00 R/W 116
00C4 UART0_MCTL UART 0 Modem Control Register 00 R/W 119
00C5 UART0_LSR UART 0 Line Status Register 60 R 120
00C6 UART0_MSR UART 0 Modem Status Register XX R 122
00C7 UART0_SPR UART 0 Scratch Pad Register 00 R/W 123
I2C Block
00C8 I2C_SAR I2C Slave Address Register 00 R/W 154
00C9 I2C_XSAR I2C Extended Slave Address Register 00 R/W 155
00CA I2C_DR I2C Data Register 00 R/W 155
00CB I2C_CTL I2C Control Register 00 R/W 157
00CC I2C_SR I2C Status Register F8 R 158
I2C_CCR I2C Clock Control Register 00 W 160
00CD I2C_SRR I2C Software Reset Register XX W 161
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter 1 (UART1) Block
00D0 UART1_RBR UART 1 Receive Buffer Register XX R 112
UART1_THR UART 1 Transmit Holding Register XX W 112
UART1_BRG_L UART 1 Baud Rate Generator Register—
Low Byte
02 R/W 110
Table 3. Register Map (Continued)
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
29
00D1 UART1_IER UART 1 Interrupt Enable Register 00 R/W 113
UART1_BRG_H UART 1 Baud Rate Generator Register—
High Byte
00 R/W 111
00D2 UART1_IIR UART 1 Interrupt Identification Register 01 R 114
UART1_FCTL UART 1 FIFO Control Register 00 W 115
00D3 UART1_LCTL UART 1 Line Control Register 00 R/W 116
00D4 UART1_MCTL UART 1 Modem Control Register 00 R/W 119
00D5 UART1_LSR UART 1 Line Status Register 60 R/W 120
00D6 UART1_MSR UART 1 Modem Status Register XX R/W 122
00D7 UART1_SPR UART 1 Scratch Pad Register 00 R/W 123
Low-Power Control
00DB CLK_PPD1 Clock Peripheral Power-Down Register 1 00 R/W 37
00DC CLK_PPD2 Clock Peripheral Power-Down Register 2 00 R/W 38
Real-Time Clock
00E0 RTC_SEC RTC Seconds Register3XX R/W 90
00E1 RTC_MIN RTC Minutes Register3XX R/W 91
00E2 RTC_HRS RTC Hours Register3XX R/W 92
00E3 RTC_DOW RTC Day-of-the-Week Register30X R/W 93
00E4 RTC_DOM RTC Day-of-the-Month Register3XX R/W 94
00E5 RTC_MON RTC Month Register3XX R/W 95
00E6 RTC_YR RTC Year Register3XX R/W 96
00E7 RTC_CEN RTC Century Register3XX R/W 97
00E8 RTC_ASEC RTC Alarm Seconds Register XX R/W 98
00E9 RTC_AMIN RTC Alarm Minutes Register XX R/W 99
00EA RTC_AHRS RTC Alarm Hours Register XX R/W 100
00EB RTC_ADOW RTC Alarm Day-of-the-Week Register 0X R/W 101
00EC RTC_ACTRL RTC Alarm Control Register 00 R/W 102
00ED RTC_CTRL RTC Control Register4x0xxx000b/
x0xxxx10b
R/W 103
Table 3. Register Map (Continued)
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
PS015313-0508 Register Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
30
Chip Select Bus Mode Control
00F0 CS0_BMC Chip Select 0 Bus Mode Control Register 02 R/W 70
00F1 CS1_BMC Chip Select 1 Bus Mode Control Register 02 R/W 70
00F2 CS2_BMC Chip Select 2 Bus Mode Control Register 02 R/W 70
00F3 CS3_BMC Chip Select 3 Bus Mode Control Register 02 R/W 70
Flash Memory Control Registers
00F5 FLASH_KEY Flash Key Register 00 W 198
00F6 FLASH_DATA Flash Data Register XX R/W 199
00F7 FLASH_ADDR_U Flash Address Upper Byte Register 0 R/W 199
00F8 FLASH_CTRL Flash Control Register 88 R/W 200
00F9 FLASH_FDIV Flash Frequency Divider Register501 R/W 201
00FA FLASH_PROT Flash Write/Erase Protection Register5FF R/W 202
00FB FLASH_IRQ Flash Interrupt Control Register 00 R/W 204
00FC FLASH_PAGE Flash Page Select Register 00 R/W 205
00FD FLASH_ROW Flash Row Select Register 00 R/W 205
00FE FLASH_COL Flash Column Select Register 00 R/W 206
00FF FLASH_PGCTL Flash Program Control Register 00 R/W 207
Notes
1. After an external pin reset, the Watchdog Timer Control register is reset to 00h. After a Watchdog Timer time-out
reset, the Watchdog Timer Control register is reset to 20h.
2. When the CPU reads this register, the current sampled value of the port is read.
3. Read Only if RTC registers are locked; Read/Write if RTC registers are unlocked.
4. After an external pin reset or a Watchdog Timer reset, the RTC Control register is reset to x0xxxx00b. After an
RTC Alarm sleep-mode recovery reset, the RTC Control register is reset to x0xxxx10b.
5. Read Only if Flash Memory is locked. Read/Write if Flash Memory is unlocked.
Table 3. Register Map (Continued)
Address
(hex) Mnemonic Name
Reset
(hex)
CPU
Access
Page
No
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Core
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
31
eZ80® CPU Core
The eZ80® is the first 8-bit CPU to support 16 MB linear addressing. Each software
module or task under a real-time executive or operating system can operate in Z80® com-
patible (64 KB) mode or full 24-bit (16 MB) address mode.
The CPU instruction set is a superset of the instruction sets for the Z80 and Z180 CPUs.
Z80 and Z180 programs can be executed on an eZ80 CPU with little or no modification.
Features
The eZ80 CPU features include:
Code-compatible with Z80 and Z180 products
24-bit linear address space
Single-cycle instruction fetch
Pipelined fetch, decode, and execute
Dual Stack Pointers for ADL (24-bit) and Z80 (16-bit) memory modes
24-bit CPU registers and ALU (Arithmetic Logic Unit)
Debug support
Nonmaskable Interrupt (NMI), plus support for 128 maskable vectored interrupts
For more information about the eZ80 CPU and its instruction set, refer to the eZ80 CPU
User Manual (UM0077).
PS015313-0508 Reset
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
32
Reset
Reset Operation
The Reset controller within the eZ80F92 device provides a consistent reset function for all
types of resets that can affect the system. A system reset, referred in this document as
RESET, returns the eZ80F92 device to a defined state. All internal registers affected by
RESET return to their default conditions. RESET configures the GPIO port pins as inputs
and clears the CPU’s Program Counter to 000000h. Program code execution ceases
during RESET.
The events that can cause a RESET are:
Power-On Reset (POR)
Low-Voltage Brownout (VBO)
External RESET pin assertion
Watchdog Timer (WDT) time-out when configured to generate a RESET
Real-Time Clock alarm with the CPU in low-power SLEEP mode
Execution of a debug reset command
During a RESET, an internal RESET mode timer holds the system in RESET mode for
257 system clock (SCLK) cycles. The RESET mode timer begins incrementing on the
next rising edge of SCLK following deactivation of all RESET events.
You must determine if 257 SCLK cycles provides sufficient time for the primary
crystal oscillator to stabilize.
Power-On Reset
A Power-On Reset (POR) occurs each time the supply voltage to the part rises from below
the Voltage Brownout threshold to above the POR voltage threshold (VPOR). The internal
bandgap-referenced voltage detector sends a continuous RESET signal to the Reset con-
troller until the supply voltage (VCC) exceeds the POR voltage threshold. After VCC rises
above VPOR, an on-chip analog delay element briefly maintains the RESET signal to the
Reset controller (TANA). After this analog delay, the eZ80F92 device is in RESET mode
until the RESET mode timer expires. POR operation is displayed in Figure 3 on page 33.
The signals in this figure are not drawn to scale and are for displaying purposes only.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Reset
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
33
Voltage Brownout Reset
If, after program execution begins, the supply voltage (VCC) drops below the Voltage
Brownout threshold (VVBO), the eZ80F92 device resets. The VBO protection circuitry
detects the low supply voltage and initiates the RESET via the Reset controller.
The eZ80F92 device remains in RESET mode until the supply voltage again returns above
the POR voltage threshold (VPOR) and the Reset controller releases the internal RESET
signal. The VBO circuitry rejects very short negative brown-out pulses to prevent spurious
RESET events. VBO operation is displayed in Figure 4 on page 34. The signals in this fig-
ure are not drawn to scale and are for displaying purposes only.
Figure 3. Power-On Reset Operation
V
POR
TANA
V
VBO
V = 0.0V
CC
V = 3.3V
CC
System Clock
Internal RESET
Signal
Oscillator
Startup
Program Execution
RESET mode timer delay
PS015313-0508 Reset
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
34
Figure 4. Voltage Brownout Reset Operation
VPOR
TANA
VVBO
V = 3.3V
V = 3.3V CC
CC
System Clock
Internal RESET
Signal
Voltage
Brown-out
Program Execution Program Execution
RESET mode
timer delay
PS015313-0508 Low-Power Modes
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
35
Low-Power Modes
Overview
The eZ80F92 device provides a range of power-saving features. The highest level of
power reduction is provided by SLEEP mode. The next level of power reduction is
provided by the HALT instruction. The lowest level of power reduction is provided by the
clock peripheral power-down registers.
SLEEP Mode
Execution of the CPU’s SLEEP instruction (SLP) places the eZ80F92 device into SLEEP
mode. In SLEEP mode, the operating characteristics are:
The primary crystal oscillator is disabled
The system clock is disabled
The CPU is idle
The Program Counter (PC) stops incrementing
The 32 kHz crystal oscillator continues to operate and drive the Real-Time Clock and
the Watchdog Timer (if WDT is configured to operate from the 32 kHz oscillator)
The CPU can be brought out of SLEEP mode by any of the following operations:
A RESET via the external RESET pin driven Low
A RESET via a Real-Time Clock alarm
A RESET via execution of a Debug Reset command
After exiting SLEEP mode, the standard RESET delay occurs to allow the primary crystal
oscillator to stabilize. See Reset on page 32 for more information.
During SLEEP mode, the CPU freezes the last address and drives the address
bus with this value. The GPIO ports remain as configured by the user. Prior to
entering SLEEP mode, the data bus is driven Low and the control signals
MREQ, CS3:0, INSTRD, BUSACK, IOREQ,RD, and WR are driven High.
Caution:
PS015313-0508 Low-Power Modes
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
36
HALT Mode
Execution of the CPU’s HALT instruction places the eZ80F92 device into HALT mode.
In HALT mode, the operating characteristics are:
Primary crystal oscillator is enabled and continues to operate
The system clock is enabled and continues to operate
The CPU is idle
The Program Counter (PC) stops incrementing
The CPU can be brought out of HALT mode by any of the following operations:
A nonmaskable interrupt (NMI)
A maskable interrupt
A RESET via the external RESET pin driven Low
A Watchdog Timer time-out (if configured to generate either an NMI or RESET upon
time-out)
A RESET via execution of a Debug RESET command
To minimize current in HALT mode, the system clock should be disabled for all unused
on-chip peripherals via the Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers.
During HALT mode, the CPU freezes the last address and drives the address bus
with this value. The GPIO Ports remain as configured by the user. Prior to
entering HALT mode, the data bus is driven Low and the control signals MREQ,
CS3:0, INSTRD, BUSACK, IOREQ, RD, and WR are driven High.
Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers
To reduce power, the Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers allow the system clock to
be disabled unused on-chip peripherals. Upon RESET, all peripherals are enabled.
The clock to unused peripherals can be disabled by setting the appropriate bit in the Clock
Peripheral Power-Down Registers to 1. When powered down, the peripherals are com-
pletely disabled. To re-enable, the bit in the Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers must
be cleared to 0.
Many peripherals feature separate enable/disable control bits that must be appropriately
set for operation. These peripheral specific enable/disable bits do not provide the same
level of power reduction as the Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers. When powered
down, the standard peripheral control registers are not accessible for Read or Write access.
See Table 4 and Table 5 on pages 37 and 38.
Caution:
PS015313-0508 Low-Power Modes
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
37
Table 4. Clock Peripheral Power-Down Register; (CLK_PPD1 = 00DBh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
GPIO_D_OFF
1 System clock to GPIO Port D is powered down.
Port D alternate functions do not operate correctly.
0 System clock to GPIO Port D is powered up.
6
GPIO_C_OFF
1 System clock to GPIO Port C is powered down.
Port C alternate functions do not operate correctly.
0 System clock to GPIO Port C is powered up.
5
GPIO_B_OFF
1 System clock to GPIO Port B is powered down.
Port B alternate functions do not operate correctly.
0 System clock to GPIO Port B is powered up.
4 Reserved.
3
SPI_OFF
1 System clock to SPI is powered down.
0 System clock to SPI is powered up.
2
I2C_OFF
1 System clock to I2C is powered down.
0 System clock to I2C is powered up.
1
UART1_OFF
1 System clock to UART1 is powered down.
0 System clock to UART1 is powered up.
0
UART0_OFF
1 System clock to UART0 and IrDA endec is powered down.
0 System clock to UART0 and IrDA endec is powered up.
PS015313-0508 Low-Power Modes
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
38
Table 5. Clock Peripheral Power-Down Register 2; (CLK_PPD2 = 00DCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
PHI_OFF
1 PHI Clock output is disabled (output is high-impedance).
0 PHI Clock output is enabled.
6 0 Reserved.
5
PRT5_OFF
1 System clock to PRT5 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT5 is powered up.
4
PRT4_OFF
1 System clock to PRT4 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT4 is powered up.
3
PRT3_OFF
1 System clock to PRT3 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT3 is powered up.
2
PRT2_OFF
1 System clock to PRT2 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT2 is powered up.
1
PRT1_OFF
1 System clock to PRT1 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT1 is powered up.
0
PRT0_OFF
1 System clock to PRT0 is powered down.
0 System clock to PRT0 is powered up.
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
39
General-Purpose Input/Output
GPIO Overview
The eZ80F92 device features 24 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) pins. The GPIO
pins are assembled as three 8-bit ports—Port B, Port C, and Port D. All port signals can be
configured for use as either inputs or outputs. In addition, all of the port pins can be used
as vectored interrupt sources for the CPU.
GPIO Operation
The GPIO operation is the same for all three GPIO ports (Ports B, C, and D). Each port
features eight GPIO port pins. The operating mode for each pin is controlled by four bits
that are divided between four 8-bit registers.
These GPIO mode control registers are:
Port x Data Register (Px_DR)
Port x Data Direction Register (Px_DDR)
Port x Alternate Register 1 (Px_ALT1)
Port x Alternate Register 2 (Px_ALT2)
where x can be B, C, or D representing any of the three GPIO ports B, C, or D. The mode
for each pin is controlled by setting each register bit pertinent to the pin to be configured.
For example, the operating mode for Port B Pin 7 (PB7), is set by the values contained in
PB_DR[7], PB_DDR[7], PB_ALT1[7], and PB_ALT2[7].
The combination of the GPIO control register bits allows individual configuration of each
port pin for nine modes. In all modes, reading of the Port x Data register returns the sam-
pled state, or level, of the signal on the corresponding pin. Table 6 lists the function of
each port signal based upon these four register bits. After a RESET event, all GPIO port
pins are configured as standard digital inputs, with interrupts disabled.
Table 6. GPIO Mode Selection
GPIO
Mode
Px_ALT2
Bits7:0
Px_ALT1
Bits7:0
Px_DDR
Bits7:0
Px_DR
Bits7:0 Port Mode Output
10000Output 0
0001Output 1
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
40
GPIO Mode 1—The port pin is configured as a standard digital output pin. The value writ-
ten to the Port x Data register (Px_DR) is presented on the pin.
GPIO Mode 2—The port pin is configured as a standard digital input pin. The output is
tristated (high impedance). The value stored in the Port x Data register produces no effect.
As in all modes, a Read from the Port x Data register returns the pin’s value. GPIO Mode
2 is the default operating mode following a RESET.
GPIO Mode 3—The port pin is configured as open-drain I/O. The GPIO pins do not fea-
ture an internal pull-up to the supply voltage. To employ the GPIO pin in OPEN-DRAIN
mode, an external pull-up resistor must connect the pin to the supply voltage. Writing a 0
to the Port x Data register outputs a Low at the pin. Writing a 1 to the Port x Data register
results in high-impedance output.
GPIO Mode 4—The port pin is configured as open-source I/O. The GPIO pins do not fea-
ture an internal pull-down to the supply ground. To employ the GPIO pin in OPEN-
SOURCE mode, an external pull-down resistor must connect the pin to the supply ground.
Writing a 1 to the Port x Data register outputs a High at the pin. Writing a 0 to the Port x
Data register results in a high-impedance output.
2 0 0 1 0 Input from pin High impedance
0 0 1 1 Input from pin High impedance
3 0 1 0 0 Open-drain output 0
0 1 0 1 Open-drain I/O High impedance
4 0 1 1 0 Open-source I/O High impedance
0 1 1 1 Open-source output 1
5 1 0 0 0 Reserved High impedance
6 1 0 0 1 Interrupt—dual edge triggered High impedance
7 1 0 1 0 Port B, C, or D—alternate function controls port I/O
1 0 1 1 Port B, C, or D—alternate function controls port I/O
8 1 1 0 0 Interrupt—active Low High impedance
1 1 0 1 Interrupt—active High High impedance
9 1 1 1 0 Interrupt—falling edge triggered High impedance
1 1 1 1 Interrupt—rising edge triggered High impedance
Table 6. GPIO Mode Selection (Continued)
GPIO
Mode
Px_ALT2
Bits7:0
Px_ALT1
Bits7:0
Px_DDR
Bits7:0
Px_DR
Bits7:0 Port Mode Output
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
41
GPIO Mode 5—Reserved. This pin produces high-impedance output.
GPIO Mode 6—This bit enables a dual edge-triggered interrupt mode. Both a rising and a
falling edge on the pin cause an interrupt request to be sent to the CPU. Writing a 1 to the
Port x Data register bit position resets the corresponding interrupt request. Writing a 0 pro-
duces no effect. The programmer must set the Port x Data register before entering the
edge-triggered interrupt mode.
GPIO Mode 7—For Ports B, C, and D, the port pin is configured to pass control over to
the alternate (secondary) functions assigned to the pin. For example, the alternate mode
function for PC7 is RI1 and the alternate mode function for PB4 is the Timer 4 Out. When
GPIO Mode 7 is enabled, the pin output data and pin tristated control come from the alter-
nate function's data output and tristate control, respectively. The value in the Port x Data
register produces no effect on operation.
Input signals are sampled by the system clock before being passed to the alternate
function input.
GPIO Mode 8—The port pin is configured for level-sensitive interrupt modes. An inter-
rupt request is generated when the level at the pin is the same as the level stored in the Port
x Data register. The port pin value is sampled by the system clock. The input pin must be
held at the selected interrupt level for a minimum of 2 clock periods to initiate an interrupt.
The interrupt request remains active as long as this condition is maintained at the external
source.
GPIO Mode 9—The port pin is configured for single edge-triggered interrupt mode. The
value in the Port x Data register determines if a positive or negative edge causes an inter-
rupt request. A 0 in the Port x Data register bit sets the selected pin to generate an interrupt
request for falling edges. A 1 in the Port x Data register bit sets the selected pin to generate
an interrupt request for rising edges. The interrupt request remains active until a 1 is writ-
ten to the corresponding interrupt request of the Port x Data register bit. Writing a 0 pro-
duces no effect on operation. The programmer must set the Port x Data register before
entering the edge-triggered interrupt mode.
A simplified block diagram of a GPIO port pin is displayed in Figure 5 on page 42.
Note:
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
42
GPIO Interrupts
Each port pin can be used as an interrupt source. Interrupts can be either level- or edge-
triggered.
Level-Triggered Interrupts
When the port is configured for level-triggered interrupts, the corresponding port pin is
tristated. An interrupt request is generated when the level at the pin is the same as the level
stored in the Port x Data register. The port pin value is sampled by the system clock. The
input pin must be held at the selected interrupt level for a minimum of 2 consecutive clock
cycles to initiate an interrupt. The interrupt request remains active as long as this condition
is maintained at the external source.
For example, if PD3 is programmed for low-level interrupt and the pin is forced Low for 2
consecutive clock cycles, an interrupt request signal is generated from that port pin and
sent to the CPU. The interrupt request signal remains active until the external device
driving PD3 forces the pin High.
Edge-Triggered Interrupts
When the port is configured for edge-triggered interrupts, the corresponding port pin is
tristated. If the pin receives the correct edge from an external device, the port pin generates
Figure 5. GPIO Port Pin Block Diagram
Port
Pin
GPIO Register
Data (Input)
GPIO Register
Data (Output)
System Clock
System Clock
Data Bus
Mode 1
GND
VDD
Mode 1
Mode 3
Mode 4
DQ
DQDQ
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
43
an interrupt request signal to the CPU. Any time a port pin is configured for edge-trig-
gered interrupt, writing a 1 to that pin’s Port x Data register causes a reset of the edge-
detected interrupt. The programmer must set the bit in the Port x Data register to 1 before
entering either single or dual edge-triggered interrupt mode for that port pin.
When configured for dual edge-triggered interrupt mode (GPIO Mode 6), both a rising
and a falling edge on the pin cause an interrupt request to be sent to the CPU.
When configured for single edge-triggered interrupt mode (GPIO Mode 9), the value in
the Port x Data register determines if a positive or negative edge causes an interrupt
request. A 0 in the Port x Data register bit sets the selected pin to generate an interrupt
request for falling edges. A 1 in the Port x Data register bit sets the selected pin to generate
an interrupt request for rising edges.
GPIO Control Registers
The 12 GPIO Control Registers operate in groups of four with a set for each Port (B, C,
and D). Each GPIO port features a Port Data register, Port Data Direction register, Port
Alternate register 1, and Port Alternate register 2.
Port x Data Registers
When the port pins are configured for one of the output modes, the data written to the
Port x Data registers, listed in Table 7, are driven on the corresponding pins. In all modes,
reading from the Port x Data registers always returns the current sampled value of the cor-
responding pins.
When the port pins are configured as edge-triggered interrupt sources, writing a 1 to the
corresponding bit in the Port x Data register clears the interrupt signal that is sent to the
CPU. When the port pins are configured for edge-selectable interrupts or level-sensitive
interrupts, the value written to the Port x Data register bit selects the interrupt edge or
interrupt level. See Table 6 on page 39 for more information.
Table 7. Port x Data Registers; (PB_DR = 009Ah, PC_DR = 009Eh, PD_DR = 00A2h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: X = Undefined; R/W = Read/Write.
PS015313-0508 General-Purpose Input/Output
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
44
Port x Data Direction Registers
In conjunction with the other GPIO Control Registers, the Port x Data Direction registers,
listed in Table 8, control the operating modes of the GPIO port pins. See Table 6 on page
39 for more information.
Port x Alternate Register 1
In conjunction with the other GPIO Control Registers, the Port x Alternate Register 1,
listed in Table 9, control the operating modes of the GPIO port pins. See Table 6 on page
39 for more information.
Port x Alternate Register 2
In conjunction with the other GPIO Control Registers, the Port x Alternate Register 2,
listed in Table 10, control the operating modes of the GPIO port pins. See Table 6 on page
39 for more information.
Table 8. Port x Data Direction Registers; (PB_DDR = 009Bh, PC_DDR = 009Fh,
PD_DDR = 00A3h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 11111111
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Table 9. Port x Alternate Registers 1; (PB_ALT1 = 009Ch, PC_ALT1 = 00A0h,
PD_ALT1 = 00A4h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Table 10. Port x Alternate Registers 2; (PB_ALT2 = 009Dh, PC_ALT2 = 00A1h,
PD_ALT2 = 00A5h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
PS015313-0508 Interrupt Controller
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
45
Interrupt Controller
The interrupt controller on the eZ80F92 device routes the interrupt request signals from
the internal peripherals and external devices (via the GPIO pins) to the CPU.
Maskable Interrupts
On the eZ80F92 device, all maskable interrupts use the CPU’s vectored interrupt function.
Table 11 lists the low-byte vector for each of the maskable interrupt sources. The
maskable interrupt sources are listed in order of priority, with vector 00h being the high-
est-priority interrupt. The full 16-bit interrupt vector is located at starting address {I[7:0],
IVECT[7:0]} where I[7:0] is the CPU’s Interrupt Page Address Register.
Your program must store the starting address of the interrupt service routine (ISR) in the
two-byte interrupt vector locations. For example, for ADL mode the two-byte address for
the SPI interrupt service routine would be stored at {00h, I[7:0], 1Eh} and {00h, I[7:0],
1Fh}. In Z80® mode, the two-byte address for the SPI interrupt service routine would be
Table 11. Interrupt Vector Sources by Priority
Vector Source Vector Source Vector Source Vector Source
00h Unused 1Ah UART 1 34h Port B 2 4Eh Port C 7
02h Unused 1Ch I2C 36h Port B 3 50h Port D 0
04h Unused 1Eh SPI 38h Port B 4 52h Port D 1
06h Unused 20h Unused 3Ah Port B 5 54h Port D 2
08h Flash 22h Unused 3Ch Port B 6 56h Port D 3
0Ah PRT 0 24h Unused 3Eh Port B 7 58h Port D 4
0Ch PRT 1 26h Unused 40h Port C 0 5Ah Port D 5
0Eh PRT 2 28h Unused 42h Port C 1 5Ch Port D 6
10h PRT 3 2Ah Unused 44h Port C 2 5Eh Port D 7
12h PRT 4 2Ch Unused 46h Port C 3 60h Unused
14h PRT 5 2Eh Unused 48h Port C 4 62h Unused
16h RTC 30h Port B 0 4Ah Port C 5 64h Unused
18h UART 0 32h Port B 1 4Ch Port C 6 66h Unused
Note: Absolute locations 00h, 08h, 10h, 18h, 20h, 28h, 30h, 38h, and 66h are reserved for hardware
reset, NMI, and the RST instruction.
PS015313-0508 Interrupt Controller
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
46
stored at {MBASE[7:0], I[7:0], 1Eh} and {MBASE, I[7:0], 1Fh}. The least-significant
byte is stored at the lower address.
When any one or more of the interrupt requests (IRQs) become active, an interrupt request
is generated by the interrupt controller and sent to the CPU. The corresponding 8-bit inter-
rupt vector for the highest-priority interrupt is placed on the 8-bit interrupt vector bus,
IVECT[7:0]. The interrupt vector bus is internal to the eZ80F92 device and is therefore
not visible externally.
The response time of the CPU to an interrupt request is a function of the current instruc-
tion being executed as well as the number of wait states being asserted. The interrupt vec-
tor, {I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]}, is visible on the address bus, ADDR[15:0], when the interrupt
service routine begins. The response of the CPU to a vectored interrupt on the eZ80F92
device is listed in Table 12. Interrupt sources are required to be active until the interrupt
service routine starts. It is recommended that the Interrupt Page Address Register (I) value
be changed by the user from its default value of 00h as this address can create conflicts
between the nonmaskable interrupt vector, the RST instruction addresses, and the
maskable interrupt vectors.
Table 12. Vectored Interrupt Operation
Memory
Mode
ADL
Bit
MADL
Bit Operation
Z80® Mode 0 0 Read the LSB of the interrupt vector placed on the internal vectored
interrupt bus, IVECT [7:0], by the interrupting peripheral.
IEF1 0
IEF2 0
The Starting Program Counter is effectively {MBASE, PC[15:0]}
Push the 2-byte return address PC[15:0] onto the ({MBASE,SPS}) stack
The ADL mode bit remains cleared to 0
The interrupt vector address is located at {MBASE, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]}
PC[15:0] ({MBASE, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]})
The ending Program Counter is effectively {MBASE, PC[15:0]}
The interrupt service routine must end with RETI
ADL Mode 1 0 Read the LSB of the interrupt vector placed on the internal vectored
interrupt bus, IVECT [7:0], by the interrupting peripheral.
IEF1 0
IEF2 0
The Starting Program Counter is PC[23:0]
Push the 3-byte return address, PC[23:0], onto the SPL stack
The ADL mode bit remains set to 1
The interrupt vector address is located at {00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]}
PC[15:0] ({00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]})
The ending Program Counter is {00h, PC[15:0]}
The interrupt service routine must end with RETI
PS015313-0508 Interrupt Controller
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
47
Nonmaskable Interrupts
An active Low input on the NMI pin generates an interrupt request to the CPU. This non-
maskable interrupt is always serviced by the CPU regardless of the state of the Interrupt
Enable flags (IEF1 and IEF2). The nonmaskable interrupt is prioritized higher than all
maskable interrupts. The response of the CPU to a nonmaskable interrupt is described in
detail in the eZ80® CPU User Manual (UM0077).
Z80® Mode 0 1 Read the LSB of the interrupt vector placed on the internal vectored
interrupt bus, IVECT[7:0], bus by the interrupting peripheral.
IEF1 0
IEF2 0
The Starting Program Counter is effectively {MBASE, PC[15:0]}
Push the 2-byte return address, PC[15:0], onto the SPL stack
Push a 00h byte onto the SPL stack to indicate an interrupt from Z80®
mode (because ADL = 0)
Set the ADL mode bit to 1
The interrupt vector address is located at {00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]}
PC[15:0] ({00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]})
The ending Program Counter is {00h, PC[15:0]}
The interrupt service routine must end with RETI.L
ADL Mode 1 1 Read the LSB of the interrupt vector placed on the internal vectored
interrupt bus, IVECT [7:0], by the interrupting peripheral.
IEF1 0
IEF2 0
The Starting Program Counter is PC[23:0]
Push the 3-byte return address, PC[23:0], onto the SPL stack
Push a 01h byte onto the SPL stack to indicate a restart from ADL mode
(because ADL = 1)
The ADL mode bit remains set to 1
The interrupt vector address is located at {00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]}
PC[15:0] ({00h, I[7:0], IVECT[7:0]})
The ending Program Counter is {00h, PC[15:0]}
The interrupt service routine must end with RETI.L
Table 12. Vectored Interrupt Operation (Continued)
Memory
Mode
ADL
Bit
MADL
Bit Operation
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
48
Chip Selects and Wait States
The eZ80F92 device generates four Chip Selects for external devices. Each Chip Select
may be programmed to access either memory space or I/O space. The Memory Chip
Selects can be individually programmed on a 64 KB boundary. The I/O Chip Selects can
each choose a 256-byte section of I/O space. In addition, each Chip Select may be
programmed for up to 7 wait states.
Memory and I/O Chip Selects
Each of the Chip Selects can be enabled for either the memory address space or the
I/O address space, but not both. To select the memory address space for a particular Chip
Select, CSX_IO (CSx_CTL[4]) must be reset to 0. To select the I/O address space for a
particular Chip Select, CSX_IO must be set to 1. After RESET, the default is for all Chip
Selects to be configured for the memory address space. For either the memory address
space or the I/O address space, the individual Chip Selects must be enabled by setting
CSx_EN (CSx_CTL[3]) to 1.
Memory Chip Select Operation
Operation of each of the Memory Chip Selects is controlled by three control registers.
To enable a particular Memory Chip Select, the following conditions must be met:
The Chip Select is enabled by setting CSx_EN to 1
The Chip Select is configured for Memory by clearing CSX_IO to 0
The address is in the associated Chip Select range:
CSx_LBR[7:0]
ADDR[23:16]
CSx_UBR[7:0]
No higher priority (lower number) Chip Select meets the above conditions
A memory access instruction must be executing
If all of the foregoing conditions are met to generate a Memory Chip Select, then the
following actions occur:
The appropriate Chip Select—CS0, CS1, CS2, or CS3—is asserted (driven Low)
MREQ is asserted (driven Low)
Depending upon the instruction, either RD or WR is asserted (driven Low)
If the upper and lower bounds are set to the same value (CSx_UBR = CSx_LBR), then a
particular Chip Select is valid for a single 64 KB page.
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
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Product Specification
49
Memory Chip Select Priority
A lower-numbered Chip Select is granted priority over a higher-numbered Chip Select.
For example, if the address space of Chip Select 0 overlaps the Chip Select 1 address
space, Chip Select 0 is active.
Reset States
On RESET, Chip Select 0 is active for all addresses, because its Lower Bound register
resets to 00h and its Upper Bound register resets to FFh. All of the other Chip Select
Lower and Upper Bound registers reset to 00h.
Memory Chip Select Example
The use of Memory Chip Selects is displayed in Figure 6. The associated control register
values listed in Table 13 on page 50. In this example, all 4 Chip Selects are enabled and
configured for memory addresses. Also, CS1 overlaps with CS0. As CS0 is prioritized
higher than CS1, CS1 is not active for much of its defined address space.
Figure 6. Example: Memory Chip Select
Memory
Location
FFFFFFh
D00000h
CFFFFFh
A00000h
9FFFFFh
7FFFFFh
800000h
000000h
CS3_UBR = FFh
CS3_LBR = D0h
CS2_UBR = CFh
CS2_LBR = A0h
CS1_UBR = 9Fh
CS0_UBR = 7Fh
CS0_LBR = CS1_LBR = 00h
CS3 Active
3 MB Address Space
CS2 Active
3 MB Address Space
CS1 Active
2 MB Address Space
CS0 Active
8 MB Address Space
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
50
I/O Chip Select Operation
I/O Chip Selects can only be active when the CPU is performing I/O instructions. Because
the I/O space is separate from the memory space in the eZ80F92 device, there can never
be a conflict between I/O and memory addresses.
The eZ80F92 device supports a 16-bit I/O address. The I/O Chip Select logic decodes the
High byte of the I/O address, ADDR[15:8]. Because the upper byte of the address bus,
ADDR[23:16], is ignored, the I/O devices can always be accessed from within any mem-
ory mode (ADL or Z80®). The MBASE offset value used for setting the Z80 MEMORY
mode page is also always ignored.
Four I/O Chip Selects are available with the eZ80F92 device. To generate a particular I/O
Chip Select, the following conditions must be met:
The Chip Select is enabled by setting CSX_EN to 1
The Chip Select is configured for I/O by setting CSX_IO to 1
An I/O Chip Select address match occurs—ADDR[15:8] = CSx_LBR[7:0]
No higher-priority (lower-number) Chip Select meets the above conditions
The I/O address is not within the on-chip peripheral address range 0080h00FFh.
On-chip peripheral registers assume priority for all addresses where:
0080h
ADDR[15:0]
00FFh
An I/O instruction must be executing
Table 13. Register Values for Memory Chip Select Example in Figure 6
Chip
Select
CSx_CTL[3]
CSx_EN
CSx_CTL[4]
CSx_IO CSx_LBR CSx_UBR Description
CS0 1 0 00h 7Fh CS0 is enabled as a Memory Chip Select.
Valid addresses range from 000000h–
7FFFFFh.
CS1 1 0 00h 9Fh CS1 is enabled as a Memory Chip Select.
Valid addresses range from 800000h–
9FFFFFh.
CS2 1 0 A0h CFh CS2 is enabled as a Memory Chip Select.
Valid addresses range from A00000h–
CFFFFFh.
CS3 1 0 D0h FFh CS3 is enabled as a Memory Chip Select.
Valid addresses range from D00000h
FFFFFFh.
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If all of the foregoing conditions are met to generate an I/O Chip Select, then the following
actions occur:
The appropriate Chip Select—CS0, CS1, CS2, or CS3—is asserted (driven Low)
IORQ is asserted (driven Low)
Depending upon the instruction, either RD or WR is asserted (driven Low)
WAIT States
For each of the Chip Selects, programmable WAIT states can be asserted to provide exter-
nal devices with additional clock cycles to complete their Read or Write operations.
The number of WAIT states for a particular Chip Select is controlled by the 3-bit field
CSx_WAIT (CSx_CTL[7:5]). The WAIT states can be independently programmed to pro-
vide 0 to 7 WAIT states for each Chip Select. The WAIT states idle the CPU for the speci-
fied number of system clock cycles.
WAIT Input Signal
Similar to the programmable WAIT states, an external peripheral can drive the WAIT
input pin to force the CPU to provide additional clock cycles to complete its Read or Write
operation. Driving the WAIT pin Low stalls the CPU. The CPU resumes operation on the
first rising edge of the internal system clock following deassertion of the WAIT pin.
If the WAIT pin is to be driven by an external device, the corresponding Chip
Select for the device must be programmed to provide at least one WAIT state.
Due to input sampling of the WAIT input pin (displayed in Figure 7), one pro-
grammable WAIT state is required to allow the external peripheral sufficient
time to assert the WAIT pin. It is recommended that the corresponding Chip Se-
lect for the external device be programmed to provide the maximum number of
WAIT states (seven).
Figure 7.Wait Input Sampling Block Diagram
Caution:
System Clock
DQ
Wait
Pin
eZ80
CPU
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52
An example of WAIT state operation is displayed in Figure 8. In this example, the Chip
Select is configured to provide a single WAIT state. The external peripheral being
accessed drives the WAIT pin Low to request assertion of an additional WAIT state. If the
WA I T pin is asserted for additional system clock cycles, WAIT states are added until the
WA I T pin is deasserted (High).
Chip Selects During Bus Request/Bus Acknowledge Cycles
When the CPU relinquishes the address bus to an external peripheral in response to an
external bus request (BUSREQ), it drives the bus acknowledge pin (BUSACK) Low. The
external peripheral can then drive the address bus (and data bus). The CPU continues to
generate Chip Select signals in response to the address on the bus. External devices cannot
access the internal registers of the eZ80F92 device.
Figure 8. Example: Wait State Operation Read Operation
TCLK TWAIT
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(output)
CSx
MREQ
RD
IN
INSTRD
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53
Bus Mode Controller
The bus mode controller allows the address and data bus timing and signal formats of the
eZ80F92 device to be configured to connect seamlessly with external eZ80®, Z80®-,
Intel-, or Motorola-compatible devices. Bus modes for each of the chip selects can be con-
figured independently using the Chip Select Bus Mode Control Registers. The number of
CPU system clock cycles per bus mode state is also independently programmable. For
IntelTM bus mode, multiplexed address and data can be selected in which the lower byte of
the address and the data byte both use the data bus, DATA[7:0]. Each of the bus modes is
explained in more detail in the following sections.
eZ80 Bus Mode
Chip selects configured for eZ80 bus mode do not modify the bus signals from the CPU.
The timing diagrams for external Memory and I/O Read and Write operations are shown
in the AC Characteristics section on page 229. The default mode for each chip select is
eZ80 mode.
Z80 Bus Mode
Chip selects configured for Z80 mode modify the CPU bus signals to match the Z80
microprocessor address and data bus interface signal format and timing. During read oper-
ations, the Z80 bus mode employs three states (T1, T2, and T3) as listed in Table 14.
During Write operations, Z80 bus mode employs three states (T1, T2, and T3) as listed in
Table 14.
Table 14. Z80 Bus Mode Read States
STATE T1 The Read cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the address bus and
the associated Chip Select signal is asserted.
STATE T2 During State T2, the RD signal is asserted. Depending upon the instruction, either the
MREQ or IORQ signal is asserted. If the external WAIT pin is driven Low at least one CPU
system clock cycle prior to the end of State T2, additional WAIT states (TWAIT) are asserted
until the WAIT pin is driven High.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered. The data is latched by the eZ80F92 device at
the rising edge of the CPU system clock at the end of State T3.
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Product Specification
54
Z80® bus mode Read and Write timing is displayed in Figure 9 and Figure 10 on page 55.
The Z80 bus mode states can be configured for 1 to 15 CPU system clock cycles. In the
figures, each Z80 bus mode state is two CPU system clock cycles in duration. Figure 9 and
Figure 10 on page 55 also display the assertion of 1 wait state (TWAIT) by the external
peripheral during each Z80 bus mode cycle.
Table 15. Z80 Bus Mode Write States
STATE T1 The Write cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the address bus, the
associated Chip Select signal is asserted.
STATE T2 During State T2, the WR signal is asserted. Depending upon the instruction, either the
MREQ or IORQ signal is asserted. If the external WAIT pin is driven Low at least one CPU
system clock cycle prior to the end of State T2, additional WAIT states (TWAIT) are asserted
until the WAIT pin is driven High.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered.
Figure 9.Example: Z80 Bus Mode Read Timing
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
RD
WAIT
TCLK
WR
T1 T2 T3
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
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Product Specification
55
IntelTM Bus Mode
Chip selects configured for Intel bus mode modify the CPU bus signals to duplicate a four-
state memory transfer similar to that found on Intel-style microcontrollers. The bus signals
and eZ80F92 device pins are mapped as displayed in Figure 11 on page 56. In Intel bus
mode, you can select either multiplexed or nonmultiplexed address and data buses. In non-
multiplexed operation, the address and data buses are separate. In multiplexed operation,
the lower byte of the address, ADDR[7:0], also appears on the data bus, DATA[7:0], dur-
ing State T1 of the Intel bus mode cycle. During multiplexed operation, the lower byte of
the address bus also appears on the address bus in addition to the data bus.
Figure 10. Example: Z80® Bus Mode Write Timing
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
RD
WAIT
TCLK
WR
T1 T2 T3
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Product Specification
56
Intel Bus Mode (Separate Address and Data Buses)
During Read operations with separate address and data buses, the Intel bus mode employs
4 states (T1, T2, T3, and T4) as listed in Table 16.
Figure 11. IntelTM Bus Mode Signal and Pin Mapping
Table 16. Intel Bus Mode Read States (Separate Address and Data Buses
STATE T1 The Read cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the
address bus and the associated Chip Select signal is asserted. The CPU
drives the ALE signal High at the beginning of T1. During the middle of T1,
the CPU drives ALE Low to facilitate the latching of the address.
STATE T2 During State T2, the CPU asserts the RD signal. Depending on the
instruction, either the MREQ or IORQ signal is asserted.
eZ80 Bus Mode
Signals (Pins)
INSTRD
RD
WR
WAIT
MREQ
IORQ
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
Multiplexed
Bus
Controller
ADDR[7:0]
Intel Bus
Signal Equvalents
ALE
RD
WR
READY
MREQ
IORQ
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
Bus Mode
Controller
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Product Specification
57
During Write operations with separate address and data buses, the Intel bus mode employs
four states (T1, T2, T3, and T4) as listed in Table 17.
Intel bus mode timing is displayed for a Read operation in Figure 12 on page 58 and for a
Write operation in Figure 13 on page 59. If the READY signal (external WAIT pin) is
driven Low prior to the beginning of State T3, additional wait states (TWAIT) are asserted
until the READY signal is driven High. The Intel bus mode states can be configured for 2
to 15 CPU system clock cycles. In the figures, each Intel bus mode state is 2 CPU system
clock cycles in duration. Figure 12 on page 58 and Figure 13 on page 59 also display the
assertion of one WAIT state (TWAIT) by the selected peripheral.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered. If the external READY (WAIT)
pin is driven Low at least one CPU system clock cycle prior to the beginning
of State T3, additional wait states (TWAIT) are asserted until the READY pin
is driven High.
STATE T4 The CPU latches the Read data at the beginning of State T4. The CPU
deasserts the RD signal and completes the IntelTM bus mode cycle.
Table 17. Intel Bus Mode Write States (Separate Address and Data Buses)
STATE T1 The Write cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the
address bus, the associated Chip Select signal is asserted, and the data is
driven onto the data bus. The CPU drives the ALE signal High at the
beginning of T1. During the middle of T1, the CPU drives ALE Low to
facilitate the latching of the address.
STATE T2 During State T2, the CPU asserts the WR signal. Depending on the
instruction, either the MREQ or IORQ signal is asserted.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered. If the external READY (WAIT)
pin is driven Low at least one CPU system clock cycle prior to the beginning
of State T3, additional WAIT states (TWAIT) are asserted until the READY
pin is driven High.
STATE T4 The CPU deasserts the WR signal at the beginning of State T4. The CPU
holds the data and address buses through the end of T4. The bus cycle is
completed at the end of T4.
Table 16. Intel Bus Mode Read States (Separate Address and Data Buses
(Continued)
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
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Product Specification
58
Figure 12. Example: IntelTM Bus Mode Read Timing—Separate Address and Data
Buses
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
RD
ALE
TWAIT
WR
READY
T1 T2 T3 T4
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59
Figure 13. Example: IntelTM Bus Mode Write Timing—Separate Address and Data
Buses
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
WR
ALE
T
WAIT
RD
READY
T1 T2 T3 T4
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60
IntelTM Bus Mode (Multiplexed Address and Data Bus)
During Read operations with multiplexed address and data, the Intel bus mode employs
four states (T1, T2, T3, and T4) as listed in Table 18.
During Write operations with multiplexed address and data, the Intel bus mode employs
four states (T1, T2, T3, and T4) as listed in Table 19.
Table 18. Intel Bus Mode Read States (Multiplexed Address and Data Bus)
STATE T1 The Read cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the
DATA bus and the associated Chip Select signal is asserted. The CPU
drives the ALE signal High at the beginning of T1. During the middle of T1,
the CPU drives ALE Low to facilitate the latching of the address.
STATE T2 During State T2, the CPU removes the address from the DATA bus and
asserts the RD signal. Depending upon the instruction, either the MREQ or
IORQ signal is asserted.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered. If the external READY (WAIT)
pin is driven Low at least one CPU system clock cycle prior to the beginning
of State T3, additional WAIT states (TWAIT) are asserted until the READY
pin is driven High.
STATE T4 The CPU latches the Read data at the beginning of State T4. The CPU
deasserts the RD signal and completes the Intel bus mode cycle.
Table 19. Intel Bus Mode Write States (Multiplexed Address and Data Bus)
STATE T1 The Write cycle begins in State T1. The CPU drives the address onto the
DATA bus and drives the ALE signal High at the beginning of T1. During
the middle of T1, the CPU drives ALE Low to facilitate the latching of the
address.
STATE T2 During State T2, the CPU removes the address from the DATA bus and
drives the Write data onto the DATA bus. The WR signal is asserted to
indicate a Write operation.
STATE T3 During State T3, no bus signals are altered. If the external READY (WAIT)
pin is driven Low at least one CPU system clock cycle prior to the beginning
of State T3, additional wait states (TWAIT) are asserted until the READY pin
is driven High.
STATE T4 The CPU deasserts the Write signal at the beginning of T4 identifying the
end of the Write operation. The CPU holds the data and address buses
through the end of T4. The bus cycle is completed at the end of T4.
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
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61
Signal timing for IntelTM bus mode with multiplexed address and data is displayed for a
Read operation in Figure 14 and for a Write operation in Figure 15 on page 62. In the fig-
ures, each Intel bus mode state is 2 CPU system clock cycles in duration. Figure 14 and
Figure 15 on page 62 also display the assertion of one wait state (TWAIT) by the selected
peripheral.
Figure 14. Example: IntelTM Bus Mode Read Timing—Multiplexed Address and Data
Bus
DATA[7:0]
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
RD
ALE
TWAIT
WR
READY
T1 T2 T3 T4
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Figure 15. Example: IntelTM Bus Mode Write Timing—Multiplexed Address and Data
Bus
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
WR
ALE
T
WAIT
RD
READY
T1 T2 T3 T4
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Motorola Bus Mode
Chip selects configured for Motorola bus mode modify the CPU bus signals to duplicate
an eight-state memory transfer similar to that found on Motorola-style microcontrollers.
The bus signals (and eZ80F92 I/O pins) are mapped as displayed in Figure 16.
During Write operations, the Motorola bus mode employs eight states (S0, S1, S2, S3, S4,
S5, S6, and S7) as listed in Table 20.
Figure 16. Motorola Bus Mode Signal and Pin Mapping
Table 20. Motorola Bus Mode Read States
STATE S0 The Read cycle starts in state S0. The CPU drives R/W High to identify a Read cycle.
STATE S1 Entering state S1, the CPU drives a valid address on the address bus, ADDR[23:0].
STATE S2 On the rising edge of state S2, the CPU asserts AS and DS.
STATE S3 During state S3, no bus signals are altered.
eZ80 Bus Mode
Signals (Pins)
INSTRD
RD
WR
WAIT
MREQ
IORQ
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
Motorola Bus
Signal Equvalents
AS
DS
R/W
DTACK
MREQ
IORQ
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
Bus Mode
Controller
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The eight states for a Write operation in Motorola bus mode are listed in Table 21.
STATE S4 During state S4, the CPU waits for a cycle termination signal DTACK (WAIT), a peripheral
signal. If the termination signal is not asserted at least one full CPU clock period prior to the
rising clock edge at the end of S4, the CPU inserts WAIT (TWAIT) states until DTACK is
asserted. Each WAIT state is a full bus mode cycle.
STATE S5 During state S5, no bus signals are altered.
STATE S6 During state S6, data from the external peripheral device is driven onto the data bus.
STATE S7 On the rising edge of the clock entering state S7, the CPU latches data from the addressed
peripheral device and deasserts AS and DS. The peripheral device deasserts DTACK at
this time.
Table 21. Motorola Bus Mode Write States
STATE S0 The Write cycle starts in S0. The CPU drives R/W High (if a preceding Write cycle leaves R/
W Low).
STATE S1 Entering S1, the CPU drives a valid address on the address bus.
STATE S2 On the rising edge of S2, the CPU asserts AS and drives R/W Low.
STATE S3 During S3, the data bus is driven out of the high-impedance state as the data to be written is
placed on the bus.
STATE S4 At the rising edge of S4, the CPU asserts DS. The CPU waits for a cycle termination signal
DTACK (WAIT). If the termination signal is not asserted at least one full CPU clock period
prior to the rising clock edge at the end of S4, the CPU inserts WAIT (TWAIT) states until
DTACK is asserted. Each WAIT state is a full bus mode cycle.
STATE S5 During S5, no bus signals are altered.
STATE S6 During S6, no bus signals are altered.
STATE S7 Upon entering S7, the CPU deasserts AS and DS. As the clock rises at the end of S7, the
CPU drives R/W High. The peripheral device deasserts DTACK at this time.
Table 20. Motorola Bus Mode Read States (Continued)
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65
Signal timing for Motorola bus mode is displayed for a Read operation in Figure 17 and
for a Write operation in Figure 18 on page 66. In these two figures, each Motorola bus
mode state is 2 CPU system clock cycles in duration.
Figure 17. Example: Motorola Bus Mode Read Timing
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
DS
AS
S3
DTACK
R/W
S0 S1 S2 S4 S6
S5 S7
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66
Switching Between Bus Modes
Each time the bus mode controller must switch from one bus mode to another, there is a
one-cycle CPU system clock delay. An extra clock cycle is not required for repeated
access in any of the bus modes; nor is it required when the eZ80F92 device switches to
eZ80® bus mode. The extra clock cycles are not shown in the timing examples. Due to the
asynchronous nature of these bus protocols, the extra delay does not impact peripheral
communication.
Figure 18. Example: Motorola Bus Mode Write Timing
System Clock
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
CSx
MREQ
or IORQ
DS
AS
S3
DTACK
R/W
S0 S1 S2 S4 S6
S5 S7
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Chip Select Registers
Chip Select x Lower Bound Register
For Memory Chip Selects, the Chip Select x Lower Bound register, listed in Table 22,
defines the lower bound of the address range for which the corresponding Memory Chip
Select (if enabled) can be active. For I/O Chip Selects, this register defines the address to
which ADDR[15:8] is compared to generate an I/O Chip Select. All Chip Select lower
bound registers reset to 00h.
Table 22. Chip Select x Lower Bound Register(CS0_LBR = 00A8h, CS1_LBR = 00ABh, CS2_LBR =
00AEh, CS3_LBR = 00B1h)
Bit 76543210
CS0_LBR Reset 00000000
CS1_LBR Reset 00000000
CS2_LBR Reset 00000000
CS3_LBR Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
CSx_LBR
00h–
FFh
For Memory Chip Selects (CSX_IO = 0)
This byte specifies the lower bound of the Chip Select address
range. The upper byte of the address bus, ADDR[23:16], is
compared to the values contained in these registers for
determining whether a Memory Chip Select signal should be
generated.
For I/O Chip Selects (CSX_IO = 1)
This byte specifies the Chip Select address value. ADDR[15:8] is
compared to the values contained in these registers for
determining whether an I/O Chip Select signal should be
generated.
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Chip Select x Upper Bound Register
For Memory Chip Selects, the Chip Select x Upper Bound registers, listed in Table 23,
defines the upper bound of the address range for which the corresponding Chip Select (if
enabled) can be active. For I/O Chip Selects, this register produces no effect. The reset
state for the Chip Select 0 Upper Bound register is FFh, while the reset state for the other
Chip Select upper bound registers is 00h.
Table 23. Chip Select x Upper Bound Register(CS0_UBR = 00A9h, CS1_UBR = 00ACh, CS2_UBR =
00AFh, CS3_UBR = 00B2h)
Bit 76543210
CS0_UBR Reset 11111111
CS1_UBR Reset 00000000
CS2_UBR Reset 00000000
CS3_UBR Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
CSx_UBR
00h–
FFh
For Memory Chip Selects (CSx_IO = 0)
This byte specifies the upper bound of the Chip Select address
range. The upper byte of the address bus, ADDR[23:16], is
compared to the values contained in these registers for
determining whether a Chip Select signal should be generated.
For I/O Chip Selects (CSx_IO = 1)
No effect.
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Chip Select x Control Register
The Chip Select x Control register, listed in Table 24, enables the Chip Selects, specifies
the type of Chip Select, and sets the number of WAIT states. The reset state for the Chip
Select 0 Control register is E8h, while the reset state for the three other Chip Select control
registers is 00h.
Table 24. Chip Select x Control Register(CS0_CTL = 00AAh, CS1_CTL = 00ADh, CS2_CTL =
00B0h, CS3_CTL = 00B3h)
Bit 76543210
CS0_CTL Reset 11101000
CS1_CTL Reset 00000000
CS2_CTL Reset 00000000
CS3_CTL Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R R R
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:5]
CSx_WAIT
000 0 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
001 1 WAIT state is asserted when this Chip Select is active.
010 2 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
011 3 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
100 4 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
101 5 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
110 6 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
111 7 WAIT states are asserted when this Chip Select is active.
4
CSX_IO
0 Chip Select is configured as a Memory Chip Select.
1 Chip Select is configured as an I/O Chip Select.
3
CSx_EN
0 Chip Select is disabled.
1 Chip Select is enabled.
[2:0] 000 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
70
Chip Select x Bus Mode Control Register+The Chip Select Bus Mode register,
listed in Table 25, configures the Chip Select for eZ80®, Z80®, IntelTM, or Motorola bus
modes. Changing the bus mode allows the eZ80F92 device to interface to peripherals
based on the Z80-, Intel-, or Motorola-style asynchronous bus interfaces. When a bus
mode other than CPU is programmed for a particular Chip Select, the CSx_WAIT setting
in that Chip Select Control Register is ignored.
Table 25. Chip Select x Bus Mode Control Register(CS0_BMC = 00F0h, CS1_BMC = 00F1h,
CS2_BMC = 00F2h, CS3_BMC = 00F3h)
Bit 76543210
CS0_BMC Reset 00000010
CS1_BMC Reset 00000010
CS2_BMC Reset 00000010
CS3_BMC Reset 00000010
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:6]
BUS_MODE
00 eZ80® bus mode.
01 Z80 bus mode.
10 IntelTM bus mode.
11 Motorola bus mode.
5
AD_MUX
0 Separate address and data.
1 Multiplexed address and data—appears on data bus
DATA[7:0].
4 0 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Chip Selects and Wait States
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
71
[3:0]
BUS_CYCLE
0000 Not valid.
0001 Each bus mode state is 1 CPU clock cycle in duration.1, 2, 3
0010 Each bus mode state is 2 CPU clock cycles in duration.
0011 Each bus mode state is 3 CPU clock cycles in duration.
0100 Each bus mode state is 4 CPU clock cycles in duration.
0101 Each bus mode state is 5 CPU clock cycles in duration.
0110 Each bus mode state is 6 CPU clock cycles in duration.
0111 Each bus mode state is 7 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1000 Each bus mode state is 8 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1001 Each bus mode state is 9 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1010 Each bus mode state is 10 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1011 Each bus mode state is 11 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1100 Each bus mode state is 12 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1101 Each bus mode state is 13 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1110 Each bus mode state is 14 CPU clock cycles in duration.
1111 Each bus mode state is 15 CPU clock cycles in duration.
Notes
1. Setting BUS_CYCLE to 1 in IntelTM bus mode causes the ALE pin to not function properly.
2. Use of the external WAIT input pin in Z80® mode requires that BUS_CYCLE is set to a value
greater than 1.
3. BUS_CYCLE produces no effect in eZ80® mode.
Bit
Position Value Description
PS015313-0508 Watchdog Timer
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
72
Watchdog Timer
Watchdog Timer Overview
The Watchdog Timer (WDT) helps protect against corrupt or unreliable software, power
faults, and other system-level problems which may place the CPU into unsuitable
operating states.
The eZ80F92 WDT features:
Four programmable time-out periods: 218, 222, 225, and 227 clock cycles
Two selectable WDT clock sources: the system clock or the Real-Time Clock source
(on-chip 32 kHz crystal oscillator or 50/60 Hz signal)
A selectable time-out response: a time-out can be configured to generate either a
RESET or a nonmaskable interrupt (NMI)
A WDT time-out RESET indicator flag
Figure 19 displays the block diagram for the Watchdog Timer.
Figure 19. Watchdog Timer Block Diagram
RESET
NMI to eZ80 CPU
28-Bit
Upcounter
Control Register/
Reset Register
WDT Control Logic
Data[7:0]
WDT_CLK
System Clock
RTC Clock
Time-out Compare Logic
(WDT_PERIOD)
PS015313-0508 Watchdog Timer
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
73
Watchdog Timer Operation
Enabling and Disabling the WDT
The Watchdog Timer is disabled upon a RESET. To enable the WDT, the application
program must set the WDT_EN bit (bit 7) of the WDT_CTL register. When enabled, the
WDT cannot be disabled without a RESET.
Time-Out Period Selection
There are four choices of time-out periods for the WDT—218, 222, 225, and 227 system
clock cycles. The WDT time-out period is defined by the WDT_PERIOD field of the
WDT_CTL
register (WDT_CTL[1:0]). The approximate time-out period for two
different WDT clock sources is listed in Table 26.
RESET Or NMI Generation
On a WDT time-out, the RST_FLAG bit in the WDT_CTL register is set to 1. In addition,
the WDT can cause a RESET or send a nonmaskable interrupt (NMI) signal to the CPU.
The default operation is for the WDT to cause a RESET. It asserts/deasserts on the rising
edge of the clock. The RST_FLAG bit can be polled by the CPU to determine the source
of the RESET event.
Table 26. Watchdog Timer Approximate Time-Out Delays
Clock Source Divider Value Time Out Delay
32.768 kHz Crystal Oscillator 218 8.00 s
32.768 kHz Crystal Oscillator 222 128 s
32.768 kHz Crystal Oscillator 225 1024 s
32.768 kHz Crystal Oscillator 227 4096 s
20 MHz System Clock 218 13.1 ms*
20 MHz System Clock 222 209.7 ms*
20 MHz System Clock 225 1.68 s
20 MHz System Clock 227 6.71 s
50 MHz System Clock 218 5.2 ms
50 MHz System Clock 222 83.9 ms
50 MHz System Clock 225 0.67 s
50 MHz System Clock 227 2.68 s
Note: *WDT time-out values should be sufficiently long to allow Flash
operations to complete.
PS015313-0508 Watchdog Timer
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
74
If the NMI_OUT bit in the WDT_CTL register is set to 1, then upon time-out, the WDT
asserts an NMI for CPU processing. The NMI_FLAG bit can be polled by the CPU to
determine the source of the NMI event.
Watchdog Timer Registers
Watchdog Timer Control Register
The Watchdog Timer Control register, listed in Table 27, is an 8-bit Read/Write register
used to enable the Watchdog Timer, set the time-out period, indicate the source of the most
recent RESET, and select the required operation upon WDT time-out.
Table 27. Watchdog Timer Control Register; (WDT_CTL = 0093h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 000/100000
CPU Access R/W R/W R R/W R/W R R/W R/W
Note: R = Read only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
WDT_EN
0 WDT is disabled.
1 WDT is enabled. When enabled, the WDT cannot be disabled
without a RESET.
6
NMI_OUT
0 WDT time-out resets the CPU.
1 WDT time-out generates a nonmaskable interrupt (NMI) to the
CPU.
5
RST_FLAG*
0 RESET caused by external full-chip reset or ZDI reset.
1 RESET caused by WDT time-out. This flag is set by the WDT
time-out, even if the NMI_OUT flag is set to 1. The CPU can
poll this bit to determine the source of the RESET or NMI.
[4:3]
WDT_CLK
00 WDT clock source is system clock.
01 WDT clock source is Real-Time Clock source (32 kHz on-chip
oscillator or 50/60 Hz input as set by RTC_CTRL[4]).
10 Reserved.
11 Reserved.
2 0 Reserved.
Note: *RST_FLAG is only cleared by a non-WDT RESET.
PS015313-0508 Watchdog Timer
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
75
Watchdog Timer Reset Register
The Watchdog Timer Reset register, listed in Table 28, is an 8-bit Write Only register. The
Watchdog Timer is reset when an A5h
value followed by 5Ah is written to this
register. Any amount of time can occur between the writing of the A5h value and the
5Ah value, so long as the WDT time-out does not occur prior to completion.
[1:0]
WDT_PERIOD
00 WDT time-out period is 227 clock cycles.
01 WDT time-out period is 225 clock cycles.
10 WDT time-out period is 222 clock cycles.
11 WDT time-out period is 218 clock cycles.
Table 28. Watchdog Timer Reset Register; (WDT_RR = 0094h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: X = Undefined; W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
WDT_RR
A5h The first Write value required to reset the WDT prior to a time-
out.
5Ah The second Write value required to reset the WDT prior to a
time-out. If an A5h, 5Ah sequence is written to WDT_RR, the
WDT timer is reset to its initial count value, and counting
resumes.
Bit
Position Value Description
Note: *RST_FLAG is only cleared by a non-WDT RESET.
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
76
Programmable Reload Timers
Programmable Reload Timers Overview
The eZ80F92 device features six Programmable Reload Timers (PRT). Each PRT contains
a 16-bit downcounter and a 16-bit reload register. In addition, each PRT features a clock
divider with four selectable taps for CLK ÷ 4, CLK ÷ 16, CLK ÷ 64, and CLK ÷ 256.
Each timer can be individually enabled to operate in either SINGLE PASS or CONTINU-
OUS mode. The timer can be programmed to start, stop, restart from the current value, or
restart from the initial value, and generate interrupts to the CPU.
Four of the Programmable Reload Timers (timers 0–3) feature a selectable clock source
input. The input for these timers can be either the system clock or the Real-Time Clock
(RTC) source. Timers 0–3 can also be used for event counting, with their inputs received
from a GPIO port pin. Output from timers 4 and 5 can be directed to a GPIO port pin.
Each of the six PRTs available on the eZ80F92 device can be controlled individually. They
do not share the same counters, reload registers, control registers, or interrupt signals.
A simplified block diagram of a programmable reload timer is displayed in Figure 20.
Figure 20.Programmable Reload Timer Block Diagram
Reload Registers
{TMRx_RR_H, TMRx_RR_L}
Data[7:0]
Data[7:0]
Data[7:0]
TOUT_EN
(Timers 4—5 only)
16-Bit
Down Counter
Adjustable
Clock
Prescaler
TMRx_IN
(Timers 0—3
only)
TMRx_CTL[3:2]
System Clock
RTC Source
GPIO Pin
Control Register
TMRx_CTL
PRT
Control Logic
IRQ to eZ80 CPU
Timer Out
Data Registers
{TMRx_DR_H, TMRx_DR_L}
22
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
77
Programmable Reload Timer Operation
Setting Timer Duration
There are three factors to consider when determining Programmable Reload Timer dura-
tion—clock frequency, clock divider ratio, and initial count value. Minimum duration of
the timer is achieved by loading 0001h. Maximum duration is achieved by loading
0000h, because the timer first rolls over to FFFFh and then continues counting down to
0000h.
The time-out period of the PRT is returned by the following equation:
To calculate the time-out period with the above equation when using an initial value of
0000h, enter a reload value of 65536 (FFFFh + 1).
Minimum time-out duration is 4 times longer than the input clock period and is generated
by setting the clock divider ratio to 1:4 and the reload value to 0001h. Maximum time-out
duration is 224 (16,777,216) times longer than the input clock period and is generated by
setting the clock divider ratio to 1:256 and the reload value to 0000h.
Single Pass Mode
In SINGLE PASS mode, when the end-of-count value, 0000h, is reached, counting halts,
the timer is disabled, and the PRT_EN bit resets to 0. To restart the timer, the CPU must
re-enable the timer by setting the PRT_EN bit to 1 in the Timer Control Register. To set
the downcounter to the value in the reload registers, the RST_EN bit must be set to 1 in the
Timer Control Register. An example of a PRT operating in SINGLE PASS mode is
displayed in Figure 21 on page 78. Timer register information is listed in Table 29 on page
78.
PRT Time-Out Period = Clock Divider Ratio x Reload Value
System Clock Frequency
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
78
Continuous Mode
In CONTINUOUS mode, when the end-of-count value, 0000h, is reached, the timer auto-
matically reloads the 16-bit start value from the Timer Reload registers, TMRx_RR_H and
TMRx_RR_L. Downcounting continues on the next clock edge. In CONTINUOUS mode,
the PRT continues to count until disabled. An example of a PRT operating in CONTINU-
OUS mode is displayed in Figure 22 on page 79. Timer register information is listed in
Table 30 on page 79.
Figure 21.PRT SINGLE PASS Mode Operation Example
Table 29. PRT SINGLE PASS Mode Operation Example
Parameter Control Register(s) Value
PRT Enabled TMRx_CTL[0] 1
Reload and Restart Enabled TMRx_CTL[1] 1
PRT Clock Divider = 4 TMRx_CTL[3:2] 00b
SINGLE PASS Mode TMRx_CTL[4] 0
PRT Interrupt Enabled TMRx_CTL[6] 1
PRT Reload Value {TMRx_RR_H, TMRx_RR_L} 0004h
CLK
CLKEN
IOWRN
t [7:0]
IRQ
0
00
43 2 1
CNTH
t [7:0]
CNTL
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
79
Reading the Current Count Value
The CPU is capable of reading the current count value while the timer is running. This
Read event does not affect timer operation. The High byte of the current count value is
latched during a Read of the Low byte.
Timer Interrupts
The timer interrupt flag, PRT_IRQ, is set to 1 whenever the timer reaches its end-of-count
value, 0000h, in SINGLE PASS mode, or when the timer reloads the start value in
CONTINUOUS mode. The interrupt flag is only set when the timer reaches 0000h (or
reloads) from 0001h. The timer interrupt flag is not set to 1 when the timer is loaded with
the value 0000h, which selects the maximum time-out period.
The CPU can be programmed to poll the PRT_IRQ bit for the time-out event. Alterna-
tively, an interrupt service request signal can be sent to the CPU by setting IRQ_EN to 1.
Figure 22. PRT CONTINUOUS Mode Operation Example
Table 30. PRT CONTINUOUS Mode Operation Example
Parameter Control Register(s) Value
PRT Enabled TMRx_CTL[0] 1
Reload and Restart Enabled TMRx_CTL[1] 1
PRT Clock Divider = 4 TMRx_CTL[3:2] 00b
CONTINUOUS Mode TMRx_CTL[4] 1
PRT Interrupt Enabled TMRx_CTL[6] 1
PRT Reload Value {TMRx_RR_H, TMRx_RR_L} 0004h
CLK
PRT Clock
(Clock  4)
IOWRN
PRT Count
Value
Interrupt
Request
I/O Write to TMRx_CTL Enables PRT
X4321
43
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
80
Then, when the end-of-count value, 0000h, is reached and PRT_IRQ is set to 1, an inter-
rupt service request signal is passed to the CPU. PRT_IRQ is cleared to 0 and the interrupt
service request signal is inactivated whenever the CPU reads from the timer control regis-
ters, TMRx_CTL.
Timer Input Source Selection
Timers 0–3 feature programmable input source selection. By default, the input is taken
from the eZ80F92 device’s system clock. Alternatively, Timers 0–3 can take their input
from port input pins PB0 (Timers 0 and 2) or PB1 (Timers 1 and 3). Timers 0–3 can also
use the Real-Time Clock source (50, 60, or 32768 Hz) as their clock sources. When the
timer clock source is the Real-Time Clock signal, the timer decrements on the second ris-
ing edge of the system clock following the falling edge of the RTC_XOUT pin. The input
source for these timers is set using the Timer Input Source Select register.
Event Counter
When Timers 0–3 are configured to take their inputs from port input pins PB0 and PB1,
they function as event counters. For event counting, the clock divider is bypassed. The
PRT counters decrement on every rising edge of the port pin. The port pins must be con-
figured as inputs. Due to the input sampling on the pins, the event input signal frequency is
limited to one-half the system clock frequency. Input sampling on the port pins results in
the PRT counter being updated on the fifth rising edge of the system clock after the rising
edge occurs at the port pin.
Timer Output
Two of the Programmable Reload Timers (Timers 4 and 5) can be directed to GPIO Port B
output pins (PB4 and PB5, respectively). To enable the Timer Out feature, the GPIO port
pin must be configured for alternate functions. After reset, the Timer Output feature is dis-
abled by default. The GPIO output pin toggles each time the PRT reaches its end-of-count
value. In CONTINUOUS mode operation, the disabling of the Timer Output feature
results in a Timer Output signal period that is twice the PRT time-out period. Examples of
the Timer Output operation are displayed in Figure 23 on page 81 and listed in Table 31 on
page 81. In these examples, the GPIO output is assumed to be Low (0) when the Timer
Output function is enabled.
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
81
Programmable Reload Timer Registers
Each programmable reload timer is controlled using five 8-bit registers. These registers
are the Timer Control register, Timer Reload Low Byte register, Timer Reload High Byte
register, Timer Data Low Byte register, and Timer Data High Byte register.
The Timer Control register can be read or written to. The timer reload registers are Write
Only and are located at the same I/O address as the timer data registers, which are Read
Only.
Timer Control Register
The Timer Control register, listed in Table 32 on page 82, is used to control operation of
the timer, including enabling the timer, selecting the clock divider, enabling the interrupt,
selecting between CONTINUOUS and SINGLE PASS modes, and enabling the auto-
reload feature.
Figure 23. PRT Timer Output Operation Example
Table 31. PRT Timer Out Operation Example
Parameter Control Register(s) Value
PRT Enabled TMRx_CTL[0] 1
Reload and Restart Enabled TMRx_CTL[1] 1
PRT Clock Divider = 4 TMRx_CTL[3:2] 00b
CONTINUOUS Mode TMRx_CTL[4] 1
PRT Reload Value {TMRx_RR_H, TMRx_RR_L} 0003h
CLK
PRT Clock
(Clock  4)
IOWRN
PRT Count
Value
Timer
Output
I/O Write to TMRx_CTL Enables PRT
X 3213
21
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
82
Table 32. Timer Control Register(TMR0_CTL = 0080h, TMR1_CTL = 0083h,
TMR2_CTL = 0086h, TMR3_CTL = 0089h, TMR4_CTL = 008Ch, or TMR5_CTL =
008Fh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
PRT_IRQ
0 The timer does not reach its end-of-count value. This bit is reset
to 0 every time the TMRx_CTL register is read.
1 The timer reaches its end-of-count value. If IRQ_EN is set to 1,
an interrupt signal is sent to the CPU. This bit remains 1 until the
TMRx_CTL register is read.
6
IRQ_EN
0 Timer interrupt requests are disabled.
1 Timer interrupt requests are enabled.
5 0 Reserved.
4
PRT_MODE
0 The timer operates in SINGLE PASS mode. PRT_EN (bit 0) is
reset to 0, and counting stops when the end-of-count value is
reached.
1 The timer operates in CONTINUOUS mode. The timer reload
value is written to the counter when the end-of-count value is
reached.
[3:2]
CLK_DIV
00 Clock ÷ 4 is the timer input source.
01 Clock ÷ 16 is the timer input source.
10 Clock ÷ 64 is the timer input source.
11 Clock ÷ 256 is the timer input source.
1
RST_EN
0 The reload and restart function is disabled.
1 The reload and restart function is enabled. When a 1 is written to
this bit, the values in the reload registers are loaded into the
downcounter when the timer restarts. The programmer must
ensure that this bit is set to 1 each time SINGLE-PASS mode is
used.
0
PRT_EN
0 The programmable reload timer is disabled.
1 The programmable reload timer is enabled.
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
83
Timer Data Register—Low Byte
This Read Only register returns the Low byte of the current count value of the selected
timer. The Timer Data Register—Low Byte, listed in Table 33, can be read while the timer
is in operation. Reading the current count value does not affect timer operation. To read
the 16-bit data of the current count value, {TMRx_DR_H[7:0], TMRx_DR_L[7:0]}, first
read the Timer Data Register—Low Byte and then read the Timer Data Register—High
Byte. The Timer Data Register—High Byte value is latched when a Read of the Timer
Data Register—Low Byte occurs.
The Timer Data registers and Timer Reload registers share the same address
space.
Timer Data Register—High Byte
This Read Only register returns the High byte of the current count value of the selected
timer. The Timer Data Register—High Byte, listed in Table 34 on page 84, can be read
while the timer is in operation. Reading the current count value does not affect timer oper-
ation.
To read the 16-bit data of the current count value, {TMRx_DR_H[7:0],
TMRx_DR_L[7:0]}, first read the Timer Data Register—Low Byte and then read the
Timer Data Register—High Byte. The Timer Data Register—High Byte value is latched
when a Read of the Timer Data Register—Low Byte occurs.
The timer data registers and timer reload registers share the same address space.
Table 33. Timer Data Register—Low Byte(TMR0_DR_L = 0081h, TMR1_DR_L =
0084h, TMR2_DR_L = 0087h, TMR3_DR_L = 008Ah, TMR4_DR_L = 008Dh, or
TMR5_DR_L = 0090h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TMRx_DR_L
00h–FFh These bits represent the Low byte of the 2-byte timer data
value, {TMRx_DR_H[7:0], TMRx_DR_L[7:0]}. Bit 7 is bit 7
of the 16-bit timer data value. Bit 0 is bit 0 (lsb) of the 16-bit
timer data value.
Note:
Note:
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
84
Timer Reload Register—Low Byte
The Timer Reload Register—Low Byte, listed in Table 35, stores the least-significant byte
(LSB) of the 2-byte timer reload value. In CONTINUOUS mode, the timer reload value is
reloaded into the timer upon end-of-count. When RST_EN (TMRx_CTL[1]) is set to 1 to
enable the automatic reload and restart function, the timer reload value is written to the
timer on the next rising edge of the clock.
The Timer Data registers and Timer Reload registers share the same address
space.
Table 34. Timer Data Register—High Byte(TMR0_DR_H = 0082h, TMR1_DR_H =
0085h, TMR2_DR_H = 0088h, TMR3_DR_H = 008Bh, TMR4_DR_H = 008Eh, or
TMR5_DR_H = 0091h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TMRx_DR_H
00h–FFh These bits represent the High byte of the 2-byte timer data
value, {TMRx_DR_H[7:0], TMRx_DR_L[7:0]}. Bit 7 is bit 15
(msb) of the 16-bit timer data value. Bit 0 is bit 8 of the 16-bit
timer data value.
Table 35. Timer Reload Register—Low Byte(TMR0_RR_L = 0081h, TMR1_RR_L =
0084h, TMR2_RR_L = 0087h, TMR3_RR_L = 008Ah, TMR4_RR_L = 008Dh, or
TMR5_RR_L = 0090h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TMRx_RR_L
00h–FFh These bits represent the Low byte of the 2-byte timer
reload value, {TMRx_RR_H[7:0], TMRx_RR_L[7:0]}. Bit 7
is bit 7 of the 16-bit timer reload value. Bit 0 is bit 0 (lsb) of
the 16-bit timer reload value.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
85
Timer Reload Register—High Byte
The Timer Reload Register—High Byte, listed in Table 36, stores the most-significant
byte (MSB) of the 2-byte timer reload value. In CONTINUOUS mode, the timer reload
value is reloaded into the timer upon end-of-count. When RST_EN (TMRx_CTL[1]) is set
to 1 to enable the automatic reload and restart function, the timer reload value is written to
the timer on the next rising edge of the clock.
The Timer Data registers and Timer Reload registers share the same address
space.
Timer Input Source Select Register
The Timer Input Source Select register, listed in Table 37 on page 86, sets the input source
for Programmable Reload Timer 0–3 (TMR0, TMR1, TMR2, TMR3). Event frequency
must be less than one-half of the system clock frequency. When configured for event
inputs through the port pins, the Timers decrement on the fifth system clock rising edge
following the rising edge of the port pin. The timer event input can arrive from the GPIO
port, the real-time clock, or the system clock. The value of the clock divider in the Timer
Control Register is ignored when the timer event input is either from the GPIO port pin or
the real-time clock source.
Table 36. Timer Reload Register—High Byte(TMR0_RR_H = 0082h, TMR1_RR_H =
0085h, TMR2_RR_H = 0088h, TMR3_RR_H = 008Bh, TMR4_RR_H = 008Eh, or
TMR5_RR_H = 0091h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TMRx_RR_H
00h–FFh These bits represent the High byte of the 2-byte timer
reload value, {TMRx_RR_H[7:0], TMRx_RR_L[7:0]}. Bit 7
is bit 15 (msb) of the 16-bit timer reload value. Bit 0 is bit 8
of the 16-bit timer reload value.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
86
Table 37. Timer Input Source Select Register(TMR_ISS = 0092h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:6]
TMR3_IN
00 The timer counts at the system clock divided by the clock
divider.
01 The timer event input is the Real-Time Clock source
(32 kHz or 50/60 Hz—refer to the Real-Time Clock on
page 88 for details).
10 The timer event input source is the GPIO Port B pin 1.
11 The timer event input source is the GPIO Port B pin 1.
[5:4]
TMR2_IN
00 The timer counts at the system clock divided by the clock
divider.
01 The timer event input is the Real-Time Clock source
(32 kHz or 50/60 Hz—See the Real-Time Clock on page
88 for details).
10 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 0.
11 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 0.
[3:2]
TMR1_IN
00 The timer counts at the system clock divided by the clock
divider.
01 The timer event input is the Real-Time Clock source
(32 kHz or 50/60 Hz—See the Real-Time Clock on page
88 for details).
10 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 1.
11 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 1.
PS015313-0508 Programmable Reload Timers
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
87
[1:0]
TMR0_IN
00 Timer counts at system clock divided by clock divider.
01 Timer event input is Real-Time Clock source
(32 kHz or 50/60 Hz—see Real-Time Clock on page 88 for
details).
10 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 0.
11 The timer event input is the GPIO Port B pin 0.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
88
Real-Time Clock
Real-Time Clock Overview
The Real-Time Clock (RTC) keeps time by maintaining a count of seconds, minutes,
hours, day-of-the-week, day-of-the-month, year, and century. The current time is kept in
24-hour format. The format for all count and alarm registers is selectable between binary
and binary-coded-decimal (BCD). The calendar operation maintains the correct day of the
month and automatically compensates for leap year. A simplified block diagram of the
RTC and the associated on-chip, low-power, 32 kHz oscillator is displayed in Figure 24.
Connections to an external battery supply and 32 kHz crystal network are also displayed
in Figure 24.
Figure 24. Real-Time Clock and 32 kHz Oscillator Block Diagram
RTC_V
RTC_X
DD
V
Enable
CLK_SEL
(RTC_CTRL[4])
32 KHz
Crystal
Battery
IRQ
ADDR[15:0]
DATA[7:0]
RTC Clock
System Clock
DD
VDD
IN
C
Low-Power
32 KHz Oscillator
Real-Time Clock
to eZ80 CPU
RTC_XOUT
C
R1
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
89
Real-Time Clock Alarm
The clock can be programmed to generate an alarm condition when the current count
matches the alarm set-point registers. Alarm registers are available for seconds, minutes,
hours, and day-of-the-week. Each alarm can be independently enabled. To generate an
alarm condition, the current time must match all enabled alarm values. For example, if the
day-of-the-week and hour alarms are both enabled, the alarm only occurs at the specified
hour on the specified day. The alarm triggers an interrupt if the interrupt enable bit,
INT_EN, is set. The alarm flag, ALARM, and corresponding interrupt to the CPU are
cleared by reading the RTC_CTRL register.
Alarm value registers and alarm control registers can be written at any time. Alarm
conditions are generated when the count value matches the alarm value. The comparison
of alarm and count values occurs whenever the RTC count increments (one time every
second). The RTC can also be forced to perform a comparison at any time by writing a
0 to the RTC_UNLOCK bit (RTC_UNLOCK is not required to be changed to a 1 first).
Real-Time Clock Oscillator and Source Selection
The RTC count is driven by either an external 32 kHz on-chip oscillator or a 50/60 Hz
power-line frequency input connected to the 32 kHz RTC_XOUT pin. An internal divider
compensates for each of these options. The clock source and power-line frequencies are
selected in the RTC_CTRL register. Writing to the RTC_CTRL register resets the clock
divider.
Real-Time Clock Battery Backup
The power supply pin (RTC_VDD) for the Real-Time Clock and associated low-power
32 kHz oscillator is isolated from the other power supply pins on the eZ80F92 device.
To ensure that the RTC continues to keep time in the event of loss of line power to the
application, a battery can be used to supply power to the RTC and the oscillator via the
RTC_VDD pin. All VSS (ground) pins should be connected together on the printed circuit
assembly.
Real-Time Clock Recommended Operation
Following a RESET from a powered-down condition, the counter values of the RTC are
undefined and all alarms are disabled.
After a RESET from a powered-down condition, the following procedure is
recommended:
Write to RTC_CTRL to set RTC_UNLOCK and CLK_SEL
Write values to the RTC count registers to set the current time
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
90
Write values to the RTC alarm registers to set the appropriate alarm conditions
Write to RTC_CTRL to clear the RTC_UNLOCK bit; clearing the RTC_UNLOCK bit
resets and enables the clock divider
Real-Time Clock Registers
The Real-Time Clock registers are accessed via the address and data bus using I/O instruc-
tions. RTC_UNLOCK controls access to the RTC count registers. When unlocked
(RTC_UNLOCK = 1), the RTC count is disabled and the count registers are Read/Write.
When locked (RTC_UNLOCK = 0), the RTC count is enabled and the count registers are
Read Only. The default, at RESET, is for the RTC to be locked.
Real-Time Clock Seconds Register
This register contains the current seconds count. The value in the RTC_SEC register is
unchanged by a RESET. The current setting of BCD_EN determines whether the values in
this register are binary (BCD_EN = 0) or binary-coded decimal (BCD_EN = 1). Access to
this register is Read Only if the RTC is locked and Read/Write if the RTC is unlocked. See
Table 38.
Table 38. Real-Time Clock Seconds Register; (RTC_SEC = 00E0h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TEN_SEC
0–5 The tens digit of the current seconds count.
[3:0]
SEC
0–9 The ones digit of the current seconds count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SEC
00h–
3Bh
The current seconds count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
91
Real-Time Clock Minutes Register
This register contains the current minutes count. See Table 39.
Table 39. Real-Time Clock Minutes Register; (RTC_MIN = 00E1h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TEN_MIN
0–5 The tens digit of the current minutes count.
[3:0]
MIN
0–9 The ones digit of the current minutes count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
MIN
00h–
3Bh
The current minutes count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
92
Real-Time Clock Hours Register
This register contains the current hours count. See Table 40.
Table 40. Real-Time Clock Hours Register; (RTC_HRS = 00E2h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TEN_HRS
0–2 The tens digit of the current hours count.
[3:0]
HRS
0–9 The ones digit of the current hours count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
HRS
00h–
17h
The current hours count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
93
Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Week Register
This register contains the current day-of-the-week count. The RTC_DOW register begins
counting at 01h. See Table 41.
Table 41. Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Week Register; (RTC_DOW = 00E3h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 0000XXXX
CPU Access RRRRR/W*R/W*R/W*R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R = Read Only; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if
RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4] 0000 Reserved.
[3:0]
DOW
1-7 The current day-of-the-week.count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4] 0000 Reserved.
[3:0]
DOW
01h–
07h
The current day-of-the-week count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
94
Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Month Register
This register contains the current day-of-the-month count. The RTC_DOM register begins
counting at 01h. See Table 42.
Table 42. Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Month Register; (RTC_DOM = 00E4h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TENS_DOM
0–3 The tens digit of the current day-of-the-month count.
[3:0]
DOM
0–9 The ones digit of the current day-of-the-month count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
DOM
01h–
1Fh
The current day-of-the-month count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
95
Real-Time Clock Month Register
This register contains the current month count. See Table 43.
Table 43. Real-Time Clock Month Register; (RTC_MON = 00E5h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TENS_MON
0–1 The tens digit of the current month count.
[3:0]
MON
0–9 The ones digit of the current month count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
MON
01h–
0Ch
The current month count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
96
Real-Time Clock Year Register
This register contains the current year count. See Table 44.
Table 44. Real-Time Clock Year Register; (RTC_YR = 00E6h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TENS_YR
0–9 The tens digit of the current year count.
[3:0]
YR
0–9 The ones digit of the current year count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
YR
00h–
63h
The current year count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
97
Real-Time Clock Century Register
This register contains the current century count. See Table 45.
Table 45. Real-Time Clock Century Register; (RTC_CEN = 00E7h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
TENS_CEN
0–9 The tens digit of the current century count.
[3:0]
CEN
0–9 The ones digit of the current century count.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
CEN
00h–
63h
The current century count.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
98
Real-Time Clock Alarm Seconds Register
This register contains the alarm seconds value. See Table 46.
Table 46. Real-Time Clock Alarm Seconds Register; (RTC_ASEC = 00E8h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W = Read/Write.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
ATEN_SEC
0–5 The tens digit of the alarm seconds value.
[3:0]
ASEC
0–9 The ones digit of the alarm seconds value.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ASEC
00h–
3Bh
The alarm seconds value.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
99
Real-Time Clock Alarm Minutes Register
This register contains the alarm minutes value. See Table 47.
Table 47. Real-Time Clock Alarm Minutes Register; (RTC_AMIN = 00E9h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W = Read/Write.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
ATEN_MIN
0–5 The tens digit of the alarm minutes value.
[3:0]
AMIN
0–9 The ones digit of the alarm minutes value.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
AMIN
00h–
3Bh
The alarm minutes value.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
100
Real-Time Clock Alarm Hours Register
This register contains the alarm hours value. See Table 48.
Table 48. Real-Time Clock Alarm Hours Register; (RTC_AHRS = 00EAh)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W = Read/Write.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4]
ATEN_HRS
0–2 The tens digit of the alarm hours value.
[3:0]
AHRS
0–9 The ones digit of the alarm hours value.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
AHRS
00h–
17h
The alarm hours value.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
101
Real-Time Clock Alarm Day-of-the-Week Register
This register contains the alarm day-of-the-week value. See Table 49.
Table 49. Real-Time Clock Alarm Day-of-the-Week Register; (RTC_ADOW = 00EBh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 0000XXXX
CPU Access RRRRR/W*R/W*R/W*R/W*
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R = Read Only; R/W* = Read Only if RTC locked, Read/Write if
RTC unlocked.
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation (BCD_EN = 1)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4] 0000 Reserved.
[3:0]
ADOW
1-7 The alarm day-of-the-week.value.
Binary Operation (BCD_EN = 0)
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4] 0000 Reserved.
[3:0]
ADOW
01h–
07h
The alarm day-of-the-week value.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
102
Real-Time Clock Alarm Control Register
This register contains alarm enable bits for the Real-Time Clock. The RTC_ACTRL regis-
ter is cleared by a RESET. See Table 50.
Real-Time Clock Control Register
This register contains control and status bits for the Real-Time Clock. Some bits in the
RTC_CTRL register are cleared by a RESET. The ALARM flag and associated interrupt
(if INT_EN is enabled) are cleared by reading this register. The ALARM flag is updated
by clearing (locking) the RTC_UNLOCK bit or by an increment of the RTC count. Writ-
ing to the RTC_CTRL register also resets the RTC clock divider allowing the RTC to be
synchronized to another time source.
SLP_WAKE indicates if an RTC alarm condition initiated the CPU recovery from SLEEP
mode. This bit can be checked after RESET to determine if a sleep-mode recovery is
caused by the RTC. SLP_WAKE is cleared by a Read of the RTC_CTRL register.
Setting BCD_EN causes the RTC to use BCD counting in all registers including the alarm
set points.
Table 50. Real-Time Clock Alarm Control Register; (RTC_ACTRL = 00ECh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRR/WR/WR/WR/W
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:4] 0000 Reserved.
3
ADOW_EN
0 The day-of-the-week alarm is disabled.
1 The day-of-the-week alarm is enabled.
2
AHRS_EN
0 The hours alarm is disabled.
1 The hours alarm is enabled.
1
AMIN_EN
0 The minutes alarm is disabled.
1 The minutes alarm is enabled.
0
ASEC_EN
0 The seconds alarm is disabled.
1 The seconds alarm is enabled.
PS015313-0508 Real-Time Clock
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
103
CLK_SEL and FREQ_SEL select the RTC clock source. If the 32 kHz crystal option is
selected the oscillator is enabled and the internal clock divider is set to divide by 32768. If
the power-line frequency option is selected, the prescale value is set by FREQ_SEL, and
the 32 kHz oscillator is disabled. See Table 51.
Table 51. Real-Time Clock Control Register; (RTC_CTRL = 00EDh)
Bit 76543210
Reset X0XXXX0/10
CPU Access R R/W R/W R/W R/W R R R/W
Note: X = Unchanged by RESET; R = Read Only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
ALARM
0 Alarm interrupt is inactive.
1 Alarm interrupt is active.
6
INT_EN
0 Interrupt on alarm condition is disabled.
1 Interrupt on alarm condition is enabled.
5
BCD_EN
0 RTC count and alarm value registers are binary.
1 RTC count and alarm value registers are binary-coded decimal
(BCD).
4
CLK_SEL
0 RTC clock source is crystal oscillator output (32768 Hz).
On-chip 32768 Hz oscillator is enabled.
1 RTC clock source is power-line frequency input.
On-chip 32768 Hz oscillator is disabled.
3
FREQ_SEL
0 Power-line frequency is 60 Hz.
1 Power-line frequency is 50 Hz.
2 0 Reserved.
1
SLP_WAKE
0 RTC does not generate a sleep-mode recovery reset.
1 RTC Alarm generates a sleep-mode recovery reset.
0
RTC_UNLOCK
0 RTC count registers are locked to prevent Write access.
RTC counter is enabled.
1 RTC count registers are unlocked to allow Write access.
RTC counter is disabled.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
104
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Trans-
mitter
The UART module implements all of the logic required to support several asynchronous
communications protocols. The module also implements two separate 16-byte-deep
FIFOs for both transmission and reception. A block diagram of the UART is displayed in
Figure 25.
The UART module provides the following asynchronous communication protocol-related
features and functions:
5-, 6-, 7-, 8- or 9-bit data transmission
Even/odd, space/mark, or no parity bit generation and detection
Start and stop bit generation and detection
Supports up to two stop bits
Line break detection and generation
Receiver overrun and framing errors detection
Logic and associated I/O to provide modem handshake capability
Figure 25.UART Block Diagram
System Clock
I/O Address
Data
Receive
Buffer
Transmit
Buffer
Modem
Control
Logic
Interrupt Signal
to eZ80 CPU
UART Control Interface and Baud Rate Generator
RxD0/RxD1
TxD0/TxD1
CTS0/CTS1
RTS0/RTS1
DSR0/DSR1
DTR0/DTR1
DCD0/DCD1
RI0/RI1
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
105
UART Functional Description
The UART function implements:
The transmitter and associated control logic
The receiver and associated control logic
The modem interface and associated logic
UART Functions
The UART function implements:
The transmitter and associated control logic
The receiver and associated control logic
The modem interface and associated logic
UART Transmitter
The transmitter block controls the data transmitted on the TxD output. It implements the
FIFO, accessed through the UARTx_THR register, the transmit shift register, the parity
generator, and control logic for the transmitter to control parameters for the asynchronous
communication protocol.
The UARTx_THR is a Write Only register. The processor writes the data byte to be trans-
mitted into this register. In the FIFO mode, up to 16 data bytes can be written via the
UARTx_THR register. The data byte from the FIFO is transferred to the transmit shift reg-
ister at the appropriate time and transmitted out on TxD output. After SYNC_RESET, the
UARTx_THR register is empty. Therefore, the Transmit Holding Register Empty (THRE)
bit (bit 5 of the UARTx_LSR
register) is 1 and an interrupt is sent to the processor (if
interrupts are enabled). The processor can reset this interrupt by loading data into the
UARTx_THR register, which clears the transmitter interrupt.
The transmit shift register places the byte to be transmitted on the TxD signal serially. The
lsb of the byte to be transmitted is shifted out first and the msb is shifted out last. The con-
trol logic within the block adds the asynchronous communication protocol bits to the data
byte being transmitted. The transmitter block obtains the parameters for the protocol from
the bits programmed via the UARTx_LCTL register. When enabled, an interrupt is gener-
ated after the most recent protocol bit is transmitted, which the processor may reset by
loading data into the UARTx_THR register. The TxD output is set to 1 if the transmitter is
idle (it does not contain any data to be transmitted).
The transmitter operates with the Baud Rate Generator (BRG) clock. The data bits are
placed on the TxD output one time every 16 BRG clock cycles. The transmitter block also
implements a parity generator that attaches the parity bit to the byte, if programmed. For
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
106
9-bit data, the host processor programs the parity bit generator so that it marks the byte as
either address (mark parity) or data (space parity).
UART Receiver
The receiver block controls the data reception from the RxD signal. The receiver block
implements a receiver shift register, receiver line error condition monitoring logic and
Receiver Data Ready logic. It also implements the parity checker.
The UARTx_RBR is a Read Only register of the module. The processor reads received
data from this register. The condition of the UARTx_RBR register is monitored by the DR
bit (bit 0 of the UARTx_LSR register). The DR bit is 1 when a data byte is received and
transferred to the UARTx_RBR register from the receiver shift register. The DR bit is
reset only when the processor reads all of the received data bytes. If the number of bits
received is less than eight, the unused MSbs of the data byte Read are 0
For 9-bit data, the receiver checks incoming bytes for space parity. This check routine gen-
erates a line status interrupt when an address byte is received, because address bytes con-
tain mark parity bits. The processor clears the interrupt, determines if the address matches
its own, then configures the receiver to either accept the subsequent data bytes if the
address matches, or ignore the data if it does not.
The receiver uses the clock from the BRG for receiving the data. This clock must be 16
times the appropriate baud rate. The receiver synchronizes the shift clock on the falling
edge of the RxD input start bit. It then receives a complete byte according to the set
parameters. The receiver also implements logic to detect framing errors, parity errors,
overrun errors, and break signals.
UART Modem Control
The modem control logic provides two outputs and four inputs for handshaking with the
modem. Any change in the modem status inputs, except RI, is detected and an interrupt
can be generated. For RI, an interrupt is generated only when the trailing edge of the RI is
detected. The module also provides LOOP mode for self-diagnostics.
UART Interrupts
There are six different sources of interrupts from the UART.
The six sources of interrupts are:
Transmitter (two different interrupts)
Receiver (three different interrupts)
Modem status
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
107
UART Transmitter Interrupt
The transmitter hold register empty interrupt is generated if there is no data available in
the hold register. The transmission complete interrupt is generated after the data in the
shift register is sent. Both interrupts can be disabled using individual interrupt enable bits
or cleared by writing data into the UARTx_THR register.
UART Receiver Interrupts
A receiver interrupt can be generated by three possible sources. The first source, a
Receiver Data Ready, indicates that one or more data bytes are received and are ready to
be read. This interrupt is generated if the number of bytes in the receiver FIFO is greater
than or equal to the trigger level. If the FIFO is not enabled, the interrupt is generated if the
receive buffer contains a data byte. This interrupt is cleared by reading the UARTx_RBR.
The second interrupt source is the receiver time-out. A receiver time-out interrupt is gen-
erated when there are fewer data bytes in the receiver FIFO than the trigger level and there
are no reads and writes to or from the receiver FIFO for four consecutive byte times.
When the receiver time-out interrupt is generated, it is cleared only after emptying the
entire receive FIFO.
The first two interrupt sources from the receiver (data ready and time-out) share an inter-
rupt enable bit.
The third source of a receiver interrupt is a line status error, indicating an error in byte
reception. This error may result from:
Incorrect received parity. For 9-bit data, incorrect parity indicates detection of an
address byte
Incorrect framing; that is, the stop bit is not detected by receiver at the end of the byte
Receiver over run condition
A BREAK condition being detected on the receive data input
An interrupt due to one of the above conditions is cleared when the UARTx_LSR register
is read. In FIFO mode, a line status interrupt is generated only after the received byte with
an error reaches the top of the FIFO and is ready to be read.
A line status interrupt is activated (provided this interrupt is enabled) as long as the Read
pointer of the receiver FIFO points to the location of the FIFO that contains a byte with the
error. The interrupt is immediately cleared when the UARTx_LSR register is read. The
ERR bit of the UARTx_LSR register is active as long as an erroneous byte is present in the
receiver FIFO.
UART Modem Status Interrupt
The modem status interrupt is generated if there is any change in state of the modem status
inputs to the UART. This interrupt is cleared when the processor reads the UARTx_MSR
register.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
108
UART Recommended Usage
The following is the standard sequence of events that occur in the eZ80F92 device using
the UART. A description of each follows.
Module reset
Control transfers to configure UART operation
Data transfers
Module Reset
Upon reset, all internal registers are set to their default values. All command status regis-
ters are programmed with their default values, and the FIFOs are flushed.
Control Transfers
Based on the requirements of the application, the data transfer baud rate is determined and
the BRG is configured to generate a 16X clock frequency. Interrupts are disabled and the
communication control parameters are programmed in the UARTx_LCTL register. The
FIFO configuration is determined and the receive trigger levels are set in the
UARTx_FCTL register. The status registers, UARTx_LSR and UARTx_MSR, are read,
and ensure that none of the interrupt sources are active. The interrupts are enabled (except
for the transmit interrupt) and the application is ready to use the module for transmission/
reception.
Data Transfers
Transmit. To transmit data, the application enables the transmit interrupt. An interrupt is
immediately expected in response. The application reads the UARTx_IIR register and
determines whether the interrupt occurs due to an empty UARTx_THR register or due to a
completed transmission. Upon this determination, the application writes the pertinent
transmit data bytes to the UARTx_THR register. The number of bytes that the application
writes depends on whether or not the FIFO is enabled. If the FIFO is enabled, the applica-
tion can write 16 bytes at a time. If not, the application can write one byte at a time. As a
result of the first Write, the interrupt is deactivated. The processor then waits for the next
interrupt. When the interrupt is raised by the UART module, the processor repeats the
same process until it exhausts all of the data for transmission.
To control and check the modem status, the application sets up the modem by writing to
the UARTx_MCTL register and reading the UARTx_MCTL register before starting the
process mentioned above.
Receive. The receiver is always enabled, and it continually checks for the start bit on the
RxD input signal. When an interrupt is raised by the UART module, the application reads
the UARTx_IIR register and determines the cause for the interrupt. If the cause is a line
status interrupt, the application reads the UARTx_LSR register, reads the data byte and
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
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Product Specification
109
then can discard the byte or take other appropriate action. If the interrupt is caused by a
receive-data-ready condition, the application alternately reads the UARTx_LSR and
UARTx_RBR registers and removes all of the received data bytes. It reads the
UARTx_LSR register before reading the UARTx_RBR register to determine that there is
no error in the received data.
To control and check modem status, the application sets up the modem by writing to the
UARTx_MCTL register and reading the UARTx_MSR register before starting the process
mentioned above.
Poll Mode Transfers. When interrupts are disabled, all data transfers are referred to as
poll mode transfers. In poll mode transfers, the application must continually poll the
UARTx_LSR register to transmit or receive data without enabling the interrupts. The
same is true for the UARTx_MSR register. If the interrupts are not enabled, the data in the
UARTx_IIR register cannot be used to determine the cause of an interrupt.
Baud Rate Generator
The Baud Rate Generator consists of a 16-bit downcounter, two registers, and associated
decoding logic. The initial value of the Baud Rate Generator is defined by the two BRG
Divisor Latch registers, {UARTx_BRG_H, UARTx_BRG_L}. At the rising edge of each
system clock, the BRG decrements until it reaches the value 0001h. On the next system
clock rising edge, the BRG reloads the initial value from {UARTx_BRG_H,
UARTx_BRG_L) and outputs a pulse to indicate the end-of-count. Calculate the UART
data rate with the following equation:
Upon RESET, the 16-bit BRG divisor value resets to 0002h. A minimum BRG divisor
value of 0001h is also valid, and effectively bypasses the BRG. A software Write to either
the Low- or High-byte registers for the BRG Divisor Latch causes both the Low and High
bytes to load into the BRG counter, and causes the count to restart.
The divisor registers can only be accessed if bit 7 of the UART Line Control register
(UARTx_LCTL) is set to 1. After reset, this bit is reset to 0.
UART Data Rate (bps) =
System Clock Frequency
16 X (UART Baud Rate Generator
Divisor)
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
110
Recommended Usage of the Baud Rate Generator
The following is the normal sequence of operations that should occur after the eZ80F92
device is powered on to configure the Baud Rate Generator:
Assert and deassert RESET
Set UARTx_LCTL[7] to 1 to enable access of the BRG divisor registers
Program the UARTx_BRG_L and UARTx_BRG_H registers
Clear UARTx_LCTL[7] to 0 to disable access of the BRG divisor registers
BRG Control Registers
UART Baud Rate Generator Register—Low and High Bytes
The registers hold the Low and High bytes of the 16-bit divisor count loaded by the pro-
cessor for UART baud rate generation. The 16-bit clock divisor value is returned by
{UARTx_BRG_H, UARTx_BRG_L}, where x is either 0 or 1 to identify the two available
UART devices. Upon RESET, the 16-bit BRG divisor value resets to 0002h. The initial
16-bit divisor value must be between 0002h and FFFFh as the values 0000h and 0001h
are invalid, and proper operation is not guaranteed. As a result, the minimum BRG clock
divisor ratio is 2.
A Write to either the Low- or High-byte registers for the BRG Divisor Latch causes both
bytes to be loaded into the BRG counter. The count is then restarted.
Bit 7 of the associated UART Line Control register (UARTx_LCTL) must be set to 1 to
access this register. See Table 52 and Table 53 on page 111. See the UART Line Control
Register (UARTx_LCTL) on page 116 for more information.
The UARTx_BRG_L registers share the same address space with the UARTx_RBR
and UARTx_THR registers. The UARTx_BRG_H registers share the same address
space with the UARTx_IER registers. Bit 7 of the associated UART Line Control
register (UARTx_LCTL) must be set to 1 to enable access to the BRG registers.
Table 52. UART Baud Rate Generator Register—Low Bytes(UART0_BRG_L =
00C0h, UART1_BRG_L = 00D0h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000010
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read only; R/W = Read/Write.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
111
UART Registers
After a RESET, all UART registers are set to their default values. Any writes to unused
registers or register bits are ignored and reads return a value of 0. For compatibility with
future revisions, unused bits within a register should always be written with a value of 0.
Read/Write attributes, reset conditions, and bit descriptions of all of the UART registers
are provided in this section.
UART Transmit Holding Register
If less than eight bits are programmed for transmission, the lower bits of the byte written
to this register are selected for transmission. The transmit FIFO is mapped at this address.
The user can write up to 16 bytes for transmission at one time to this address if the FIFO is
enabled by the application. If the FIFO is disabled, this buffer is only one byte deep.
These registers share the same address space as the UARTx_RBR and UARTx_BRG_L
registers. See Table 54 on page 112.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
UART_BRG_L
00h–
FFh
These bits represent the Low byte of the 16-bit Baud Rate
Generator divider value. The complete BRG divisor value is
returned by {UART_BRG_H, UART_BRG_L}.
Table 53. UART Baud Rate Generator Register—High Bytes(UART0_BRG_H =
00C1h, UART1_BRG_H = 00D1h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
UART_BRG_H
00h–
FFh
These bits represent the High byte of the 16-bit Baud Rate
Generator divider value. The complete BRG divisor value is
returned by {UART_BRG_H, UART_BRG_L}.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
112
UART Receive Buffer Register
The bits in this register reflect the data received. If less than eight bits are programmed for
receive, the lower bits of the byte reflect the bits received whereas upper unused bits are 0.
The receive FIFO is mapped at this address. If the FIFO is disabled, this buffer is only one
byte deep.
These registers share the same address space as the UARTx_THR and UARTx_BRG_L
registers. See Table 55.
Table 54. UART Transmit Holding Registers(UART0_THR = 00C0h, UART1_THR =
00D0h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TxD
00h–
FFh
Transmit data byte.
Table 55. UART Receive Buffer Registers(UART0_RBR = 00C0h, UART1_RBR =
00 D0h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
RxD
00h–
FFh
Receive data byte.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
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Product Specification
113
UART Interrupt Enable Register
The UARTx_IER register is used to enable and disable the UART interrupts. The
UARTx_IER registers share the same I/O addresses as the UARTx_BRG_H registers. See
Table 56.
Table 56. UART Interrupt Enable Registers(UART0_IER = 00C1h, UART1_IER =
00D1h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read Only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:5] 000 Reserved.
4
TCIE
0 Transmission complete interrupt is disabled.
1 Transmission complete interrupt is generated when both the
transmit hold register and the transmit shift register are empty.
3
MIIE
0 Modem interrupt on edge detect of status inputs is disabled.
1 Modem interrupt on edge detect of status inputs is enabled.
2
LSIE
0 Line status interrupt is disabled.
1 Line status interrupt is enabled for receive data errors:
incorrect parity bit received, framing error, overrun error, or
break detection.
1
TIE
0 Transmit interrupt is disabled.
1 Transmit interrupt is enabled. Interrupt is generated when the
transmit FIFO/buffer is empty indicating no more bytes
available for transmission.
0
RIE
0 Receive interrupt is disabled.
1 Receive interrupt and receiver time-out interrupt are enabled.
Interrupt is generated if the FIFO/buffer contains data ready to
be read or if the receiver times out.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
114
UART Interrupt Identification Register
The Read Only UARTx_IIR register allows the user to check whether the FIFO is enabled
and the status of interrupts. These registers share the same I/O addresses as the
UARTx_FCTL registers. See Table 57 and Table 58.
Table 57. UART Interrupt Identification Registers(UART0_IIR = 00C2h, UART1_IIR =
00D2h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000001
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:6]
FSTS
00 FIFO is disabled.
10 Receive FIFO is disabled (MULTIDROP mode).
11 FIFO is enabled.
[5:4] 00 Reserved.
[3:1]
INSTS
000–
110
Interrupt Status Code
The code indicated in these three bits is valid only if INTBIT is
1. If two internal interrupt sources are active and their
respective enable bits are High, only the higher priority
interrupt is seen by the application. The lower-priority interrupt
code is indicated only after the higher-priority interrupt is
serviced. Table 58 lists the interrupt status codes.
0
INTBIT
0 There is an active interrupt source within the UART.
1 There is not an active interrupt source within the UART.
Table 58. UART Interrupt Status Codes
INSTS
Value Priority Interrupt Type
011 Highest Receiver Line Status
010 Second Receiver Data Ready or Trigger Level
110 Third Character Time-out
101 Fourth Transmission Complete
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
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Product Specification
115
UART FIFO Control Register
This register is used to monitor trigger levels, clear FIFO pointers, and enable or disable
the FIFO. The UARTx_FCTL registers share the same I/O addresses as the UARTx_IIR
registers. See Table 59.
001 Fifth Transmit Buffer Empty
000 Lowest Modem Status
Table 59. UART FIFO Control Registers(UART0_FCTL = 00C2h, UART1_FCTL =
00D2h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:6]
TRIG
00 Receive FIFO trigger level set to 1. Receive data interrupt is
generated when there is 1 byte in the FIFO. Valid only if FIFO
is enabled.
01 Receive FIFO trigger level set to 4. Receive data interrupt is
generated when there are 4 bytes in the FIFO. Valid only if
FIFO is enabled.
10 Receive FIFO trigger level set to 8. Receive data interrupt is
generated when there are 8 bytes in the FIFO. Valid only if
FIFO is enabled.
11 Receive FIFO trigger level set to 14. Receive data interrupt is
generated when there are 14 bytes in the FIFO. Valid only if
FIFO is enabled.
[5:3] 000 Reserved.
2
CLRTXF
0No effect.
1 Clear the transmit FIFO and reset the transmit FIFO pointer.
Valid only if the FIFO is enabled.
Table 58. UART Interrupt Status Codes (Continued)
INSTS
Value Priority Interrupt Type
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
116
UART Line Control Register
This register is used to control the communication control parameters.
See Table 60 and Table 61 on page 118.
1
CLRRXF
0No effect.
1 Clear the receive FIFO, clear the receive error FIFO, and reset
the receive FIFO pointer. Valid only if the FIFO is enabled.
0
FIFOEN
0 Transmit and receive FIFOs are disabled. Transmit and receive
buffers are only 1 byte deep.
1 Transmit and receive FIFOs are enabled*.
Note:
*Receive FIFO is not enabled during
MULTIDROP
mode.
Table 60. UART Line Control Registers(UART0_LCTL = 00C3h, UART1_LCTL =
00D3h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
DLAB
0 Access to the UART registers at I/O addresses UARTx_RBR,
UARTx_THR, and UARTx_IER is enabled.
1 Access to the Baud Rate Generator registers at I/O addresses
UARTx_BRG_L and UARTx_BRG_H is enabled.
Note: *Receive Parity is set to SPACE in MULTIDROP mode.
Bit
Position Value Description
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
117
6
SB
0 Do not send a BREAK signal.
1 Send Break
UART sends continuous zeroes on the transmit output from the
next bit boundary. The transmit data in the transmit shift
register is ignored. After forcing this bit High, the TxD output is
0 only after the bit boundary is reached. Just before forcing
TxD to 0, the transmit FIFO is cleared. Any new data written to
the transmit FIFO during a break should be written only after
the THRE bit of UARTx_LSR register goes High. This new data
is transmitted after the UART recovers from the break. After the
break is removed, the UART recovers from the break for the
next BRG edge.
5
FPE
0 Do not force a parity error.
1 Force a parity error. When this bit and the party enable bit
(PEN) are both 1, an incorrect parity bit is transmitted with the
data byte.
4
EPS
0 Use odd parity for transmit and receive. The total number of 1
bits in the transmit data plus parity bit is odd. Use as a SPACE
bit in MULTIDROP mode. See Table 62 on page 118 for parity
select definitions.*
1 Use even parity for transmit and receive. The total number of 1
bits in the transmit data plus parity bit is even. Use as a MARK
bit in MULTIDROP mode. See Table 62 on page 118 for parity
select definitions.
3
PEN
0 Parity bit transmit and receive is disabled.
1 Parity bit transmit and receive is enabled. For transmit, a parity
bit is generated and transmitted with every data character. For
receive, the parity is checked for every incoming data
character. In MULTIDROP mode, receive parity is checked for
space parity.
[2:0]
CHAR
000–
111
UART Character Parameter Selection—see Table 61 on page
118 for a description of the values.
Bit
Position Value Description
Note: *Receive Parity is set to SPACE in MULTIDROP mode.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
118
Table 61. UART Character Parameter Definition
CHAR[2:0]
Character Length
(Tx/Rx Data Bits)
Stop Bits
(Tx Stop Bits)
000 5 1
001 6 1
010 7 1
011 8 1
100 5 2
101 6 2
110 7 2
111 8 2
Table 62. Parity Select Definition for Multidrop Communications
MDM
UARTx_MGTL[5]
EPS
UARTx_LCTL940 Parity Type
00odd
0 1 even
1 0 space
11*mark
Note: *In MULTIDROP mode, EPS resets to 0 after the first
character is sent.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
119
UART Modem Control Register
This register is used to control and check the modem status, as listed in Table 63.
Table 63. UART Modem Control Registers(UART0_MCTL = 00C4h, UART1_MCTL =
00D4h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read Only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:6] 00b Reserved—must be 00b.
5
MDM
0 MULTIDROP mode disabled.
1 MULTIDROP mode enabled. See Table 62 on page 118 for
parity select definitions.
4
LOOP
0 LOOP BACK mode is not enabled.
1 LOOP BACK mode is enabled.
The UART operates in internal LOOP BACK mode. The
transmit data output port is disconnected from the internal
transmit data output and set to 1. The receive data input port is
disconnected and internal receive data is connected to internal
transmit data. The modem status input ports are disconnected
and the four bits of the modem control register are connected
as modem status inputs. The two modem control output ports
(OUT1&2) are set to their inactive state.
3
OUT2
0–1 No function in normal operation.
In LOOP BACK mode, this bit is connected to the DCD bit in
the UART Status Register.
2
OUT1
0–1 No function in normal operation.
In LOOP BACK mode, this bit is connected to the RI bit in the
UART Status Register.
1
RTS
0–1 Request To Send
In normal operation, the RTS output port is the inverse of this
bit. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit is connected to the CTS bit in
the UART Status Register.
0
DTR
0–1 Data Terminal Ready
In normal operation, the DTR output port is the inverse of this
bit. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit is connected to the DSR bit
in the UART Status Register.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
120
UART Line Status Register
This register is used to show the status of UART interrupts and registers. See Table 64.
Table 64. UART Line Status Registers(UART0_LSR = 00C5h, UART1_LSR = 00 D5h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 01100000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
ERR
0 Always 0 when operating in with the FIFO disabled. With the
FIFO enabled, this bit is reset when the UARTx_LSR register is
read and there are no more bytes with error status in the FIFO.
1 Error detected in the FIFO. There is at least 1 parity, framing or
break indication error in the FIFO.
6
TEMT
0 Transmit holding register/FIFO is not empty or transmit shift
register is not empty or transmitter is not idle.
1 Transmit holding register/FIFO and transmit shift register are
empty; and the transmitter is idle. This bit cannot be set to 1
during the BREAK condition. This bit only becomes 1 after the
BREAK command is removed.
5
THRE
0 Transmit holding register/FIFO is not empty.
1 Transmit holding register/FIFO is empty. This bit cannot be set
to 1 during the BREAK condition. This bit only becomes 1 after
the BREAK command is removed.
4
BI
0 Receiver does not detect a BREAK condition. This bit is reset
to 0 when the UARTx_LSR register is read.
1 Receiver detects a BREAK condition on the receive input line.
This bit is 1 if the duration of BREAK condition on the receive
data is longer than one character transmission time, the time
depends on the programming of the UARTx_LSR register. In
case of FIFO only one null character is loaded into the receiver
FIFO with the framing error. The framing error is revealed to
the CPU whenever that particular data is read from the receiver
FIFO.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
121
UART Modem Status Register
This register is used to show the status of the UART signals. See Table 65 on page 122.
3
FE
0 No framing error detected for character at the top of the FIFO.
This bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_LSR register is read.
1 Framing error detected for the character at the top of the FIFO.
This bit is set to 1 when the stop bit following the data/parity bit
is logic 0.
2
PE
0 The received character at the top of the FIFO does not contain
a parity error. In multidrop mode, this indicates that the
received character is a data byte. This bit is reset to 0 when the
UARTx_LSR register is read.
1 The received character at the top of the FIFO contains a parity
error. In multidrop mode, this indicates that the received
character is an address byte.
1
OE
0 The received character at the top of the FIFO does not contain
an overrun error. This bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_LSR
register is read.
1 Overrun error is detected. If the FIFO is not enabled, this
indicates that the data in the receive buffer register was not
read before the next character was transferred into the receiver
buffer register. If the FIFO is enabled, this indicates the FIFO
was already full when an additional character was received by
the receiver shift register. The character in the receiver shift
register is not put into the receiver FIFO.
0
DR
0 This bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_RBR register is read or
all bytes are read from the receiver FIFO.
1Data Ready
If the FIFO is not enabled, this bit is set to 1 when a complete
incoming character is transferred into the receiver buffer
register from the receiver shift register. If the FIFO is enabled,
this bit is set to 1 when a character is received and transferred
to the receiver FIFO.
Bit
Position Value Description
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
122
Table 65. UART Modem Status Registers(UART0_MSR = 00C6h, UART1_MSR =
00 D6h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
DCD
0–1 Data Carrier Detect
In NORMAL mode, this bit reflects the inverted state of the
DCDx input pin. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit reflects the
value of the UARTx_MCTL[3] = out2.
6
RI
0–1 Ring Indicator
In NORMAL mode, this bit reflects the inverted state of the RIx
input pin. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit reflects the value of the
UARTx_MCTL[2] = out1.
5
DSR
0–1 Data Set Ready
In NORMAL mode, this bit reflects the inverted state of the
DSRx input pin. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit reflects the
value of the UARTx_MCTL[0] = DTR.
4
CTS
0–1 Clear To Send
In NORMAL mode, this bit reflects the inverted state of the
CTSx input pin. In LOOP BACK mode, this bit reflects the value
of the UARTx_MCTL[1] = RTS.
3
DDCD
0–1 Delta Status Change of DCD
This bit is set to 1 whenever the DCDx pin changes state. This
bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_MSR register is read.
2
TERI
0–1 Trailing Edge Change on RI
This bit is set to 1 whenever a falling edge is detected on the
RIx pin. This bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_MSR register is
read.
1
DDSR
0–1 Delta Status Change of DSR
This bit is set to 1 whenever the DSRx pin changes state. This
bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_MSR register is read.
0
DCTS
0–1 Delta Status Change of CTS
This bit is set to 1 whenever the CTSx pin changes state.
This bit is reset to 0 when the UARTx_MSR register is read.
PS015313-0508 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
123
UART Scratch Pad Register
The UARTx_SPR register can be used by the system as a general-purpose Read/Write reg-
ister. See Table 66.
Table 66. UART Scratch Pad Registers(UART0_SPR = 00C7h, UART1_SPR =
00D7h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SPR
00h–
FFh
The UART scratch pad register is available for use as a
general-purpose Read/Write register.
PS015313-0508 Infrared Encoder/Decoder
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
124
Infrared Encoder/Decoder
The eZ80F92 device contains a UART to infrared encoder/decoder (endec). The IrDA
endec is integrated with the on-chip UART0 to allow easy communication between the
CPU and IrDA Physical Layer Specification Version 1.4-compatible infrared transceivers,
as displayed in Figure 26. Infrared communication provides secure, reliable, high-speed,
low-cost, point-to-point communication between PCs, PDAs, mobile telephones, printers,
and other infrared-enabled devices.
Functional Description
When the IrDA endec is enabled, the transmit data from the on-chip UART is encoded as
digital signals in accordance with the IrDA standard and output to the infrared transceiver.
Likewise, data received from the infrared transceiver is decoded by the endec and passed
to the UART. Communication is half-duplex, meaning that simultaneous data transmission
and reception is not allowed.
The baud rate is set by the UART Baud Rate Generator, and supports IrDA standard baud
rates from 9600 bps to 115.2 kbps. Higher baud rates than 115.2 kbps are possible, but do
not meet IrDA specifications for these data rates. The UART must be enabled to use the
Figure 26. Infrared System Block Diagram
eZ80F92
To eZ80 CPU
System
Clock
UART0
RxD
TxD
RxD
TxD
IR_RxD
IR_TxD
Baud Rate
Clock
Infrared
Encoder/Decoder
Interrupt
Signal
I/O
Address
Data I/O
Address
Data
Infrared
Transceiver
PS015313-0508 Infrared Encoder/Decoder
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
125
endec. See Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter on page 104 for more informa-
tion about the UART and its Baud Rate Generator.
Transmit
The data to be transmitted via the IR transceiver is first sent to UART0. The UART trans-
mit signal (TxD) and Baud Rate Clock are used by the IrDA endec to generate the modu-
lation signal (IR_TxD) that drives the infrared transceiver. To enable transmit encoding,
the IR_RxEN bit in the IR_CTL register must be set to 0.
Each UART bit is 16-clocks wide. If the data to be transmitted is a logical 1 (High), the
IR_TxD signal remains Low (0) for the full 16-clock period. If the data to be transmitted is
a logical 0, a 3-clock High (1) pulse is output following a 7-clock Low (0) period. Follow-
ing the 3-clock High pulse, a 6-clock Low pulse completes the full 16-clock data period.
Data transmission is displayed in Figure 27. During data transmission, the IR receive
function should be disabled by clearing the IR_RxEN bit in the IR_CTL reg to 0. The SIR
data format uses half-duplex communication; the UART does not transmit data while the
receiver decoder is enabled.
Receive
Data is received from the IR transceiver via the IR_RxD signal and decoded by the IrDA
endec. This decoded data is passed from the endec to UART0. To enable receiver decode,
the IR_RxEN bit in the IR_CTL register must be set to 1. The SIR data format uses half-
duplex communication; therefore, the UART should not transmit data during normal oper-
ation while the receiver decoder is enabled.
Figure 27.Infrared Data Transmission
16-clock
period
3-clock
pulse
7-clock
delay
Baud Rate
Clock
UART_TxD Start Bit = 0 Data Bit 0 = 1 Data Bit 1 = 0 Data Bit 2 = 1 Data Bit 3 = 1
IR_TxD
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The UART baud rate clock is used by the IrDA endec to generate the demodulated signal
(RxD) that drives the UART. Each UART bit period is sixteen baud-clocks wide. Each
IR_RXD bit is encoded during a bit period such that a 0 is represented by a pulse and a 1 is
represented by no pulse. The IrDA Physical Layer Specification describes a nominal pulse
as being 3/16 of a bit period wide. In this case, if the data to be received is a logical 0
(Low), a 3-clock-wide Low (0) pulse is received following a 7-clock High (1) period.
Following the 3-clock Low pulse is a 6-clock High pulse to complete the full 16-clock
data period. If the data to be received is a logical 1 (High), the IR_RxD signal is held High
(1) for the full 16-clock period. Data reception is displayed in Figure 28.
The IrDA Physical Layer Specification allows for a minimum signal width as well as the
nominal signal width described above. By definition, the received pulse duration can be as
small as 1.41 seconds for all baud rates up to 115.2 kbps. Table 67 outlines the minimum
and maximum pulse durations for all baud rates supported by the eZ80® CPU. A receiver
frequency divider based upon the system clock frequency measures this time limit and
allows legal signals to pass to UART0.
Figure 28.Infrared Data Reception
Table 67. IrDA Physical Layer 1.4 Pulse Durations Specifications
Baud Rate
Minimum Pulse
Width
Maximum Pulse
Width
9600 1.41 s 22.13 s
19200 1.41 s 11.07 s
38400 1.41 s 5.96 s
16-clock
period
16-clock
period 16-clock
period 16-clock
period
1.4 s
min. pulse
8-clock
delay
Baud Rate
Clock
RxD
Start Bit = 0 Data Bit 0 = 1 Data Bit 1 = 0 Data Bit 2 = 1 Data Bit 3 = 1
RxD
16-clock
period
IR
UART
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Receiver Frequency Divider
The IrDA receiver uses a 6-bit frequency divider. The value is derived from the system
clock to measure IR_RxD pulses. The IrDA endec detects pulses that are within the IrDA
Physical Layer specified minimum and maximum ranges, with system clock frequencies
from 5 MHz up to 50 MHz.
The upper four bits of the frequency divider factor are set via the FREQ_DIV bit in the
IR_CTL register, based on the following equation:
The remaining lower two bits of the divider are set to 03h. The target frequency corre-
sponds to a period of 1.2 seconds. The FREQ_DIV value must be rounded to the nearest
integer and the resulting period of the 6-bit frequency divider must not be larger than
1.4 seconds, which is the IrDA defined minimum pulse width. If the period is greater than
1.4 seconds, FREQ_DIV should be rounded to the next lower integer. The receiver fre-
quency divider value versus the system clock frequency is shown in table, below.
57600 1.41 s 4.34 s
115200 1.41 s 2.23 s
Frequency Divider Factor = System Clock Frequency (MHz)
Target Frequency of 3.33 MHz
Table 68. Frequency Divider Values
System Clock FREQ_DIV
< 5.0 MHz 00h*
5.0–7.8 MHz 01h
7.8–10.8 MHz 02h
10.8–13.6 MHz 03h
13.6–25 MHz FLOOR[4-bit Frequency Divider Factor]
25–50 MHz ROUND[4-bit Frequency Divider Factor]
Note: *The frequency divider is disabled when set to 00h.
Table 67. IrDA Physical Layer 1.4 Pulse Durations Specifications (Continued)
Baud Rate
Minimum Pulse
Width
Maximum Pulse
Width
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Setting the upper 4 bits of IR_CTL to 00h disables the frequency divider but not the IrDA
receiver. In this mode, the IrDA receiver uses edge detection on the IR_RxD bit stream.
Jitter
Due to the inherent sampling of the received IR_RxD signal by the BIt Rate Clock, some
jitter can be expected on the first bit in any sequence of data. However, all subsequent bits
in the received data stream are a fixed 16 clock periods wide.
Infrared Encoder/Decoder Signal Pins
The IrDA endec signal pins (IR_TxD and IR_RxD) are multiplexed with General-Purpose
I/O (GPIO) pins. These GPIO pins must be configured for alternate function operation for
the endec to operate.
The remaining six UART0 pins (CTS0, DCD0, DSR0, DTR0, RTS and RI0) are not
required for use with the endec. The UART0 modem status interrupt should be disabled to
prevent unwanted interrupts from these pins. The GPIO pins corresponding to these six
unused UART0 pins can be used for inputs, outputs, or interrupt sources. Recommended
GPIO Port D control register settings are provided in Table 69. See General-Purpose
Input/Output on page 39 for additional information about setting the GPIO Port modes.
Loopback Testing
Both internal and external loopback testing can be accomplished with the IrDA endec on
the eZ80F92 device. Setting the LOOP_BACK bit to 1 enables internal loopback testing.
During internal loopback, the IR_TxD output signal is inverted and connected on-chip to
the IR_RxD input. External loopback testing of the off-chip IrDA transceiver can be
accomplished by transmitting data from the UART while the receiver is enabled
(IR_RxEN set to 1).
Table 69. GPIO Mode Selection when using the IrDA Encoder/Decoder
GPIO Port D Bits
Allowable GPIO
Port Mode Allowable Port Mode Functions
PD0 7 Alternate function.
PD1 7 Alternate function.
PD2–PD7 Any other than GPIO Mode 7
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, or 9)
Output, input, open-drain, open-source, level-
sensitive interrupt input, or edge-triggered
interrupt input.
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eZ80F92/eZ80F93
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Infrared Encoder/Decoder Register
After a RESET, the Infrared Encoder/Decoder register is set to its default value. Any
writes to unused register bits are ignored and reads return a value of 0. The IR_CTL regis-
ter is listed in Table 70.
Table 70. Infrared Encoder/Decoder Control Registers(IR_CTL = 00BFh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R = Read only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:3] 000000 Reserved.
2
LOOP_BACK
0 Internal LOOP BACK mode is disabled.
1 Internal LOOP BACK mode is enabled.
IR_TxD output is inverted and connected to IR_RxD input for
internal loop back testing.
1
IR_RxEN
0 IR_RxD data is ignored.
1 IR_RxD data is passed to UART0 RxD.
0
IR_EN
0 IrDA endec is disabled.
1 IrDA endec is enabled.
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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Product Specification
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Serial Peripheral Interface
The Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) is a synchronous interface allowing several SPI-type
devices to be interconnected. The SPI is a full-duplex, synchronous, character-oriented
communication channel that employs a four-wire interface. The SPI block consists of a
transmitter, receiver, baud rate generator, and control unit. During an SPI transfer, data is
sent and received simultaneously by both the master and the slave SPI devices.
In a serial peripheral interface, separate signals are required for data and clock. The SPI
may be configured as either a master or a slave. The connection of two SPI devices (one
master and one slave) and the direction of data transfer is displayed in Figure 29 and
Figure 30 on page 131.
When using the SPI module in the master mode, Port B2 must not be used as
GPIO. If you do attempt to use it as GPIO, even though it is assigned as a stan-
dard Mode 1 output pin, outputting a logic low on the pin will cause the SPI to
trigger a Mode Fault.
Figure 29.SPI Master Device
Note:
MASTER
MISO DATAOUT
CLKOUT
SS
Bit 0
8-Bit Shift Register
Baud Rate
Generator
Bit 7
SCK
DATAIN
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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SPI Signals
The four basic SPI signals are:
1. MISO (Master In, Slave Out)
2. MOSI (Master Out, Slave In)
3. SCK (SPI Serial Clock)
4. SS (Slave Select)
These SPI signals are discussed in the following paragraphs. Each signal is described in
both MASTER and SLAVE modes.
Master In, Slave Out
The Master In, Slave Out (MISO) pin is configured as an input in a master device and as
an output in a slave device. It is one of the two lines that transfer serial data, with the msb
sent first. The MISO pin of a slave device is placed in a high-impedance state if the slave
is not selected. When the SPI is not enabled, this signal is in a high-impedance state.
Master Out, Slave In
The Master Out, Slave In (MOSI) pin is configured as an output in a master device and as
an input in a slave device. It is one of the two lines that transfer serial data, with the msb
sent first. When the SPI is not enabled, this signal is in a high-impedance state.
Slave Select
The active Low Slave Select (SS) input signal is used to select the SPI as a slave device. It
must be Low prior to all data communication and must stay Low for the duration of the
data transfer.
The SS input signal must be High for the SPI to operate as a master device. If the SS signal
goes Low, a Mode Fault error flag (MODF) is set in the SPI_SR register. See SPI Status
Register (SPI_SR) on page 137 for more information.
Figure 30.SPI Slave Device
SLAVE
MOSI MISO
SCK
DATAOUT
SS
Bit 0
8-Bit Shift Register
Bit 7
DATAIN
ENABLE
CLKIN
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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When the Clock Phase bit (CPHA) is set to 0, the shift clock is the logical OR of SS with
SCK. In this clock phase mode, SS must go High between successive characters in an SPI
message. When CPHA is set to 1, SS can remain Low for several SPI characters. In cases
where there is only one SPI slave, its SS line could be tied Low as long as CPHA is set
to 1. See (SPI_CTL) on page 136 for more information about CPHA.
Serial Clock
The Serial Clock (SCK) is used to synchronize data movement both in and out of the
device through its MOSI and MISO pins. The master and slave are each capable of
exchanging a byte of data during a sequence of eight clock cycles. As SCK is generated by
the master, the SCK pin becomes an input on a slave device. The SPI contains an internal
divide-by-two clock divider. In MASTER mode, the SPI serial clock is one-half the fre-
quency of the clock signal created by the SPI’s Baud Rate Generator.
As displayed in Figure 31 and Table 71 on page 133, four possible timing relations may be
chosen by using control bits CPOL and CPHA in the SPI Control register. See the SPI
Control Register (SPI_CTL) on page 136. Both the master and slave must operate with the
identical timing, clock polarity (CPOL), and clock phase (CPHA). The master device
always places data on the MOSI line a half-cycle before the clock edge (SCK signal) so
that the slave device latches the data.
Figure 31. SPI Timing
SCK (CPOL bit = 0)
SCK (CPOL bit = 1)
Sample Input
(CPHA bit = 0) Data Out
Sample Input
(CPHA bit = 1) Data Out
ENABLE (To Slave)
Number of Cycles on the SCK Signal
1234 5678
MSB 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB
MSB 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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SPI Functional Description
When a master transmits to a slave device via the MOSI signal, the slave device responds
by sending data to the master via the master's MISO signal. The resulting implication is a
full-duplex transmission, with both data out and data in synchronized with the same clock
signal. Thus the byte transmitted is replaced by the byte received and eliminates the
requirement for separate transmit-empty and receive-full status bits. A single status bit,
SPIF, is used to signify that the I/O operation is completed, see the SPI Status Register
(SPI_SR) on page 137.
The SPI is double-buffered on Read, but not on Write. If a Write is performed during data
transfer, the transfer occurs uninterrupted, and the Write is unsuccessful. This condition
causes the WRITE COLLISION (WCOL) status bit in the SPI_SR register to be set. After
a data byte is shifted, the SPIF flag of the SPI_SR register is set.
In SPI MASTER mode, the SCK pin functions as an output. It idles High or Low, depend-
ing on the CPOL bit in the SPI_CTL register, until data is written to the shift register. Data
transfer is initiated by writing to the transmit shift register, SPI_TSR. Eight clocks are then
generated to shift the 8 bits of transmit data out the MOSI pin while shifting in 8 bits of
data on the MISO pin. After transfer, the SCK signal idles.
In SPI SLAVE mode, the start logic receives a logic Low from the SS pin and a clock
input at the SCK pin, and the slave is synchronized to the master. Data from the master is
received serially from the slave MOSI signal and loads the 8-bit shift register. After the
8-bit shift register is loaded, its data is parallel transferred to the Read buffer. During a
Write cycle data is written into the shift register, then the slave waits for the SPI master to
initiate a data transfer, supply a clock signal, and shift the data out on the slave's MISO
signal.
If the CPHA bit in the SPI_CTL register is 0, a transfer begins when SS pin signal goes
Low and the transfer ends when SS goes High after eight clock cycles on SCK. When the
CPHA bit is set to 1, a transfer begins the first time SCK becomes active while SS is Low
and the transfer ends when the SPIF flag gets set.
Table 71. SPI Clock Phase and Clock Polarity Operation
CPHA CPOL
SCK
Transmit
Edge
SCK
Receive
Edge
SCK
Idle
State
SS High
Between
Characters?
0 0 Falling Rising Low Yes
0 1 Rising Falling High Yes
1 0 Rising Falling Low No
1 1 Falling Rising High No
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SPI Flags
Mode Fault
The Mode Fault flag (MODF) indicates that there may be a multimaster conflict for sys-
tem control. The MODF bit is normally cleared to 0 and is only set to 1 when the master
device’s SS pin is pulled Low. When a mode fault is detected, the following occurs:
1. The MODF flag (SPI_SR[4]) is set to 1.
2. The SPI device is disabled by clearing the SPI_EN bit (SPI_CTL[5]) to 0.
3. The MASTER_EN bit (SPI_CTL[4]) is cleared to 0, forcing the device into SLAVE
mode.
4. If the SPI interrupt is enabled by setting IRQ_EN (SPI_CTL[7]) High, an SPI
interrupt is generated.
Clearing the Mode Fault flag is performed by reading the SPI Status register. The other
SPI control bits (SPI_EN and MASTER_EN) must be restored to their original states by
user software after the Mode Fault flag is cleared.
Write Collision
The WRITE COLLISION flag, WCOL (SPI_SR[5]), is set to 1 when an attempt is made
to write to the SPI Transmit Shift register (SPI_TSR) while data transfer occurs. Clearing
the WCOL bit is performed by reading SPI_SR with the WCOL bit set.
SPI Baud Rate Generator
The SPI’s Baud Rate Generator creates a lower frequency clock from the high-frequency
system clock. The Baud Rate Generator output is used as the clock source by the SPI.
Baud Rate Generator Functional Description
The SPI’s Baud Rate Generator consists of a 16-bit downcounter, two 8-bit registers, and
associated decoding logic. The Baud Rate Generators initial value is defined by the two
BRG Divisor Latch registers, {SPI_BRG_H, SPI_BRG_L}. At the rising edge of each
system clock, the BRG decrements until it reaches the value 0001h. On the next system
clock rising edge, the BRG reloads the initial value from {SPI_BRG_H, SPI_BRG_L) and
outputs a pulse to indicate the end-of-count. Calculate the SPI Data Rate with the follow-
ing equation:
SPI Data Rate (bps) = System Clock Frequency
2 X SPI Baud Rate Generator Divisor
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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Upon RESET, the 16-bit BRG divisor value resets to 0002h. When the SPI is operating as
a Master, the BRG divisor value must be set to a value of 0003h or greater. When the SPI
is operating as a Slave, the BRG divisor value must be set to a value of 0004h or greater.
A software Write to either the Low- or High-byte registers for the BRG Divisor Latch
causes both the Low and High bytes to load into the BRG counter, and causes the count to
restart.
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI Configured as the Master
1. Load the SPI Baud Rate Generator Registers, SPI_BRG_H and SPI_BRG_L.
2. External device must deassert the SS pin if currently asserted.
3. Load the SPI Control Register, SPI_CTL.
4. Assert the ENABLE pin of the slave device using a GPIO pin.
5. Load the SPI Transmit Shift Register, SPI_TSR.
6. When the SPI data transfer is complete, deassert the ENABLE pin of the slave device.
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI Configured as a Slave
1. Load the SPI Baud Rate Generator Registers, SPI_BRG_H and SPI_BRG_L.
2. Load the SPI Transmit Shift Register, SPI_TSR. This load cannot occur while the SPI
slave is currently receiving data.
3. Wait for the external SPI Master device to initiate the data transfer by asserting SS.
SPI Registers
There are six registers in the Serial Peripheral Interface which provide control, status, and
data storage functions. The SPI registers are described in the following paragraphs.
SPI Baud Rate Generator Registers—Low Byte and High Byte
These registers hold the Low and High bytes of the 16 bit divisor count loaded by the pro-
cessor for baud rate generation. The 16 bit clock divisor value is returned by
{SPI_BRG_H, SPI_BRG_L}. Upon RESET, the 16 bit BRG divisor value resets to
0002h. When configured as a Master, the 16 bit divisor value must be between 0003h and
FFFFh, inclusive. When configured as a Slave, the 16 bit divisor value must be between
0004h and FFFFh, inclusive.
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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A Write to either the Low or High byte registers for the BRG Divisor Latch causes both
bytes to be loaded into the BRG counter and the count restarted. See Table 72 and Table
73.
sterister is used to control and setup the serial peripheral interface. The SPI should be dis-
This register is used to control and setup the serial peripheral interface. The SPI should be
disabled prior to making any changes to CPHA or CPOL. See disabled prior to making
any changes to CPHA or CPOL. See Table 74 on page 137.
Table 72. SPI Baud Rate Generator Register—Low Byte(SPI_BRG_L = 00B8h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000010
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SPI_BRG_L
00h–
FFh
These bits represent the Low byte of the 16-bit Baud Rate
Generator divider value. The complete BRG divisor value is
returned by {SPI_BRG_H, SPI_BRG_L}.
Table 73. SPI Baud Rate Generator Register—High Byte (SPI_BRG_H = 00B9h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SPI_BRG_H
00h–
FFh
These bits represent the High byte of the 16-bit Baud Rate
Generator divider value. The complete BRG divisor value is
returned by {SPI_BRG_H, SPI_BRG_L}.
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SPI Status Register
The SPI Status Read Only register returns the status of data transmitted using the serial
peripheral interface. Reading the SPI_SR register clears Bits 7, 6, and 4 to a logical 0.
See Table 75.
Table 74. SPI Control Register(SPI_CTL = 00BAh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000100
CPU Access R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R R
Note: R = Read Only; R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
IRQ_EN
0 SPI system interrupt is disabled.
1 SPI system interrupt is enabled.
6 0 Reserved.
5
SPI_EN
0 SPI is disabled.
1 SPI is enabled.
4
MASTER_EN
0 When enabled, the SPI operates as a slave.
1 When enabled, the SPI operates as a master.
3
CPOL
0 Master SCK pin idles in a Low (0) state.
1 Master SCK pin idles in a High (1) state.
2
CPHA
0 SS must go High after transfer of every byte of data.
1 SS can remain Low to transfer any number of data bytes.
[1:0] 00 Reserved.
Table 75. SPI Status Register(SPI_SR = 00BBh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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Bit
Position Value Description
7
SPIF
0 SPI data transfer is not finished.
1 SPI data transfer is finished. If enabled, an interrupt is
generated. This bit flag is cleared to 0 by a Read of the
SPI_SR register.
6
WCOL
0 An SPI write collision is not detected.
1 An SPI write collision is detected. This bit flag is cleared to 0
by a Read of the SPI_SR registers.
5 0 Reserved.
4
MODF
0 A mode fault (multimaster conflict) is not detected.
1 A mode fault (multimaster conflict) is detected. This bit flag is
cleared to 0 by a Read of the SPI_SR register.
[3:0] 0000 Reserved.
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SPI Transmit Shift Register
The SPI Transmit Shift register (SPI_TSR) is used by the SPI master to transmit data onto
the SPI serial bus to the slave device. A Write to the SPI_TSR register places data directly
into the shift register for transmission. A Write to this register within an SPI device config-
ured as a master initiates transmission of the byte of the data loaded into the register. At
the completion of transmitting a byte of data, the SPIF status bit (SPI_SR[7]) is set to 1 in
both the master and slave devices.
The SPI Transmit Shift Write Only register shares the same address space as the SPI
Receive Buffer Read Only register. See Table 76.
SPI Receive Buffer Register
The SPI Receive Buffer register (SPI_RBR) is used by the SPI slave to receive data from
the serial bus. The SPIF bit must be cleared prior to a second transfer of data from the shift
register or an overrun condition exists. In cases of overrun the byte that caused the overrun
is lost.
The SPI Receive Buffer Read Only register shares the same address space as the SPI
Transmit Shift Write Only register. See Table 77.
Table 76. SPI Transmit Shift Register(SPI_TSR = 00BCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
TX_DATA
00h–
FFh
SPI transmit data.
Table 77. SPI Receive Buffer Register(SPI_RBR = 00BCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
PS015313-0508 Serial Peripheral Interface
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Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
RX_DATA
00h–FFh SPI received data.
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
141
I2C Serial I/O Interface
I2C General Characteristics
The I2C serial I/O bus is a two-wire communication interface that can operate in four
modes:
1. MASTER TRANSMIT
2. MASTER RECEIVE
3. SLAVE TRANSMIT
4. SLAVE RECEIVE
The I2C interface consists of the Serial Clock (SCL) and the Serial Data (SDA). Both SDA
and SCL are bidirectional lines, connected to a positive supply voltage via an external
pull-up resistor. When the bus is free, both lines are High. The output stages of devices
connected to the bus must be configured as open-drain outputs. Data on the I2C bus can be
transferred at a rate of up to 100 kbps in STANDARD mode, or up to 400 kbps in FAST
mode. One clock pulse is generated for each data bit transferred.
Clocking Overview
If another device on the I2C bus drives the clock line when the I2C is in MASTER mode,
the I2C synchronizes its clock to the I2C bus clock. The High period of the clock is deter-
mined by the device that generates the shortest High clock period. The Low period of the
clock is determined by the device that generates the longest Low clock period.
A slave may stretch the Low period of the clock to slow down the bus master. The Low
period may also be stretched for handshaking purposes. This can be done after each bit
transfer or each byte transfer. The I2C stretches the clock after each byte transfer until the
IFLG bit in the I2C_CTL register is cleared.
Bus Arbitration Overview
In MASTER mode, the I2C checks that each transmitted logic 1 appears on the I2C bus as
a logic 1. If another device on the bus overrules and pulls the SDA signal Low, arbitration
is lost. If arbitration is lost during the transmission of a data byte or a Not-Acknowledge
bit, the I2C returns to the idle state. If arbitration is lost during the transmission of an
address, the I2C switches to SLAVE mode so that it can recognize its own slave address or
the general call address.
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
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Data Validity
The data on the SDA line must be stable during the High period of the clock. The High or
Low state of the data line can only change when the clock signal on the SCL line is Low as
displayed in Figure 32.
START and STOP Conditions
Within the I2C bus protocol, unique situations arise which are defined as START and
STOP conditions. See Figure 33. A High-to-Low transition on the SDA line while SCL is
High indicates a START condition. A Low-to-High transition on the SDA line while SCL
is High defines a STOP condition.
START and STOP conditions are always generated by the master. The bus is considered to
be busy after the START condition. The bus is considered to be free a defined time after
the STOP condition.
Figure 32. I2C Clock and Data Relationship
Figure 33. START and STOP Conditions In I2C Protocol
SDA Signal
SCL Signal
Data Line
Stable
Data Valid
Change of
Data Allowed
SDA Signal
START Condition STOP Condition
SCL Signal
SP
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
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Product Specification
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Transferring Data
Byte Format
Every character transferred on the SDA line must be a single 8-bit byte. The number of
bytes that can be transmitted per transfer is unrestricted. Each byte must be followed by an
Acknowledge (ACK)1. Data is transferred with the most-significant bit (msb) first. See
Figure 34. A receiver can hold the SCL line Low to force the transmitter into a wait state.
Data transfer then continues when the receiver is ready for another byte of data and
releases SCL.
Acknowledge
Data transfer with an ACK function is obligatory. The ACK-related clock pulse is gener-
ated by the master. The transmitter releases the SDA line (High) during the ACK clock
pulse. The receiver must pull down the SDA line during the ACK clock pulse so that it
remains stable Low during the High period of this clock pulse. See Figure 35 on page 144.
A receiver that is addressed is obliged to generate an ACK after each byte is received.
When a slave-receiver does not acknowledge the slave address (for example, unable to
receive because it's performing some real-time function), the data line must be left High
by the slave. The master then generates a STOP condition to abort the transfer.
If a slave-receiver acknowledges the slave address, but cannot receive any more data
bytes, the master must abort the transfer. The abort is indicated by the slave generating the
Not Acknowledge (NACK) on the first byte to follow. The slave leaves the data line High
and the master generates the STOP condition.
If a master-receiver is involved in a transfer, it must signal the end of data to the slave-
transmitter by not generating an ACK on the final byte that is clocked out of the slave.
1. ACK is defined as a general Acknowledge bit. By contrast, the I2C Acknowledge bit is
represented as AAK, bit 2 of the I2C Control Register, which identifies which ACK signal to
transmit. See Table 87 on page 157.
Figure 34. I2C Frame Structure
SDA Signal
SCL Signal
START Condition
Clock Line Held Low By Receiver
STOP Condition
S P
Acknowledge from
Receiver
MSB
ACK
91912 8
Acknowledge from
Receiver
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The slave-transmitter must release the data line to allow the master to generate a STOP or
a repeated START condition.
Clock Synchronization
All masters generate their own clocks on the SCL line to transfer messages on the I2C bus.
Data is only valid during the High period of each clock.
Clock synchronization is performed using the wired AND connection of the I2C interfaces
to the SCL line, meaning that a High-to-Low transition on the SCL line causes the relevant
devices to start counting from their Low period. When a device clock goes Low, it holds
the SCL line in that state until the clock High state is reached. See Figure 36 on page 145.
The Low-to-High transition of this clock, however, may not change the state of the SCL
line if another clock is still within its Low period. The SCL line is held Low by the device
with the longest Low period. Devices with shorter Low periods enter a High wait-state
during this time.
When all devices concerned count off their Low period, the clock line is released and goes
High. There is no difference between the device clocks and the state of the SCL line, and
all of the devices start counting their High periods. The first device to complete its High
period again pulls the SCL line Low. In this way, a synchronized SCL clock is generated
with its Low period determined by the device with the longest clock Low period, and its
High period determined by the one with the shortest clock High period.
Figure 35.I2C Acknowledge
Data Output
by Transmitter
Data Output
by Receiver
SCL Signal
from Master
START Condition
S
MSB
1
Clock Pulse for Acknowledge
912 8
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Arbitration
A master may start a transfer only if the bus is free. Two or more masters may generate a
START condition within the minimum hold time of the START condition which results in
a defined START condition to the bus. Arbitration takes place on the SDA line, while the
SCL line is at the High level, in such a way that the master which transmits a High level,
while another master is transmitting a Low level switches off its data output stage because
the level on the bus does not correspond to its own level.
Arbitration can continue for many bits. Its first stage is comparison of the address bits. If
the masters are each trying to address the same device, arbitration continues with compar-
ison of the data. Because address and data information about the I2C bus is used for arbi-
tration, no information is lost during this process. A master which loses the arbitration can
generate clock pulses until the end of the byte in which it loses the arbitration.
If a master also incorporates a slave function and it loses arbitration during the addressing
stage, it's possible that the winning master is trying to address it. The losing master must
switch over immediately to its slave-receiver mode. Figure 36 displays the arbitration pro-
cedure for two masters. Of course, more may be involved (depending on how many mas-
ters are connected to the bus). The moment there is a difference between the internal data
level of the master generating DATA 1 and the actual level on the SDA line, its data output
is switched off, which means that a High output level is then connected to the bus. As a
result, the data transfer initiated by the winning master is not affected. Because control of
the I2C bus is decided solely on the address and data sent by competing masters, there is
no central master, nor any order of priority on the bus.
Special attention must be paid if, during a serial transfer, the arbitration procedure is still
in progress at the moment when a repeated START condition or a STOP condition is trans-
mitted to the I2C bus. If it is possible for such a situation to occur, the masters involved
must send this repeated START condition or STOP condition at the same position in the
format frame.
Figure 36.Clock Synchronization In I2C Protocol
CLK1 Signal
CLK2 Signal
SCL Signal
Counter
Reset
Wait
State
Start Counting
High Period
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In other words, arbitration is not allowed between:
A repeated START condition and a data bit
A STOP condition and a data bit
A repeated START condition and a STOP condition
Clock Synchronization for Handshake
The Clock synchronizing mechanism can function as a handshake, enabling receivers to
cope with fast data transfers, on either a byte or bit level. The byte level allows a device to
receive a byte of data at a fast rate, but allows the device more time to store the received
byte or to prepare another byte for transmission. Slaves hold the SCL line Low after recep-
tion and acknowledge the byte, forcing the master into a wait state until the slave is ready
for the next byte transfer in a handshake procedure.
Operating Modes
Master Transmit
In MASTER TRANSMIT mode, the I2C transmits a number of bytes to a slave receiver.
Enter MASTER TRANSMIT mode by setting the STA bit in the I2C_CTL register to 1.
The I2C then tests the I2C bus and transmits a START condition when the bus is free.
When a START condition is transmitted, the IFLG bit is 1 and the status code in the
I2C_SR register is 08h. Before this interrupt is serviced, the I2C_DR register must be
loaded with either a 7-bit slave address or the first part of a 10-bit slave address, with the
lsb cleared to 0 to specify TRANSMIT mode. The IFLG bit should now be cleared to 0 to
prompt the transfer to continue.
After the 7-bit slave address (or the first part of a 10-bit address) plus the Write bit are
transmitted, the IFLG is set again. A number of status codes are possible in the I2C_SR
register. See Table 78 on page 147.
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If 10-bit addressing is being used, then the status code is 18h or 20h after the first part of
a 10-bit address plus the Write bit are successfully transmitted.
After this interrupt is serviced and the second part of the 10-bit address is transmitted, the
I2C_SR register contains one of the codes in Table 79 on page 148.
Table 78. I2C Master Transmit Status Codes
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
18h Addr+W transmitted,
ACK received
For a 7-bit address: write
byte to DATA, clear IFLG
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit repeated
START
Or set STP, clear IFLG Transmit STOP
Or set STA & STP, clear
IFLG
Transmit STOP then
START
For a 10-bit address: write
extended address byte to
DATA, clear IFLG
Transmit extended
address byte
20h Addr+W transmitted,
ACK not received
Same as code 18h Same as code 18h
38h Arbitration lost Clear IFLG Return to idle
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit START when
bus is free
68h Arbitration lost,
+W received,
ACK transmitted
Clear IFLG, AAK = 0 Receive data byte,
transmit NACK
Or clear IFLG, AAK = 1 Receive data byte,
transmit ACK
78h Arbitration lost,
General call addr
received, ACK
transmitted
Same as code 68h Same as code 68h
B0h Arbitration lost,
SLA+R received,
ACK transmitted
Write byte to DATA, clear
IFLG, clear AAK = 0
Transmit last byte,
receive ACK
Or write byte to DATA, clear
IFLG, set AAK = 1
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
W = Write bit; that is, the lsb is cleared to 0.
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If a repeated START condition is transmitted, the status code is 10h instead of 08h.
After each data byte is transmitted, the IFLG is 1 and one of the status codes listed in
Table 80 is in the I2C_SR
register.
Table 79. I2C 10-Bit Master Transmit Status Codes
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
38h Arbitration lost Clear IFLG Return to idle
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit START when
bus free
68h Arbitration lost,
SLA+W received,
ACK transmitted
Clear IFLG, clear AAK = 0 Receive data byte,
transmit NACK
Or clear IFLG, set AAK = 1 Receive data byte,
transmit ACK
B0h Arbitration lost,
SLA+R received,
ACK transmitted
Write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG, clear AAK = 0
Transmit last byte,
receive ACK
Or write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG, set AAK = 1
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
D0h Second Address byte
+ W transmitted,
ACK received
Write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit repeated
START
Or set STP, clear IFLG Transmit STOP
Or set STA & STP,
clear IFLG
Transmit STOP then
START
D8h Second Address byte
+ W transmitted,
ACK not received
Same as code D0h Same as code D0h
Table 80. I2C Master Transmit Status Codes For Data Bytes
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
28h Data byte transmitted,
ACK received
Write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit repeated START
Or set STP, clear IFLG Transmit STOP
Or set STA & STP,
clear IFLG
Transmit START then STOP
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When all bytes are transmitted, the microcontroller should write a 1 to the STP bit in the
I2C_CTL register. The I2C then transmits a STOP condition, clears the STP bit and returns
to the idle state.
Master Receive
In MASTER RECEIVE mode, the I2C receives a number of bytes from a slave transmit-
ter.
After the START condition is transmitted, the IFLG bit is 1 and the status code 08h is
loaded in the I2C_SR register. The I2C_DR register should be loaded with the slave
address (or the first part of a 10-bit slave address), with the lsb set to 1 to signify a Read.
The IFLG bit should be cleared to 0 as a prompt for the transfer to continue.
When the 7-bit slave address (or the first part of a 10-bit address) and the Read bit are
transmitted, the IFLG bit is set and one of the status codes listed in Table 81 is in the
I2C_SR register.
30h Data byte transmitted,
ACK not received
Same as code 28h Same as code 28h
38h Arbitration lost Clear IFLG Return to idle
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit START when bus
free
Table 81. I2C Master Receive Status Codes
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
40h Addr + R
transmitted, ACK
received
For a 7-bit address,
clear IFLG, AAK = 0
Receive data byte,
transmit NACK
Or clear IFLG, AAK = 1 Receive data byte,
transmit ACK
For a 10-bit address
Write extended address
byte to DATA, clear IFLG
Transmit extended
address byte
R = Read bit; that is, the lsb is set to 1.
Table 80. I2C Master Transmit Status Codes For Data Bytes (Continued)
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
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If 10-bit addressing is being used, the slave is first addressed using the full 10-bit address
plus the Write bit. The master then issues a restart followed by the first part of the 10-bit
address again, but with the Read bit. The status code then becomes 40h or 48h. It is the
responsibility of the slave to remember that it had been selected prior to the restart.
If a repeated START condition is received, the status code is 10h instead of 08h.
After each data byte is received, the IFLG is set and one of the status codes listed in
Table 82 is in the I2C_SR register.
48h Addr + R
transmitted, ACK not
received
For a 7-bit address:
Set STA, clear IFLG
Transmit repeated
START
Or set STP, clear IFLG Transmit STOP
Or set STA & STP,
clear IFLG
Transmit STOP then
START
For a 10-bit address:
Write extended address byte
to DATA, clear IFLG
Transmit extended
address byte
38h Arbitration lost Clear IFLG Return to idle
Or set STA, clear IFLG Transmit START when
bus is free
68h Arbitration lost,
SLA+W received,
ACK transmitted
Clear IFLG, clear AAK = 0 Receive data byte,
transmit NACK
Or clear IFLG, set AAK = 1 Receive data byte,
transmit ACK
78h Arbitration lost,
General call addr
received, ACK
transmitted
Same as code 68h Same as code 68h
B0h Arbitration lost,
SLA+R received,
ACK transmitted
Write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG, clear AAK = 0
Transmit last byte,
receive ACK
Or write byte to DATA,
clear IFLG, set AAK = 1
Transmit data byte,
receive ACK
Table 81. I2C Master Receive Status Codes (Continued)
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
R = Read bit; that is, the lsb is set to 1.
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When all bytes are received, a NACK should be sent, then the microcontroller should
write a 1 to the STP bit in the I2C_CTL register. The I2C then transmits a STOP condition,
clears the STP bit and returns to the idle state.
Slave Transmit
In SLAVE TRANSMIT mode, a number of bytes are transmitted to a master receiver.
The I2C enters SLAVE TRANSMIT mode when it receives its own slave address and a
Read bit after a START condition. The I2C then transmits an acknowledge bit (if the AAK
bit is set to 1) and sets the IFLG bit in the I2C_CTL register and the I2C_SR register con-
tains the status code A8h.
When I2C contains a 10-bit slave address (signified by F0hF7h in the I2C_SAR
register), it transmits an acknowledge after the first address byte is received after
a restart. An interrupt is generated, IFLG is set but the status does not change. No
second address byte is sent by the master. It is up to the slave to remember it had
been selected prior to the restart.
I2C goes from MASTER mode to SLAVE TRANSMIT mode when arbitration is lost dur-
ing the transmission of an address, and the slave address and Read bit are received. This
action is represented by the status code B0h in the I2C_SR register.
The data byte to be transmitted is loaded into the
I2C_DR register and the IFLG bit
cleared. After the I2C transmits the byte and receives an acknowledge, the IFLG bit is set
and the I2C_SR
register contains B8h. When the final byte to be transmitted is loaded into
the I2C_DR register, the AAK bit is cleared when the IFLG is cleared. After the final byte
Table 82. I2C Master Receive Status Codes For Data Bytes
Code I2C State Microcontroller Response Next I2C Action
50h Data byte received,
ACK transmitted
Read DATA, clear IFLG,
clear AAK = 0
Receive data byte,
transmit NACK
Or read DATA, clear IFLG,
set AAK = 1
Receive data byte,
transmit ACK
58h Data byte received,
NACK transmitted
Read DATA, set STA,
clear IFLG
Transmit repeated START
Or read DATA, set STP,
clear IFLG
Transmit STOP
Or read DATA, set
STA & STP, clear IFLG
Transmit STOP then
START
38h Arbitration lost in
NACK bit
Same as master transmit Same as master transmit
Note:
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is transmitted, the IFLG is set and the I2C_SR register contains C8h and the I2C returns to
the idle state. The AAK bit must be set to 1 before reentering SLAVE mode.
If no acknowledge is received after transmitting a byte, the IFLG is set and the I2C_SR
register contains C0h. The I2C then returns to the idle state.
If a STOP condition is detected after an acknowledge bit, the I2C returns to the idle state.
Slave Receive
In SLAVE RECEIVE mode, a number of data bytes are received from a master transmit-
ter.
The I2C enters SLAVE RECEIVE mode when it receives its own slave address and a
Write bit (lsb = 0) after a START condition. The I2C transmits an acknowledge bit and
sets the IFLG bit in the I2C_CTL register and the I2C_SR register contains the status code
60h. The I2C also enters SLAVE RECEIVE mode when it receives the general call
address 00h (if the GCE bit in the I2C_SAR register is set). The status code is then 70h.
When the I2C contains a 10-bit slave address (signified by F0hF7h in the
I2C_SAR register), it transmits an acknowledge after the first address byte is
received but no interrupt is generated. IFLG is not set and the status does not
change. The I2C generates an interrupt only after the second address byte is
received. The I2C sets the IFLG bit and loads the status code as described above.
I2C goes from MASTER mode to SLAVE RECEIVE mode when arbitration is lost during
the transmission of an address, and the slave address and Write bit (or the general call
address if the CGE bit in the I2C_SAR register is set to 1) are received. The status code in
the I2C_SR register is 68h if the slave address is received or 78h if the general call
address is received. The IFLG bit must be cleared to 0 to allow data transfer to continue.
If the AAK bit in the I2C_CTL register is set to 1 then an acknowledge bit (Low level on
SDA) is transmitted and the IFLG bit is set after each byte is received. The I2C_SR regis-
ter contains the status code 80h or 90h if SLAVE RECEIVE mode is entered with the
general call address. The received data byte can be read from the I2C_DR register and the
IFLG bit must be cleared to allow the transfer to continue. If a STOP condition or a
repeated START condition is detected after the acknowledge bit, the IFLG bit is set and
the I2C_SR register contains status code A0h.
If the AAK bit is cleared to 0 during a transfer, the I2C transmits a not-acknowledge bit
(High level on SDA) after the next byte is received, and set the IFLG bit. The I2C_SR reg-
ister contains the status code 88h or 98h if SLAVE RECEIVE mode is entered with the
general call address. The I2C returns to the idle state when the IFLG bit is cleared to 0.
Note:
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I2C Registers
Addressing
The processor interface provides access to six 8-bit registers: four Read/Write registers,
one Read Only register and two Write Only registers, as listed in Table 83.
Resetting the I2C Registers
Hardware Reset— When the I2C is reset by a hardware reset of the eZ80F92 device, the
I2C_SAR, I2C_XSAR, I2C_DR and I2C_CTL registers are cleared to 00h; while the
I2C_SR register is set to F8h.
Software Reset— Perform a software reset by writing any value to the I2C Software
Reset Register (I2C_SRR). A software reset sets the I2C back to idle and the STP, STA,
and IFLG bits of the I2C_CTL register to 0.
I2C Slave Address Register
The I2C_SAR register provides the 7-bit address of the I2C when in SLAVE mode and
allows 10-bit addressing in conjunction with the I2C_XSAR register. I2C_SAR[7:1] =
sla[6:0] is the 7-bit address of the I2C when in 7-bit SLAVE mode. When the I2C receives
this address after a START condition, it enters SLAVE mode. I2C_SAR[7] corresponds to
the first bit received from the I2C bus.
When the register receives an address starting with F7h to F0h (I2C_SAR[7:3] = 11110b),
the I2C recognizes that a 10-bit slave addressing mode is selected. The I2C sends an ACK
after receiving the I2C_SAR byte (the device does not generate an interrupt at this point).
After the next byte of the address (I2C_XSAR) is received, the I2C generates an interrupt
and goes into SLAVE mode. Then I2C_SAR[2:1] are used as the upper 2 bits for the 10-
bit extended address. The full 10-bit address is supplied by {I2C_SAR[2:1],
I2C_XSAR[7:0]}. See Table 84 on page 154.
Table 83. I2C Register Descriptions
Register Description
I2C_SAR Slave address register
I2C_XSAR Extended slave address register
I2C_DR Data byte register
I2C_CTL Control register
I2C_SR Status register (Read Only)
I2C_CCR Clock Control register (Write Only)
I2C_SRR Software reset register (Write Only)
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I2C Extended Slave Address Register
The I2C_XSAR register is used in conjunction with the I2C_SAR register to provide
10-bit addressing of the I2C when in SLAVE mode. The I2C_SAR value forms the lower
8 bits of the 10-bit slave address. The full 10-bit address is supplied by {I2C_SAR[2:1],
I2C_XSAR[7:0]}.
When the register receives an address starting with F7h to F0h (I2C_SAR[7:3] = 11110b),
the I2C recognizes that a 10-bit slave addressing mode is selected. The I2C sends an ACK
after receiving the I2C_XSAR byte (the device does not generate an interrupt at this
point). After the next byte of the address (I2C_XSAR) is received, the I2C generates an
interrupt and goes into SLAVE mode. Then I2C_SAR[2:1] are used as the upper 2 bits for
the 10-bit extended address. The full 10-bit address is supplied by {I2C_SAR[2:1],
I2C_XSAR[7:0]}. See Table 85 on page 155.
Table 84. I2C Slave Address Registers(I2C_SAR = 00C8h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:1]
SLA
00h–
7Fh
7-bit slave address or upper 2 bits,I2C_SAR[2:1], of address
when operating in 10-bit mode.
0
GCE
0I
2C not enabled to recognize the General Call Address.
1I
2C enabled to recognize the General Call Address.
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I2C Data Register
This register contains the data byte/slave address to be transmitted or the data byte just
received. In transmit mode, the msb of the byte is transmitted first. In receive mode, the
first bit received is placed in the msb of the register. After each byte is transmitted, the
I2C_DR register contains the byte that is present on the bus in case a lost arbitration event
occurs. See Table 86.
I2C Control Register
The I2C_CTL register is a control register that is used to control the interrupts and the
master slave relationships on the I2C bus.
When the Interrupt Enable bit (IEN) is set to 1, the interrupt line goes High when the IFLG
is set to 1. When IEN is cleared to 0, the interrupt line always remains Low.
When the Bus Enable bit (ENAB) is set to 0, the I2C bus inputs SCLx and SDAx are
ignored and the I2C module does not respond to any address on the bus. When ENAB is
Table 85. I2C Extended Slave Address Registers(I2C_XSAR = 00C9h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SLAX
00h–
FFh
Least-significant 8 bits of the 10-bit extended slave address.
Table 86. I2C Data Registers(I2C_DR = 00CAh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
DATA
00h–
FFh
I2C data byte.
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set to 1, the I2C responds to calls to its slave address and to the general call address if the
GCE bit (I2C_SAR[0]) is set to 1.
When the Master Mode Start bit (STA) is set to 1, the I2C enters MASTER mode and
sends a START condition on the bus when the bus is free. If the STA bit is set to 1 when
the I2C module is already in MASTER mode and one or more bytes are transmitted, then a
repeated START condition is sent. If the STA bit is set to 1 when the I2C block is accessed
in SLAVE mode, the I2C completes the data transfer in SLAVE mode and then enters
MASTER mode when the bus is released. The STA bit is automatically cleared after a
START condition is set. Writing a 0 to this bit produces no effect.
If the Master Mode Stop bit (STP) is set to 1 in MASTER mode, a STOP condition is
transmitted on the I2C bus. If the STP bit is set to 1 in slave move, the I2C module operates
as if a STOP condition is received, but no STOP condition is transmitted. If both STA and
STP bits are set, the I2C block first transmits the STOP condition (if in MASTER mode)
and then transmit the START condition. The STP bit is cleared automatically. Writing a 0
to this bit produces no effect.
The I2C Interrupt Flag (IFLG) is set to 1 automatically when any of 30 of the possible 31
I2C states is entered. The only state that does not set the IFLG bit is state F8h. If IFLG is
set to 1 and the IEN bit is also set, an interrupt is generated. When IFLG is set by the I2C,
the Low period of the I2C bus clock line is stretched and the data transfer is suspended.
When a 0 is written to IFLG, the interrupt is cleared and the I2C clock line is released.
When the I2C Acknowledge bit (AAK) is set to 1, an Acknowledge is sent during the
acknowledge clock pulse on the I2C bus if:
Either the whole of a 7-bit slave address or the first or second byte of a 10-bit slave
address is received
The general call address is received and the General Call Enable bit in I2C_SAR is set
to 1
A data byte is received while in MASTER or SLAVE modes
When AAK is cleared to 0, a NACK is sent when a data byte is received in MASTER or
SLAVE mode. If AAK is cleared to 0 in the Slave Transmitter mode, the byte in the
I2C_DR register is assumed to be the final byte. After this byte is transmitted, the I2C
block enter states C8h, then returns to the idle state. The I2C module does not respond to
its slave address unless AAK is set. See Table 87 on page 157.
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
157
Table 87. I2C Control Registers(I2C_CTL = 00CBh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R R
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
IEN
0I
2C interrupt is disabled.
1I
2C interrupt is enabled.
6
ENAB
0The I
2C bus (SCL/SDA) is disabled and all inputs are ignored.
1The I
2C bus (SCL/SDA) is enabled.
5
STA
0 Master mode START condition is sent.
1 Master mode start-transmit START condition on the bus.
4
STP
0 Master mode STOP condition is sent.
1 Master mode stop-transmit STOP condition on the bus.
3
IFLG
0I
2C interrupt flag is not set.
1I
2C interrupt flag is set.
2
AAK
0 Not Acknowledge.
1 Acknowledge.
[1:0] 00 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
158
I2C Status Register
The I2C_SR register is a Read Only register that contains a 5-bit status code in the five
msbs: the three lsbs are always 0. The Read Only I2C_SR registers share the same I/O
addresses as the Write Only I2C_CCR registers. See Table 88.
There are 29 possible status codes, as listed in Table 89. When the I2C_SR register con-
tains the status code F8h, no relevant status information is available, no interrupt is gener-
ated and the IFLG bit in the I2C_CTL register is not set. All other status codes correspond
to a defined state of the I2C.
When each of these states is entered, the corresponding status code appears in this register
and the IFLG bit in the I2C_CTL register is set. When the IFLG bit is cleared, the status
code returns to F8h.
Table 88. I2C Status Registers(I2C_SR = 00CCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 11111000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:3]
STAT
00000–
11111
5-bit I2C status code.
[2:0] 000 Reserved.
Table 89. I2C Status Codes
Code Status
00h Bus error
08h START condition transmitted
10h Repeated START condition transmitted
18h Address and Write bit transmitted, ACK received
20h Address and Write bit transmitted, ACK not received
28h Data byte transmitted in MASTER mode, ACK received
30h Data byte transmitted in MASTER mode, ACK not received
38h Arbitration lost in address or data byte
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
159
If an illegal condition occurs on the I2C bus, the bus error state is entered (status code
00h). To recover from this state, the STP bit in the I2C_CTL
register must be set and the
IFLG bit cleared. The I2C then returns to the idle state. No STOP condition is transmitted
on the I2C bus.
The STP and STA bits may be set to 1 at the same time to recover from the bus
error. The I2C then sends a START condition.
40h Address and Read bit transmitted, ACK received
48h Address and Read bit transmitted, ACK not received
50h Data byte received in MASTER mode, ACK transmitted
58h Data byte received in MASTER mode, NACK transmitted
60h Slave address and Write bit received, ACK transmitted
68h Arbitration lost in address as master, slave address and Write bit received,
ACK transmitted
70h General Call address received, ACK transmitted
78h Arbitration lost in address as master, General Call address received, ACK
transmitted
80h Data byte received after slave address received, ACK transmitted
88h Data byte received after slave address received, NACK transmitted
90h Data byte received after General Call received, ACK transmitted
98h Data byte received after General Call received, NACK transmitted
A0h STOP or repeated START condition received in SLAVE mode
A8h Slave address and Read bit received, ACK transmitted
B0h Arbitration lost in address as master, slave address and Read bit received,
ACK transmitted
B8h Data byte transmitted in SLAVE mode, ACK received
C0h Data byte transmitted in SLAVE mode, ACK not received
C8h Last byte transmitted in SLAVE mode, ACK received
D0h Second Address byte and Write bit transmitted, ACK received
D8h Second Address byte and Write bit transmitted, ACK not received
F8h No relevant status information, IFLG = 0
Table 89. I2C Status Codes (Continued)
Code Status
Note:
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
160
I2C Clock Control Register
The I2C_CCR register is a Write Only register. The seven LSBs control the frequency at
which the I2C bus is sampled and the frequency of the I2C clock line (SCL) when the I2C
is in MASTER mode. The Write Only I2C_CCR registers share the same I/O addresses as
the Read Only I2C_SR registers. See Table 90.
The I2C clocks are derived from the CPU system clock. The frequency of the CPU system
clock is fSCK. The I2C bus is sampled by the I2C block at the frequency fSAMP supplied by:
In MASTER mode, the I2C clock output frequency on SCL (fSCL) is supplied by:
The use of two separately-programmable dividers allows the MASTER mode output fre-
quency to be set independently of the frequency at which the I2C bus is sampled. This fea-
ture is particularly useful in multimaster systems because the frequency at which the I2C
bus is sampled must be at least 10 times the frequency of the fastest master on the bus to
ensure that START and STOP conditions are always detected. By using two programma-
ble clock divider stages, a high sampling frequency can be ensured while allowing the
MASTER mode output to be set to a lower frequency.
Table 90. I2C Clock Control Registers(I2C_CCR = 00CCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Read only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7 0 Reserved.
[6:3]
M
0000–
1111
I2C clock divider scalar value.
[2:0]
N
000–
111
I2C clock divider exponent.
fSAMP =fSCLK
2N
fSCL =fSCLK
10 • (M + 1)(2)N
PS015313-0508 I2C Serial I/O Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
161
Bus Clock Speed
The I2C bus is defined for bus clock speeds up to 100 kbps (400 kbps in FAST mode).
To ensure correct detection of START and STOP conditions on the bus, the I2C must sam-
ple the I2C bus at least ten times faster than the bus clock speed of the fastest master on the
bus. The sampling frequency should therefore be at least 1 MHz (4 MHz in FAST mode)
to guarantee correct operation with other bus masters.
The I2C sampling frequency is determined by the frequency of the CPU system clock and
the value in the I2C_CCR bits 2 to 0. The bus clock speed generated by the I2C in MAS-
TER mode is determined by the frequency of the input clock and the values in
I2C_CCR[2:0] and I2C_CCR[6:3].
I2C Software Reset Register
The I2C_SRR register is a Write Only register. Writing any value to this register performs
a software reset of the I2C module. See Table 91.
Table 91. I2C Software Reset Register(I2C_SRR = 00CDh)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
SRR
00h–FFh Writing any value to this register performs a software reset of
the I2C module.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
162
Zilog Debug Interface
Introduction
The Zilog Debug Interface (ZDI) provides a built-in debugging interface to the eZ80®
CPU. ZDI provides basic in-circuit emulation features including:
Examining and modifying internal registers
Examining and modifying memory
Starting and stopping the user program
Setting program and data BREAK points
Single-stepping the user program
Executing user-supplied instructions
Debugging the final product with the inclusion of one small connector
Downloading code into SRAM
C source-level debugging using Zilog Developer Studio (ZDS II)
The above features are built into the silicon. Control is provided via a two-wire interface
that is connected to the USB Smart Cable Debug Interface Tool. Figure 37 displays a typi-
cal setup using a a target board, USB Smart Cable, and the host PC running ZDS. Visit
www.zilog.com for more information about USB Smart Cable and ZDS II.
Figure 37. Typical ZDI Debug Setup
Zilog
Developer
Studio
USB Smart
Cable
Emulator
eZ80
Product
Target Board
C
O
N
N
E
C
T
O
R
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
163
ZDI allows reading and writing of most internal registers without disturbing the state of
the machine. Reads and writes to memory may occur as fast as the ZDI can download and
upload data, with a maximum frequency of one-half the CPU system clock frequency.
Table 92 lists the recommended frequencies of the ZDI clock in relation to the system
clock.
ZDI-Supported Protocol
ZDI supports a bidirectional serial protocol. The protocol defines any device that sends
data as the transmitter and any receiving device as the receiver. The device controlling the
transfer is the master and the device being controlled is the slave. The master always ini-
tiates the data transfers and provides the clock for both receive and transmit operations.
The ZDI block on the eZ80F92 device is considered a slave in all data transfers.
Figure 38 displays the schematic for building a connector on a target board. This connec-
tor allows the user to connect directly to the USB Smart Cable debugger using a six-pin
header.
Table 92. Recommended ZDI Clock vs. System Clock Frequency
System Clock Frequency ZDI Clock Frequency
3–10 MHz 1 MHz
8–16 MHz 2 MHz
12–24 MHz 4 MHz
20–50 MHz 8 MHz
Figure 38.Schematic For Building a Target Board USB Smart Cable Connector
6-Pin Target Connector
1
3
5
2
4
6
eZ80F92
MCU
10 K‰ 10 K‰
TCK (ZCL)
TDI (ZDA)
TVDD
(Target V )
DD
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
164
ZDI Clock and Data Conventions
The two pins used for communication with the ZDI block are the ZDI Clock pin (ZCL)
and the ZDI Data pin (ZDA). On the eZ80F92 device, the ZCL pin is shared with the TCK
pin while the ZDA pin is shared with the TDI pin. The ZCL and ZDA pin functions are
only available when the On-Chip Instrumentation is disabled and the ZDI is therefore
enabled. For general data communication, the data value on the ZDA pin can change only
when ZCL is Low (0). The only exception is the ZDI START bit, which is indicated by a
High-to-Low transition (falling edge) on the ZDA pin while ZCL is High.
Data is shifted into and out of ZDI, with the msb (bit 7) of each byte being first in time,
and the lsb (bit 0) last in time. All information is passed between the master and the slave
in 8-bit (single-byte) units. Each byte is transferred with nine clock cycles: eight to shift
the data, and ninth for internal operations.
ZDI START Condition
All ZDI commands are preceded by the ZDI START signal, which is a High-to-Low tran-
sition of ZDA when ZCL is High. The ZDI slave on the eZ80F92 device continually mon-
itors the ZDA and ZCL lines for the START signal and does not respond to any command
until this condition is met. The master pulls ZDA Low, with ZCL High, to indicate the
beginning of a data transfer with the ZDI block. Figure 39 and Figure 40 on page 165 dis-
play a valid ZDI START signal prior to writing and reading data, respectively. A Low-to-
High transition of ZDA while the ZCL is High yields no effect.
Data is shifted in during a Write to the ZDI block on the rising edge of ZCL, as displayed
in Figure 39. Data is shifted out during a Read from the ZDI block on the falling edge of
ZCL as displayed in Figure 40 on page 165. When an operation is completed, the master
stops during the ninth cycle and holds the ZCL signal High.
Figure 39.ZDI Write Timing
ZDI Data In
(Write)
ZDI Data In
(Write)
Start Signal
ZCL
ZDA
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
165
ZDI Single-Bit Byte Separator
Following each 8-bit ZDI data transfer, a single-bit byte separator is used. To initiate a
new ZDI command, the single-bit byte separator must be High (logical 1) to allow for a
new ZDI START command to be sent. For all other cases, the single-bit byte separator can
be either Low (logical 0) or High (logical 1). When ZDI is configured to allow the CPU to
accept external bus requests, the single-bit byte separator should be Low (logical 0) during
all ZDI commands. This Low value indicates that ZDI is still operating and is not ready to
relinquish the Bus. The CPU does not accept the external bus requests until the single-bit
byte separator is a High (logical 1). For more information about accepting bus requests in
ZDI DEBUG mode, see the Bus Requests During ZDI DEBUG Mode section on page
169.
ZDI Register Addressing
Following a START signal the ZDI master must output the ZDI register address. All data
transfers with the ZDI block use special ZDI registers. The ZDI control registers that
reside in the ZDI register address space should not be confused with the eZ80F92 device
peripheral registers that reside in the I/O address space.
Many locations in the ZDI control register address space are shared by two registers, one
for Read Only access and one for Write Only access. As an example, a Read from ZDI
register address 00h returns the eZ80® Product ID Low Byte while a Write to this same
location, 00h, stores the Low byte of one of the address match values used for generating
BREAK points.
The format for a ZDI address is seven bits of address, followed by one bit for Read or
Write control, and completed by a single-bit byte separator. The ZDI executes a Read or
Write operation depending on the state of the R/W bit (0 = Write, 1 = Read). If no new
START command is issued at completion of the Read or Write operation, the operation
Figure 40.ZDI Read Timing
ZDI Data Out
(Read)
ZDI Data Out
(Read)
Start Signal
ZCL
ZDA
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
166
can be repeated. Repeated Read or Write operations can occur without requiring a resend
of the ZDI command. To initiate a new ZDI command, a START signal must follow.
Figure 41 displays the timing for address Writes to ZDI registers.
ZDI Write Operations
ZDI Single-Byte Write
For single-byte Write operations, the address and Write control bit are first written to the
ZDI block. Following the single-bit byte separator, the data is shifted into the ZDI block
on the next eight rising edges of ZCL. The master terminates activity after 8 clock
cycles.Figure 42 displays the timing for ZDI single-byte Write operations.
Figure 41.ZDI Address Write Timing
Figure 42.ZDI Single-Byte Data Write Timing
ZDI Address Byte
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
or new ZDI
START Signal
START
Signal
0 = WRITE
1 = READ
lsbmsb
ZCLS 1 23 45 67 89
A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 R/W 0/1ZDA
ZDI Data Byte
lsb of
ZDI Address
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
lsb
of DATA
msb
of DATA
End of Data
or New ZDI
START Signal
ZCL 789123456789
A0 Write 0/1 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1
ZDA
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
167
ZDI Block Write
The Block Write operation is initiated in the same manner as the single-byte Write opera-
tion, but instead of terminating the Write operation after the first data byte is transferred,
the ZDI master can continue to transmit additional bytes of data to the ZDI slave on the
eZ80F92 device. After the receipt of each byte of data the ZDI register address increments
by 1. If the ZDI register address reaches the end of the Write Only ZDI register address
space (30h), the address stops incrementing. Figure 43 displays the timing for ZDI Block
Write operations.
ZDI Read Operations
ZDI Single-Byte Read
Single-byte Read operations are initiated in the same manner as single-byte Write opera-
tions, with the exception that the R/W bit of the ZDI register address is set to 1. Upon
receipt of a slave address with the R/W bit set to 1, the eZ80F92 device’s ZDI block loads
the selected data into the shifter at the beginning of the first cycle following the single-bit
data separator. The msb is shifted out first. Figure 44 displays the timing for ZDI single-
byte Read operations.
Figure 43.ZDI Block Data Write Timing
ZDI Data Bytes
lsb of
ZDI Address
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
msb
of DATA
Byte 2
msb
of DATA
Byte 1
lsb
of DATA
Byte 1
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
ZCL 789123789129
A0 Write 0/1 D7 D6 D5 D1 D0 0/1 D7 D6 1
ZDA
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
168
ZDI Block Read
A Block Read operation is initiated the same as a single-byte Read; however, the ZDI
master continues to clock in the next byte from the ZDI slave as the ZDI slave continues to
output data. The ZDI register address counter increments with each Read. If the ZDI regis-
ter address reaches the end of the Read Only ZDI register address space (20h), the address
stops incrementing. Figure 45 displays the ZDI’s Block Read timing.
Operation of the eZ80F92 Device During ZDI Breakpoints
If the ZDI forces the CPU to BREAK, only the CPU suspends operation. The system clock
continues to operate and drive other peripherals. Those peripherals that can operate auton-
omously from the CPU may continue to operate, if so enabled. For example, the Watchdog
Timer and Programmable Reload Timers continue to count during a ZDI BREAK point.
When using the ZDI interface, any Write or Read operations of peripheral registers in the
I/O address space produces the same effect as Read or Write operations using the CPU.
Figure 44.ZDI Single-Byte Data Read Timing
Figure 45.ZDI Block Data Read Timing
ZDI Data Byte
lsb of
ZDI Address
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
lsb
of DATA
msb
of DATA
End of Data
or New ZDI
START Signal
ZCL 789123456789
A0 Read 0/1 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1
ZDA
ZDI Data Bytes
lsb of
ZDI Address
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
msb
of DATA
Byte 2
msb
of DATA
Byte 1
lsb
of DATA
Byte 1
Single-Bit
Byte Separator
ZCL 789123789129
A0 Read 0/1 D7 D6 D5 D1 D0 0/1 D7 D6 1
ZDA
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
169
Because many register Read/Write operations exhibit secondary effects, such as clearing
flags or causing operations to commence, the effects of the Read/Write operations during a
ZDI BREAK must be taken into consideration.
Bus Requests During ZDI DEBUG Mode
The ZDI block on the eZ80F92 device allows an external device to take control of the
address and data bus while the eZ80F92 device is in DEBUG mode. ZDI_BUSACK_EN
causes ZDI to allow or prevent acknowledgement of bus requests by external peripherals.
The bus acknowledge only occurs at the end of the current ZDI operation (indicated by a
High during the single-bit byte separator). The default reset condition is for bus acknowl-
edgement to be disabled. To allow bus acknowledgement, the ZDI_BUSACK_EN must be
written.
When an external bus request (BUSREQ pin asserted) is detected, ZDI waits until comple-
tion of the current operation before responding. ZDI acknowledges the bus request by
asserting the bus acknowledge (BUSACK) signal. If the ZDI block is not currently shift-
ing data, it acknowledges the bus request immediately. ZDI uses the single-bit byte separa-
tor of each data word to determine if it is at the end of a ZDI operation. If the bit is a
logical 0, ZDI does not assert BUSACK to allow additional data Read or Write operations.
If the bit is a logical 1, indicating completion of the ZDI commands, BUSACK is asserted.
Potential Hazards of Enabling Bus Requests During DEBUG Mode
There are some potential hazards that the user must be aware of when enabling external
bus requests during ZDI DEBUG mode. First, when the address and data bus are used by
an external source, ZDI must only access ZDI registers and internal CPU registers to pre-
vent possible Bus contention. The bus acknowledge status is reported in the
ZDI_BUS_STAT register. The BUSACK output pin also indicates the bus acknowledge
state.
A second hazard is that when a bus acknowledge is granted, the ZDI is subject to any
WAIT states that are assigned to the device currently accessed by the external peripheral.
To prevent data errors, ZDI should avoid data transmission while another device is con-
trolling the bus.
Finally, exiting ZDI DEBUG mode while an external peripheral controls the address and
data buses, as indicated by BUSACK assertion, may produce unpredictable results.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
170
ZDI Write Only Registers
Table 93 lists the ZDI Write Only registers. Many of the ZDI Write Only addresses are
shared with ZDI Read Only registers.
Table 93. ZDI Write Only Registers
ZDI
Address ZDI Register Name ZDI Register Function
Reset
Value
00h ZDI_ADDR0_L Address Match 0 Low Byte XXh
01h ZDI_ADDR0_H Address Match 0 High Byte XXh
02h ZDI_ADDR0_U Address Match 0 Upper Byte XXh
04h ZDI_ADDR1_L Address Match 1 Low Byte XXh
05h ZDI_ADDR1_H Address Match 1 High Byte XXh
06h ZDI_ADDR1_U Address Match 1 Upper Byte XXh
08h ZDI_ADDR2_L Address Match 2 Low Byte XXh
09h ZDI_ADDR2_H Address Match 2 High Byte XXh
0Ah ZDI_ADDR2_U Address Match 2 Upper Byte XXh
0Ch ZDI_ADDR3_L Address Match 3 Low Byte XXh
0Dh ZDI_ADDR3_H Address Match 3 High Byte XXh
0Eh ZDI_ADDR3_U Address Match 4 Upper Byte XXh
10h ZDI_BRK_CTL BREAK Control register 00h
11h ZDI_MASTER_CTL Master Control register 00h
13h ZDI_WR_DATA_L Write Data Low Byte XXh
14h ZDI_WR_DATA_H Write Data High Byte XXh
15h ZDI_WR_DATA_U Write Data Upper Byte XXh
16h ZDI_RW_CTL Read/Write Control register 00h
17h ZDI_BUS_CTL Bus Control register 00h
21h ZDI_IS4 Instruction Store 4 XXh
22h ZDI_IS3 Instruction Store 3 XXh
23h ZDI_IS2 Instruction Store 2 XXh
24h ZDI_IS1 Instruction Store 1 XXh
25h ZDI_IS0 Instruction Store 0 XXh
30h ZDI_WR_MEM Write Memory register XXh
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
171
ZDI Read Only Registers
Table 94 lists the ZDI Read Only registers. Many of the ZDI Read Only addresses are
shared with ZDI Write Only registers.
ZDI Register Definitions
ZDI Address Match Registers
The four sets of address match registers are used for setting the addresses for generating
BREAK points. When the accompanying BRK_ADDRX bit is set in the ZDI BREAK
Control register to enable the particular address match, the current eZ80F92 address is
compared with the 3-byte address set, {ZDI_ADDRx_U, ZDI_ADDRx_H,
ZDI_ADDR_x_L}. If the CPU is operating in ADL mode, the address is supplied by
ADDR[23:0]. If the CPU is operating in Z80® mode, the address is supplied by
{MBASE[7:0], ADDR[15:0]}. If a match is found, ZDI issues a BREAK to the eZ80F92
device placing the processor in ZDI mode pending further instructions from the ZDI inter-
face block. If the address is not the first op-code fetch, the ZDI BREAK is executed at the
end of the instruction in which it is executed. There are four sets of address match regis-
ters. They can be used in conjunction with each other to BREAK on branching instruc-
tions. See Table 95 on page 172.
Table 94. ZDI Read Only Registers
ZDI
Address ZDI Register Name ZDI Register Function
Reset
Value
00h ZDI_ID_L eZ80® Product ID Low Byte register 07h
01h ZDI_ID_H eZ80 Product ID High Byte register 00h
02h ZDI_ID_REV eZ80 Product ID Revision register XXh
03h ZDI_STAT Status register 00h
10h ZDI_RD_L Read Memory Address Low Byte
register
XXh
11h ZDI_RD_H Read Memory Address High Byte
register
XXh
12h ZDI_RD_U Read Memory Address Upper Byte
register
XXh
17h ZDI_BUS_STAT Bus Status register 00h
20h ZDI_RD_MEM Read Memory Data Value XXh
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
172
ZDI BREAK Control Register
The ZDI BREAK Control register is used to enable BREAK points. ZDI asserts a BREAK
when the CPU instruction address, ADDR[23:0], matches the value in the ZDI Address
Match 3 registers, {ZDI_ADDR3_U, ZDI_ADDR3_H, ZDI_ADDR3_L}. BREAKs can
only occur on an instruction boundary. If the instruction address is not the beginning of an
instruction (that is, for multibyte instructions), then the BREAK occurs at the end of the
current instruction. The BRK_NEXT bit is set to 1. The BRK_NEXT bit must be reset to
0 to release the BREAK. See Table 96 on page 173.
Table 95. ZDI Address Match Registers(ZDI_ADDR0_L = 00h, ZDI_ADDR0_H = 01h,
ZDI_ADDR0_U = 02h, ZDI_ADDR1_L = 04h, ZDI_ADDR1_H = 05h,
ZDI_ADDR1_U = 06h, ZDI_ADDR2_L = 08h, ZDI_ADDR2_H = 09h,
ZDI_ADDR2_U = 0Ah, ZDI_ADDR3_L = 0Ch, ZDI_ADDR3_H = 0Dh, and
ZDI_ADDR3_U = 0Eh in the ZDI Register Write Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_ADDRx_L,
ZDI_ADDRx_H,
or
ZDI_ADDRx_U
00h–
FFh
The four sets of ZDI address match registers are used for
setting the addresses for generating BREAK points.
The 24-bit addresses are supplied by {ZDI_ADDRx_U,
ZDI_ADDRx_H, ZDI_ADDRx_L, where x is 0, 1, 2, or 3.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
173
Table 96. ZDI BREAK Control Register(ZDI_BRK_CTL = 10h in the ZDI Write Only
Register Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
brk_next
0 The ZDI BREAK on the next CPU instruction is disabled.
Clearing this bit releases the CPU from its current BREAK
condition.
1 The ZDI BREAK on the next CPU instruction is enabled.
The CPU can use multibyte Op Codes and multibyte
operands. BREAK points only occur on the first Op Code in
a multibyte Op Code instruction. If the ZCL pin is High and
the ZDA pin is Low at the end of RESET, this bit is set to 1
and a BREAK occurs on the first instruction following the
RESET. This bit is set automatically during ZDI BREAK on
address match. A BREAK can also be forced by writing a 1
to this bit.
6
brk_addr3
0 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 3, is
disabled.
1 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 3, is
enabled.
5
brk_addr2
0 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 2, is
disabled.
1 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 2, is
enabled.
4
brk_addr1
0 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 1, is
disabled.
1 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 1, is
enabled.
3
brk_addr0
0 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 0, is
disabled.
1 The ZDI BREAK, upon matching BREAK address 0, is
enabled.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
174
2
ign_low_1
0The Ignore the Low Byte function of the ZDI Address Match
1 registers is disabled. If BRK_ADDR1 is set to 1, ZDI
initiates a BREAK when the entire 24-bit address,
ADDR[23:0], matches the 3-byte value {ZDI_ADDR1_U,
ZDI_ADDR1_H, ZDI_ADDR1_L}.
1The Ignore the Low Byte function of the ZDI Address Match
1 registers is enabled. If BRK_ADDR1 is set to 1, ZDI
initiates a BREAK when only the upper 2 bytes of the 24-bit
address, ADDR[23:8], match the 2-byte value
{ZDI_ADDR1_U, ZDI_ADDR1_H}. As a result, a BREAK
can occur anywhere within a 256-byte page.
1
ign_low_0
0The Ignore the Low Byte function of the ZDI Address Match
1 registers is disabled. If BRK_ADDR0 is set to 1, ZDI
initiates a BREAK when the entire 24-bit address,
ADDR[23:0], matches the 3-byte value {ZDI_ADDR0_U,
ZDI_ADDR0_H, ZDI_ADDR0_L}.
1The Ignore the Low Byte function of the ZDI Address Match
1 registers is enabled. If the BRK_ADDR1 is set to 0, ZDI
initiates a BREAK when only the upper 2 bytes of the 24-bit
address, ADDR[23:8], match the 2 bytes value
{ZDI_ADDR0_U, ZDI_ADDR0_H}. As a result, a BREAK
can occur anywhere within a 256-byte page.
0
single_step
0 ZDI SINGLE STEP mode is disabled.
1 ZDI SINGLE STEP mode is enabled. ZDI asserts a BREAK
following execution of each instruction.
Bit
Position Value Description
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
175
ZDI Master Control Register
The ZDI Master Control register provides control of the eZ80F92 device. It is capable of
forcing a RESET and waking up the eZ80F92 device from the low-power modes (HALT
or SLEEP). See Table 97.
Table 97. ZDI Master Control Register(ZDI_MASTER_CTL = 11h in ZDI Register
Write Address Spaces)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
ZDI_RESET
0 No action.
1 Initiate a RESET of the CPU. This bit is automatically
cleared at the end of the RESET event.
[6:0] 0000000 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
176
ZDI Write Data Registers
These three registers are used in the ZDI Write Only register address space to store the
data that is written when a Write instruction is sent to the ZDI Read/Write Control register
(ZDI_RW_CTL). The ZDI Read/Write Control register is located at ZDI address 16h
immediately following the ZDI Write Data registers. As a result, the ZDI Master is
allowed to write the data to {ZDI_WR_U, ZDI_WR_H, ZDI_WR_L} and the Write com-
mand in one data transfer operation. See Table 98.
ZDI Read/Write Control Register
The ZDI Read/Write Control register is used in the ZDI Write Only Register address to
read data from, write data to, and manipulate the CPU’s registers or memory locations.
When this register is written, the eZ80F92 device immediately performs the operation cor-
responding to the data value written as listed in Table 99 on page 177. When a Read oper-
ation is executed via this register, the requested data values are placed in the ZDI Read
Data registers {ZDI_RD_U, ZDI_RD_H, ZDI_RD_L}. When a Write operation is exe-
cuted via this register, the Write data is taken from the ZDI Write Data registers
{ZDI_WR_U, ZDI_WR_H, ZDI_WR_L}. See Table 99 on page 177. Refer to the eZ80®
CPU User Manual (UM0077) for information regarding the CPU registers.
Table 98. ZDI Write Data Registers(ZDI_WR_U = 13h, ZDI_WR_H = 14h,
and ZDI_WR_L = 15h in the ZDI Register Write Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: X = Undefined; W = Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_WR_L,
ZDI_WR_H,
or
ZDI_WR_L
00h–
FFh
These registers contain the data that is written during
execution of a Write operation defined by the
ZDI_RW_CTL register. The 24-bit data value is stored as
{ZDI_WR_U, ZDI_WR_H, ZDI_WR_L}. If less than 24 bits
of data are required to complete the required operation, the
data is taken from the LSBs.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
177
Table 99. ZDI Read/Write Control Register Functions(ZDI_RW_CTL = 16h in the ZDI
Register Write Only Address Space )
Hex
Value Command
Hex
Value Command
00 Read {MBASE, A, F}
ZDI_RD_U MBASE
ZDI_RD_H F
ZDI_RD_L A
80 Write AF
MBASE ZDI_WR_U
F ZDI_WR_H
A ZDI_WR_L
01 Read BC
ZDI_RD_U BCU
ZDI_RD_H B
ZDI_RD_L C
81 Write BC
BCU ZDI_WR_U
B ZDI_WR_H
C ZDI_WR_L
02 Read DE
ZDI_RD_U DEU
ZDI_RD_H D
ZDI_RD_L E
82 Write DE
DEU ZDI_WR_U
D ZDI_WR_H
E ZDI_WR_L
03 Read HL
ZDI_RD_U HLU
ZDI_RD_H H
ZDI_RD_L L
83 Write HL
HLU ZDI_WR_U
H ZDI_WR_H
L ZDI_WR_L
04 Read IX
ZDI_RD_U IXU
ZDI_RD_H IXH
ZDI_RD_L IXL
84 Write IX
IXU ZDI_WR_U
IXH ZDI_WR_H
IXL ZDI_WR_L
05 Read IY
ZDI_RD_U IYU
ZDI_RD_H IYH
ZDI_RD_L IYL
85 Write IY
IYU ZDI_WR_U
IYH ZDI_WR_H
IYL ZDI_WR_L
06 Read SP
In ADL mode, SP = SPL
In Z80® mode, SP = SPS
86 Write SP
In ADL mode, SP = SPL
In Z80 mode, SP = SPS
07 Read PC
ZDI_RD_U PC[23:16]
ZDI_RD_H PC[15:8]
ZDI_RD_L PC[7:0]
87 Write PC
PC[23:16] ZDI_WR_U
PC[15:8] ZDI_WR_H
PC[7:0] ZDI_WR_L
08 Set ADL
ADL 1
88 Reserved
09 Reset ADL
ADL 0
89 Reserved
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
178
0A Exchange CPU register sets
AF AF’
BC BC’
DE DE’
HL HL’
8A Reserved
0B Read memory from current PC
value, increment PC
8B Write memory from current PC
value, increment PC
The eZ80® CPU’s alternate register set (A’, F’, B’, C’, D’, E’, HL’) cannot be read directly.
The ZDI programmer must execute the exchange instruction (EXX) to gain access to the
alternate eZ80 CPU register set.
Table 99. ZDI Read/Write Control Register Functions(ZDI_RW_CTL = 16h in the ZDI
Register Write Only Address Space (Continued))
Hex
Value Command
Hex
Value Command
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
179
ZDI Bus Control Register
The ZDI Bus Control register controls bus requests during DEBUG mode. It enables or
disables bus acknowledge in ZDI DEBUG mode and allows ZDI to force assertion of the
BUSACK signal. This register should only be written during ZDI DEBUG mode (that is,
following a BREAK). See Table 100.
Table 100. ZDI Bus Control Register(ZDI_BUS_CTL = 17h in the ZDI Register Write
Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit Position Value Description
7
ZDI_BUSAK_EN
0 Bus requests by external peripherals using the BUSREQ
pin are ignored. The bus acknowledge signal, BUSACK,
is not asserted in response to any bus requests.
1 Bus requests by external peripherals using the BUSREQ
pin are accepted. A bus acknowledge occurs at the end
of the current ZDI operation. The bus acknowledge is
indicated by asserting the BUSACK pin in response to a
bus request.
6
ZDI_BUSAK
0 Deassert the bus acknowledge pin (BUSACK) to return
control of the address and data buses back to ZDI.
1 Assert the bus acknowledge pin (BUSACK) to pass
control of the address and data buses to an external
peripheral.
[5:0] 000000 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
180
Instruction Store 4:0 Registers
The ZDI Instruction Store registers are located in the ZDI Register Write Only address
space. They can be written with instruction data for direct execution by the CPU. When
the ZDI_IS0 register is written, the eZ80F92 device exits the ZDI BREAK state and exe-
cutes a single instruction. The Op Codes and operands for the instruction come from these
Instruction Store registers. The Instruction Store Register 0 is the first byte fetched, fol-
lowed by Instruction Store registers 1, 2, 3, and 4, as necessary. Only the bytes the proces-
sor requires to execute the instruction must be stored in these registers. Some CPU
instructions, when combined with the MEMORY mode suffixes (.SIS, .SIL, .LIS, or
.LIL), require 6 bytes to operate. These 6-byte instructions cannot be executed directly
using the ZDI Instruction Store registers. See Table 101.
The Instruction Store 0 register is located at a higher ZDI address than the other
Instruction Store registers. This feature allows the use of the ZDI auto-address
increment function to load and execute a multibyte instruction with a single data
stream from the ZDI master. Execution of the instruction commences with writing
the most recent byte to ZDI_IS0.
Table 101. Instruction Store 4:0 Registers(ZDI_IS4 = 21h, ZDI_IS3 = 22h, ZDI_IS2 =
23h, ZDI_IS1 = 24h, and ZDI_IS0 = 25h in the ZDI Register Write Only Address
Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: X = Undefined; W = Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_IS4,
ZDI_IS3,
ZDI_IS2,
ZDI_IS1, or
ZDI_IS0
00h–
FFh
These registers contain the Op Codes and operands for
immediate execution by the CPU following a Write to
ZDI_IS0. The ZDI_IS0 register contains the first Op Code
of the instruction. The remaining ZDI_ISx registers contain
any additional Op Codes or operand dates required for
execution of the required instruction.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
181
ZDI Write Memory Register
A Write to the ZDI Write Memory register causes the eZ80F92 device to write the 8-bit
data to the memory location specified by the current address in the program counter. In
Z80® MEMORY mode, this address is {MBASE, PC[15:0]}. In ADL MEMORY mode,
this address is PC[23:0]. The program counter, PC, increments after each data Write.
However, the ZDI register address does not increment automatically when this register is
accessed. As a result, the ZDI master is allowed to write any number of data bytes by writ-
ing to this address one time followed by any number of data bytes. See Table 102.
Table 102. ZDI Write Memory Register(ZDI_WR_MEM = 30h in the ZDI Register Write
Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: X = Undefined; W = Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_WR_MEM
00h–
FFh
The 8-bit data that is transferred to the ZDI slave following
a Write to this address is written to the address indicated
by the current program counter. The program counter is
incremented following each 8 bits of data. In Z80
MEMORY mode, ({MBASE, PC[15:0]}) 8 bits of
transferred data. In ADL MEMORY mode,
(PC[23:0]) 8 bits of transferred data.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
182
eZ80® Product ID Low and High Byte Registers
The eZ80 Product ID Low and High Byte registers combine to provide a means for an
external device to determine the particular eZ80Acclaim!® product being addressed. See
Table 103 and Table 104.
Table 103. eZ80 Product ID Low Byte Register(ZDI_ID_L = 00h in the ZDI Register
Read Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000111
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_ID_L
07h {ZDI_ID_H, ZDI_ID_L} = {00h, 07h} indicates the eZ80F92
product.
Table 104. eZ80 Product ID High Byte Register(ZDI_ID_H = 01h in the ZDI Register
Read Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_ID_H
00h {ZDI_ID_H, ZDI_ID_L} = {00h, 07h} indicates the eZ80F92
product.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
183
eZ80® Product ID Revision Register
The eZ80 Product ID Revision register identifies the current revision of the eZ80F92
product. See Table 105.
ZDI Status Register
The ZDI Status register provides current information about the eZ80F92 device.
See Table 106.
Table 105. eZ80 Product ID Revision Register(ZDI_ID_REV = 02h in the ZDI Register
Read Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: X = Undetermined; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_ID_REV
00h–
FFh
Identifies the current revision of the eZ80F92 product.
Table 106. ZDI Status Register(ZDI_STAT = 03h in the ZDI Register Read Only
Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
ZDI_ACTIVE
0 The CPU is not functioning in ZDI mode.
1 The CPU is currently functioning in ZDI mode.
6 0 Reserved.
5
HALT_SLP
0 The CPU is not currently in HALT or SLEEP mode.
1 The CPU is currently in HALT or SLEEP mode.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
184
ZDI Read Register Low, High, and Upper
The ZDI register Read Only address space offers Low, High, and Upper functions, which
contain the value read by a Read operation from the ZDI Read/Write Control register
(ZDI_RW_CTL). This data is valid only while in ZDI BREAK mode and only if the
instruction is read by a request from the ZDI Read/Write Control register. See Table 107.
4
ADL
0 The CPU is operating in Z80® MEMORY mode.
(ADL bit = 0)
1 The CPU is operating in ADL MEMORY mode.
(ADL bit = 1)
3
MADL
0 The CPU’s Mixed-Memory mode (MADL) bit is reset to 0.
1 The CPU’s Mixed-Memory mode (MADL) bit is set to 1.
2
IEF1
0 The CPU’s Interrupt Enable Flag 1 is reset to 0. Maskable
interrupts are disabled.
1 The CPU’s Interrupt Enable Flag 1 is set to 1. Maskable
interrupts are enabled.
[1:0] 00 Reserved.
Table 107. ZDI Read Register Low, High and Upper(ZDI_RD_L = 10h, ZDI_RD_H =
11h, and ZDI_RD_U = 12h in the ZDI Register Read Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_RD_L,
ZDI_RD_H, or
ZDI_RD_U
00h–
FFh
Values read from the memory location as requested by the
ZDI Read Control register during a ZDI Read operation.
The 24-bit value is supplied by {ZDI_RD_U, ZDI_RD_H,
ZDI_RD_L}.
Bit
Position Value Description
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
185
ZDI Bus Status Register
The ZDI Bus Status register monitors BUSACKs during ZDI DEBUG mode.
See Table 108.
ZDI Read Memory Register
When a Read is executed from the ZDI Read Memory register, the eZ80F92 device
fetches the data from the memory address currently pointed to by the program counter,
PC; the program counter is then incremented. In Z80® MEMORY mode, the memory
address is {MBASE, PC[15:0]}. In ADL MEMORY mode, the memory address is
PC[23:0]. Refer to the eZ80® CPU User Manual (UM0077) for more information regard-
ing Z80® and ADL MEMORY modes. The program counter, PC, increments after each
data Read. However, the ZDI register address does not increment automatically when this
register is accessed. As a result, the ZDI master can read any number of data bytes out of
memory through the ZDI Read Memory register. See Table 109 on page 186.
Table 108. ZDI Bus Control Register(ZDI_BUS_STAT = 17h in the ZDI Register Read
Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
ZDI_BUSACK_EN
0 Bus requests by external peripherals using the
BUSREQ pin are ignored. The bus acknowledge signal,
BUSACK, is not asserted.
1 Bus requests by external peripherals using the
BUSREQ pin are accepted. A bus acknowledge occurs
at the end of the current ZDI operation. The bus
acknowledge is indicated by asserting the BUSACK pin.
6
ZDI_BUS_STAT
0 Address and data buses are not relinquished to an
external peripheral. bus acknowledge is deasserted
(BUSACK pin is High).
1 Address and data buses are relinquished to an external
peripheral. bus acknowledge is asserted (BUSACK pin
is Low).
[5:0] 000000 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Zilog Debug Interface
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
186
Table 109. ZDI Read Memory Register(ZDI_RD_MEM = 20h in the ZDI Register Read
Only Address Space)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRRRR
Note: R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
ZDI_RD_MEM
00h–
FFh
8-bit data read from the memory address indicated by the
CPU’s program counter. In Z80® MEMORY mode, 8-bit
data is transferred out from address {MBASE, PC[15:0]}. In
ADL Memory mode, 8-bit data is transferred out from
address PC[23:0].
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Instrumentation
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
187
On-Chip Instrumentation
Introduction to On-Chip Instrumentation
On-Chip Instrumentation1 (OCI™) for the eZ80® CPU core enables powerful debugging
features. The OCI provides run control, memory and register visibility, complex break-
points, and trace history features.
The OCI employs all of the functions of the ZDI as described in the Zilog Debug Interface
section that starts on page 162. It also adds the following debug features:
Control via a 4-pin Joint Test Action Group (JTAG)-standard port that conforms to the
IEEE Standard 1149.1 (Test Access Port and Boundary Scan Architecture)2
Complex break point trigger functions
Break point enhancements, such as the ability to:
Define two break point addresses that form a range
Break on masked data values
Start or stop trace
Assert a trigger output signal
Trace history buffer
Software break point instruction
There are four sections to the OCI:
1. JTAG interface
2. ZDI debug control
3. Trace buffer memory
4. Complex triggers
OCI Activation
OCI features clock initialization circuitry so that external debug hardware can be detected
during power-up. The external debugger must drive the OCI clock pin (TCK) Low at least
two system clock cycles prior to the end of the RESET to activate the OCI block. If TCK
is High at the end of the RESET, the OCI block shuts down so that it does not draw power
in normal product operation. When the OCI is shut down, ZDI is enabled directly and can
1. On-Chip Instrumentation and OCI are trademarks of First Silicon Solutions, Inc.
2. The eZ80F92 does not contain the boundary scan register required for 1149.1 compliance.
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Instrumentation
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
188
be accessed via the clock (TCK) and data (TDI) pins. See the Zilog Debug Interface sec-
tion on page 162 for more information about ZDI.
OCI Interface
There are five dedicated pins on the eZ80F92 device for the OCI interface.
Four pins—TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO—are required for IEEE Standard 1149.1-compli-
ant JTAG ports. The TRIGOUT pin provides additional testability features. These five
OCI pins are listed in Table 110.
Table 110. OCI Pins
Symbol Name Type Description
TCK Clock Input Asynchronous to the primary CPU system clock. The
TCK period must be at least twice the system clock
period. During RESET, this pin is sampled to select
either OCI or ZDI DEBUG modes. If Low during
RESET, the OCI is enabled. If High during RESET,
the OCI is powered down and ZDI DEBUG mode is
enabled. When ZDI DEBUG mode is active, this pin is
the ZDI clock. On-chip pull-up ensures a default value
of 1 (High).
TMS Test Mode Select Input This serial test mode input controls JTAG mode
selection. On-chip pull-up ensures a default value of
1 (High). The TMS signal is sampled on the rising
edge of the TCK signal.
TDI Data In Input
(OCI enabled)
Serial test data input. On-chip pull-up ensures a
default value of 1 (High). This pin is input-only when
the OCI is enabled. The input data is sampled on the
rising edge of the TCK signal.
I/O
(OCI disabled)
When the OCI is disabled, this pin functions as the
ZDA (ZDI Data) I/O pin.
TDO Data Out Output The output data changes on the falling edge of the
TCK signal.
TRIGOUT Trigger Output Output Generates an active High trigger pulse when valid
OCI trigger events occur. Output is tristate when no
data is driven out.
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Instrumentation
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
189
OCI Information Requests
For additional information regarding On-Chip Instrumentation, or to order OCI debug
tools, contact:
First Silicon Solutions, Inc.
5440 SW Westgate Drive, Suite 240
Portland, OR 97221
Phone: (503) 292-6730
Fax: (503) 292-5840
www.fs2.com
PS015313-0508 Random Access Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
190
Random Access Memory
The eZ80F92 features 8 KB (8192 bytes) single-port data Random Access Memory
(RAM) for general-purpose use. The eZ80F93 features 4 KB (4096 bytes) general-pur-
pose RAM. RAM can be enabled or disabled, and it can be relocated to the top of any
64 KB page in memory. Data is passed to and from RAM via the 8-bit data bus. On-chip
RAM operates with zero WAIT states.
For the eZ80F92, RAM occupies memory addresses in the range {RAM_ADDR_U[7:0],
E000h} to {RAM_ADDR_U[7:0], FFFFh}. Following a RESET, RAM is enabled with
RAM_ADDR_U set to FFh. Figure 46 displays a memory map of on-chip RAM. In this
example, the RAM Address Upper Byte register, RAM_ADDR_U, is set to 7Ah.
Figure 46 is not drawn to scale, as RAM occupies only a very small fraction of the avail-
able 16 MB address space.
For the eZ80F93 device, RAM occupies memory addresses in the range
{RAM_ADDR_U[7:0], F000h} to {RAM_ADDR_U[7:0], F000h}. Following a RESET,
RAM is enabled with RAM_ADDR_U set to FFh. Figure 47 on page 191 displays a mem-
ory map of on-chip RAM. In this example, the RAM Address Upper Byte register,
RAM_ADDR_U, is set to 7Ah. Figure 46 is not drawn to scale, as RAM occupies only a
very small fraction of the available 16 MB address space.
Figure 46.eZ80F92 On-Chip RAM Memory Addressing Example
Memory
Location
FFFFFFh
7AFFFFh
7AE000h
000000h
RAM_ADDR_U
7Ah
8KB
General Purpose
RAM
PS015313-0508 Random Access Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
191
When enabled, on-chip RAM assumes priority over on-chip Flash Memory and any Mem-
ory Chip Selects that can also be enabled in the same address space. If an address is gener-
ated in a range that is covered by both the RAM address space and a particular Memory
Chip Select address space, the Memory Chip Select is not activated. On-chip RAM is not
accessible by external devices during Bus Acknowledge cycles.
Figure 47.eZ80F93 On-Chip RAM Memory Addressing Example
Memory
Location
FFFFFFh
7AFFFFh
7AF000h
000000h
RAM_ADDR_U
7Ah
4KB
General Purpose
RAM
PS015313-0508 Random Access Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
192
RAM Control Registers
RAM Control Register
The internal data RAM can be disabled by clearing the RAM_EN bit. The default, upon
RESET, is for RAM to be enabled.
RAM Address Upper Byte Register
The RAM_ADDR_U register defines the upper byte of the address for the on-chip RAM.
If enabled, RAM addresses assume priority over all Chip Selects. The external Chip Select
signals are not asserted if the corresponding RAM address is enabled.
Table 111. RAM Control Register; (RAM_CTL = 00B4h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 10000000
CPU Access R/WRRRRRRR
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
7
RAM_EN
0 On-chip general-purpose RAM is disabled
1 On-chip general-purpose RAM is enabled
[6:0] 0000000 Reserved
Table 112. RAM Address Upper Byte Register; (RAM_ADDR_U = 00B5h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 11111111
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
RAM_ADDR_U
00h–
FFh
This byte defines the upper byte of the RAM address. On-chip
RAM is prioritized over all Memory Chip Selects. If the enabled
RAM and Chip Select addresses overlap, the external Chip
Select is not asserted.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
193
Flash Memory
Flash Memory Arrangement in eZ80F92
The eZ80F92 device features 128 KB (131,072 bytes) of non-volatile Flash memory with
Read/Write/Erase capability. The main Flash memory array is arranged in 128 pages with
eight rows per page and 128 bytes per row. In addition to main Flash memory, there are
two separately-addressable rows which comprise a 256-byte Information Page.
The 128 KB of main storage can be protected in eight 16 KB blocks. Protecting a 16 KB
block prevents Write or Erase operations. Figure 48 displays the Flash memory
arrangement.
Figure 48.eZ80F92 Flash Memory Arrangement
8
16 KB blocks
16
1 KB pages
per block
8
128-byte rows
per page
128
single-byte columns
per row
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
F
D
B
9
7
5
3
1
E
C
A
8
6
4
2
0127 126 1 0
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
194
Flash Memory Arrangement in the eZ80F93
The eZ80F92 features 64 KB (65,536 bytes) of non-volatile Flash memory with Read/
Write/Erase capability. The main Flash memory array is arranged in 64 pages with eight
rows per page and 128 bytes per row. In addition to the main Flash memory there are two
separately addressable rows which comprise a 256 byte Information Page.
The 64 KB of main storage can be protected in four 16 KB blocks. Protecting a 16 KB
block prevents Write or Erase operations. Figure 49 displays the Flash memory
arrangement.
Flash Memory Overview
Flash can be programmed a single byte at a time or in bursts of up to 128 bytes (full row).
Write operations may be accomplished using either memory or I/O instructions. Reading
Flash memory can be accomplished through internal memory access or through the ZDI
and OCI interfaces. The Flash memory controller contains a frequency divider, Flash
register interface, address generator, and the Flash control state machine.
Figure 49.eZ80F93 Flash Memory Arrangement
4
16-KB blocks
16
1-KB pages
per block
8
128-byte rows
per page
128
single-byte columns
per row
3
2
1
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
F
D
B
9
7
5
3
1
E
C
A
8
6
4
2
0
127 126 1 0
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
195
Figure 50 displays a simplified block diagram of the Flash controller.
Programming Flash Memory
Flash memory is programmed using standard I/O or memory Write operations which the
Flash memory controller automatically translates to the detailed timing and protocol
required for Flash memory. The more efficient multibyte (row) programming mode is only
available through I/O Writes.
To ensure data integrity and device reliability, following two main restrictions
exist when programming Flash memory:
1. The cumulative programming time subsequent to the most recent Erase cannot
exceed 16 ms for any given row.
2. The same byte cannot be programmed more than twice subsequent to the most
recent Erase.
Single-Byte I/O Write Operations
A single-byte I/O Write operation uses I/O registers for setting the column, page, and row
address to be programmed. The FLASH_DATA register stores the data to be written.
While the CPU executes an output to I/O instruction to load the data into the
FLASH_DATA register, the Flash controller asserts the internal WAIT signal to stall the
CPU until the Flash Write operation is complete. A single-byte Write takes between 66 µs
and 85 µs to complete. Programming an entire row (128 bytes) using single-byte Writes
Figure 50. Flash Memory Block Diagram
System Clock
eZ80 Core
Interface
WAIT
IRQ
ADDR
D
CPUD
FADDR
OUT
17
817
8
8
8
9
7
OUT
FD
IN
FD
OUT
FCNTL
MAIN_INFO
Clock Divider
8-bit downcounter
Flash
Control
Registers
Flash
State
Machine
ADDR GEN
Flash
256 KB
+
512 bytes
Caution:
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
196
therefore takes at most 10.8 ms. This measure of time does not include the time required
by the CPU to transfer data to the registers, which is a function of the instructions
employed and the system clock frequency.
A sequence that performs a single-byte I/O Write is detailed below. As the Write is self-
timed, the following sequence can be repeated back-to-back without any necessity for
polling or interrupts:
1. Write the FLASH_PAGE, FLASH_ROW, and FLASH_COL registers with the
address of the byte to be written.
2. Write the data value to the FLASH_DATA register.
Multibyte I/O Write (Row Programming)
Multibyte I/O Write operations use the same I/O registers as single-byte Writes, but use an
internal address incrementer for subsequent Writes. Multibyte Writes allow programming
of a full row and are enabled by setting the ROW_PGM bit of the Flash Program Control
Register. For multibyte Writes, the CPU sets the address registers, enables row
programming, and then executes a output to I/O instruction with repeat to load the block
of data into the FLASH_DATA register. For each individual byte written to the
FLASH_DATA register during the block move, the Flash controller asserts the internal
WAIT signal to stall the CPU until the current byte has been programmed.
During row programming, the Flash controller continuously asserts Flash’s high voltage
until all bytes are programmed (column address < 127). As a consequence, the row can be
programmed faster than if the high voltage is toggled for each byte. The per-byte
programming time during row programming is between 41 µs and 52 µs. As such,
programming the 128 bytes of a row in this mode takes at most 6.7 ms, leaving 9.3 ms for
the overhead of CPU instructions used to fetch the 128 bytes.
A sequence that performs a multibyte I/O Write is shown in the following sequence:
1. Check the FLASH_IRQ register to be sure any previous Row Program has completed.
2. Write the FLASH_PAGE, FLASH_ROW, and FLASH_COL registers with the
address of the first byte to be written.
3. Set the ROW_PGM bit in the FLASH_PGCTL register to enable row programming
mode.
4. Write the next data value to the FLASH_DATA register.
5. If the end of the row has not been reached, return to Step 4.
During row programming, software must monitor the row time-out error bit either by
enabling this interrupt or through polling. If a row time-out occurs, the Flash controller
aborts the row programming operation and software must then assure that no further
writes are performed to the row without it first being erased. It is suggested that row
programming only be used one time per row and not in combination with single-byte
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
197
Writes to the same row without first erasing it. Otherwise, the burden is on software to
ensure that the 16 ms maximum cumulative programming time between erasures is not
exceeded for a row.
Memory Write
A single-byte memory Write operation uses the address bus and data bus of the eZ80F92
device for programming a single data byte to Flash. While the CPU executes a LOAD
instruction, the Flash controller asserts the internal WAIT signal to stall the CPU until the
Write is complete. A single-byte Write takes between 66 µs and 85 µs to complete.
Programming an entire row using memory Writes therefore takes at most 10.8 ms. This
time does not include time required by the CPU to transfer data to the registers which is a
function of the instructions employed and the system clock frequency.
The memory Write function does not support multibyte row programming. As memory
Writes are self-timed, they can be performed back-to-back without any necessity for
polling or interrupts.
Erasing Flash Memory
Erasing bytes in Flash memory returns them to a value of FFh. Both the Mass and Page
Erase operations are self-timed by the Flash controller, leaving the CPU free to execute
other operations in parallel. The DONE status bit in the Flash Interrupt Control Register
can be polled by software or used as an interrupt source to signal completion of an Erase
operation. If the CPU attempts to access Flash while an Erase is in progress, the Flash
controller forces a WAIT state until the Erase operation completes.
Mass Erase
Performing a Mass Erase operation on Flash memory erases all bits in Flash, including the
Information Page. This self-timed operation takes approximately 200 ms to complete.
Page Erase
The smallest erasable unit in Flash memory is a page. Which of the main Flash memory
pages or the single Information Page is to be erased is determined by the setting of the
FLASH_PAGE register. This self-timed operation takes approximately 10 ms to complete.
Flash Control Registers
The Flash register interface contains all the registers used in Flash memory.
The definitions as follows describe each register.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
198
Flash Key Register
Writing the two-byte sequence B6h, 49h in immediate succession to this register unlocks
the Flash Divider and Flash Write/Erase Protection registers. If these values are not
written by consecutive CPU I/O writes (I/O reads and memory Read/Writes produce no
effect), the Flash Divider and Flash Write/Erase Protection registers remain locked to
prevent accidental overwrites of these critical Flash control register settings. Writing a
value to either the Flash Frequency Divider register or the Flash Write/Erase Protection
register automatically relocks both of the registers again.
Flash Data Register
The Flash Data register stores the data values to be programmed to Flash memory through
I/O Write operations. This register is used for all I/O Write access to Flash, both individual
byte Writes and multibyte row programming.
For single-byte I/O Write operations, a single-byte Write to this I/O register programs the
data value into the single-byte location pointed to by the page, row, and column registers.
For multibyte I/O Write operations, the Flash controller autoincrements the column
address for each byte placed into this register. A maximum of 128 bytes of data can be
programmed into Flash during a multibyte I/O Write operation. The ROW_PGM bit in the
Flash Program Control register must be set to 1 prior to beginning a multibyte I/O Write
operation.
This register does not return data from Flash memory. If read, this register returns the most
recent data value written to the register.
Table 113. Flash Key Register; (FLASH_KEY = 00F5h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access WWWWWWWW
Note: W = Write Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
FLASH_KEY
B6h,
49h
Sequential Write operations of the values {B6h, 49h} to this
register unlock the Flash Frequency Divider and Flash Write/
Erase Protection registers.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
199
Flash Address Upper Byte Register
The FLASH_ADDR_U register defines the upper 7 bits of the address for Flash memory.
Changing the value of FLASH_ADDR_U allows the on-chip 128 KB/64 KB Flash
memory to be mapped to any location within the 16 MB linear address space of the
eZ80F92 device. If the on-chip Flash memory is enabled, Flash address assumes priority
over any external Chip Selects. The external Chip Select signals are not asserted if the
corresponding Flash address is enabled. The internal Flash memory does not hold priority
over internal SRAM.
Table 114. Flash Data Register; (FLASH_DATA = 00F6h)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXXXXX
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
FLASH_DATA
00h–
FFh
Data value to be written to Flash during an I/O Write operation.
Table 115. Flash Address Upper Byte Register; (FLASH_ADDR_U = 00F7h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R
Note: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:1]
FLASH_ADDR_U
00h–
FEh
These bits define the upper byte of the Flash address. When
on-chip Flash is enabled, the Flash address space begins at
address {FLASH_ADDR_U, 0b, 0000h}. On-chip Flash is
prioritized over all external Chip Selects.
0 0 Reserved (enforces alignment on a 128 KB boundary).
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
200
Flash Control Register
The Flash Control register enables or disables memory access to Flash. I/O access to the
Flash control registers and I/O programming to Flash memory are still possible while
Flash memory space access is disabled.
The minimum access time of the internal Flash is 60 ns. The Flash control register must be
configured to provide the appropriate number of WAIT states based on the system clock
frequency of the eZ80F92 device. Default on RESET is for 4 WAIT states to be inserted
for Flash memory access.
Table 116. Flash Control Register; (FLASH_CTRL= 00F8h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 10001000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R R/W R R R
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:5]
FLASH_WAIT
000 0 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
001 1 Wait state is inserted when Flash is active.
010 2 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
011 3 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
100 4 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
101 5 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
110 6 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
111 7 Wait states are inserted when Flash is active.
[4] 0 Reserved.
[3]
FLASH_EN
0 Flash Memory Access is disabled.
1 Flash Memory Access is enabled.
[2:0] 000 Reserved.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
201
Flash Frequency Divider Register
The 8-bit frequency divider allows programming to Flash over a range of system clock
frequencies. Flash can programmed with system clock frequencies ranging from 154 kHz
through 50 MHz. The Flash controller requires an input clock with a period that falls
within the range of 5.1 µs to 6.5 µs. The period of the Flash controller clock is set through
the Flash Frequency Divider register. Writes to this register are allowed only after it is
unlocked via the FLASH_KEY register. The Frequency Divider register value required
versus system clock frequency is listed in Table 117. System clock frequencies outside of
the ranges shown in this table are not supported.
Table 117. Flash Frequency Divider Values
System Clock Frequency Flash Frequency Divider Value
154–196 kHz 1
308–392 kHz 2
462–588 kHz 3
616 kHz–50 MHz CEILING [System Clock Frequency
(MHz) x 5.1 (μs)]*
Note: *The CEILING function rounds fractional values up to the next whole
number, for example, CEILING(3.01) is 4.
Table 118. Flash Frequency Divider Register; (FLASH_FDIV = 00F9h)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000001
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only. *Key sequence required to enable Writes
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:0]
FLASH_FDIV
01h–
FFh
Divider value for generating the required 5.1–6.5 μs Flash
controller clock period.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
202
Flash Write/Erase Protection Register
The Flash Write/Erase Protection register prevents accidental Write or Erase operations.
The protection is limited to a resolution of eight 16 KB blocks. Setting a bit to 1 protects
that 16 KB block of Flash memory from accidental writing or erasure. Default on RESET
is for all Flash memory blocks to be protected.
A protect bit is not available for the Information Page. Mass Erase is prevented if
any of the bits in this register are set to 1.
Writes to this register are allowed only after it is unlocked via the FLASH_KEY register.
Any attempted Writes to this register while locked sets it to FFh, thereby protecting all
blocks.
Table 119. Flash Write/Erase Protection Register; (FLASH_PROT= 00FAh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 11111111
CPU Access R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W* R/W*
Note: R/W = Read/Write if unlocked, R = Read Only if locked. *Key sequence required to unlock.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7]*
BLK7_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x1C000 to 0x1FFFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x1C000 to 0x1FFFF
[6]*
BLK6_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x18000 to 0x1BFFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x18000 to 0x1BFFF
[5]*
BLK5_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x14000 to 0x17FFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x14000 to 0x17FFF
[4]*
BLK4_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x10000 to 0x13FFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x10000 to 0x13FFF
[3]
BLK3_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x0C000 to 0x0FFFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x0C000 to 0x0FFFF
[2]
BLK2_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x08000 to 0x0BFFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x08000 to 0x0BFFF
[1]
BLK1_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x04000 to 0x07FFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x04000 to 0x07FFF
Note: *Unused in the eZ80F93 device.
Note:
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
203
Flash Interrupt Control Register
There are two sources of interrupts from the Flash controller. These two sources are:
1. Page Erase, Mass Erase, or Row Program completed successfully.
2. An error condition occurred.
Either or both of the two interrupt sources can be enabled by setting the appropriate bits in
the Flash Interrupt Control register.
The Flash Interrupt Control register contains four status bits to indicate the following error
conditions:
Row Program Time-out
.
This bit signals a time-out during Row Programming. If the
current Row Program operation does not complete within 2,432 Flash controller
clocks (12.4–15.8 ms depending on the Flash controller clock period), the Flash con-
troller terminates the Row Program operation by clearing Bit 2 of the Flash Program
Control register and setting the RP_TMO error bit to 1.
Write Violation
.
This bit indicates an attempt to write to a protected block of Flash
memory (the Write is not performed).
Page Erase Violation
.
This bit indicates an attempt to erase a protected block of Flash
memory (the requested page is not erased).
Mass Erase Violation
.
This bit indicates an attempt to Mass Erase when there are one
more protected blocks in Flash memory (the Mass Erase is not performed).
If the Error Condition Interrupt is enabled, any of the four error conditions result in an
interrupt request being sent to the eZ80F92 device’s Interrupt Controller. Reading the
Flash Interrupt Control register clears all error condition flags and the done flag.
[0]
BLK0_PROT
0 Disable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x00000 to 0x03FFF
1 Enable Write/Erase Protect on block 0x00000 to 0x03FFF
Bit
Position Value Description
Note: *Unused in the eZ80F93 device.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
204
Flash Page Select Register
The msb of this register is used to select whether all Flash access and Page Erases are
directed to the 256-byte Information Page or to the main Flash memory array. When the
main array is selected, the lower 7-bits (6 bits in the eZ80F93 device) are used to select
one of the 128 pages for Page Erase or I/O Write operations.
To perform a Page Erase, the software must set the proper page value prior to setting the
Page Erase bit in the Flash control register.
Table 120. Flash Interrupt Control Register; (FLASH_IRQ= 00FBh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/WR/WRRRRRR
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only. Read resets bits [5] and [3:0].
Bit
Position Value Description
[7]
DONE_IEN
0 Flash Erase/Row Program Done Interrupt is disabled
1 Flash Erase/Row Program Done Interrupt is enabled
[6]
ERR_IEN
0 Error Condition Interrupt is disabled
1 Error Condition Interrupt is enabled
[5]
DONE
0 Erase/Row Program Done Flag is not set
1 Erase/Row Program Done Flag is set
[4] 0 Reserved
[3]
WR_VIO
0 The Write Violation Error Flag is not set
1 The Write Violation Error Flag is set
[2]
RP_TMO
0 The Row Program Time-out Error Flag is not set
1 The Row Program Time-out Error Flag is set
[1]
PG_VIO
0 The Page Erase Violation Error Flag is not set
1 The Page Erase Violation Error Flag is set
[0]
MASS_VIO
0 The Mass Erase Violation Error Flag is not set
1 The Mass Erase Violation Error Flag is set
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
205
Flash Row Select Register
The Flash Row Select register is a 3-bit value used to define one of the eight rows of Flash
memory on a single page. This register is used for all I/O Write access to Flash.
Table 121. Flash Page Select Register; (FLASH_PAGE= 00FCh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7]
INFO_EN
0 Flash accesses main Flash memory.
1 Flash accesses the Information Page. Page Erase and Mass
Erase operations affect the Information Page only.
[6:0]*
FLASH_PAGE
00h–
7Fh
Page address of Flash memory to be used during the Page
Erase or I/O Write of the main Flash memory. When INFO_EN
is set to 1, this field is ignored.
Note: *Only 6 bits are available in the eZ80F93 device.
Table 122. Flash Row Select Register; (FLASH_ROW= 00FDh)
Bit 76543210
Reset XXXXX000
CPU Access RRRRRR/WR/WR/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:3] 00h Reserved.
[2:0]
FLASH_ROW
0h–7h Row address of Flash memory to be used during an I/O Write
to Flash memory. When INFO_EN is 1 in the Flash Page
Select Register, values for this field are restricted to 0h–1h,
which selects between the two rows in the Information Page.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
206
Flash Column Select Register
The column select register is a 7-bit value used to define one of the 128 bytes of Flash
memory on a single row. This register is used for all I/O Write access to Flash.
This register must be set to the proper column location within a row to program using a
single-byte Write operation. In multibyte row programming, this register is used as the
start address for the hardware incrementer.
Flash Program Control Register
The Flash program control register is used to perform the functions of Mass Erase, Page
Erase, and Row Program.
Mass Erase and Page Erase are self-clearing functions. Mass Erase requires approximately
200 ms to erase the full 128 KB/64 KB of main Flash and the 256 byte Information Page.
Page Erase requires approximately 10 ms to erase a 1 KB page. Upon completion of either
a Mass Erase or Page Erase, the value of the corresponding bit is reset to 0.
While Flash is being erased, any Read or Write access of Flash memory force the CPU
into a WAIT state until the Erase operation is complete and Flash can be accessed. Reads
and Writes to areas other than Flash can proceed as usual while an Erase operation is
underway.
During row programming, any Reads of Flash memory force a WAIT condition until the
row programming operation completes or times out.
Table 123. Flash Column Select Register; (FLASH_COL= 00FEh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7] 0 Reserved
[6:0]
FLASH_COL
00h–
7Fh
Column address within a row of Flash memory to be used
during an I/O Write of Flash memory.
PS015313-0508 Flash Memory
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
207
Table 124. Flash Program Control Register; (FLASH_PGCTL= 00FFh)
Bit 76543210
Reset 00000000
CPU Access RRRRRR/WR/WR/W
Note: R/W = Read/Write, R = Read Only.
Bit
Position Value Description
[7:3] 0000 Reserved.
[2]
ROW_PGM
0 Row Program Disable or Row Program completed.
1 Row Program Enable. This bit automatically resets to 0 when
the row address reaches 128 or when the Row Program
operation times out.
[1]
PG_ERASE
0 Page Erase Disable (Page Erase completed).
1 Page Erase Enable. This bit automatically resets to 0 when the
Page Erase operation is complete.
[0]
MASS_ERASE
0 Mass Erase Disable (Mass Erase completed).
1 Mass Erase Enable. This bit automatically resets to 0 when the
Mass Erase operation is complete.
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
208
eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
Table 125 on page 208 through Table 134 on page 208 indicate the eZ80 CPU instructions
available for use with the eZ80F92 device. The instructions are grouped by class. More
detailed information is available in the eZ80® CPU User Manual (UM0077).
Table 125. Arithmetic Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
ADC Add with Carry
ADD Add without Carry
CP Compare with Accumulator
DAA Decimal Adjust Accumulator
DEC Decrement
INC Increment
MLT Multiply
NEG Negate Accumulator
SBC Subtract with Carry
SUB Subtract without Carry
Table 126. Bit Manipulation Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
BIT Bit Test
RES Reset Bit
SET Set Bit
Table 127. Block Transfer and Compare Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
CPD (CPDR) Compare and Decrement (with Repeat)
CPI (CPIR) Compare and Increment (with Repeat)
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
209
LDD (LDDR) Load and Decrement (with Repeat)
LDI (LDIR) Load and Increment (with Repeat)
Table 128. Exchange Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
EX Exchange registers
EXX Exchange CPU Multibyte register banks
Table 129. Input/Output Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
IN Input from I/O
IN0 Input from I/O on Page 0
IND (INDR) Input from I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
INDRX Input from I/O and Decrement Memory Address
with Stationary I/O Address
IND2 (IND2R) Input from I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
INDM (INDMR) Input from I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
INI (INIR) Input from I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
INIRX Input from I/O and Increment Memory Address
with Stationary I/O Address
INI2 (INI2R) Input from I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
INIM (INIMR) Input from I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
OTDM (OTDMR) Output to I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
OTDRX Output to I/O and Decrement Memory Address
with Stationary I/O Address
OTIM (OTIMR) Output to I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
OTIRX Output to I/O and Increment Memory Address
with Stationary I/O Address
OUT Output to I/O
Table 127. Block Transfer and Compare Instructions (Continued)
Mnemonic Instruction
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
210
OUT0 Output to I/O on Page 0
OUTD (OTDR) Output to I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
OUTD2 (OTD2R) Output to I/O and Decrement (with Repeat)
OUTI (OTIR) Output to I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
OUTI2 (OTI2R) Output to I/O and Increment (with Repeat)
TSTIO Test I/O
Table 130. Load Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
LD Load
LEA Load Effective Address
PEA Push Effective Address
POP Pop
PUSH Push
Table 131. Logical Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
AND Logical AND
CPL Complement Accumulator
OR Logical OR
TST Test Accumulator
XOR Logical Exclusive OR
Table 132. Processor Control Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
CCF Complement Carry Flag
DI Disable Interrupts
Table 129. Input/Output Instructions (Continued)
Mnemonic Instruction
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
211
EI Enable Interrupts
HALT Halt
IM Interrupt Mode
NOP No Operation
RSMIX Reset Mixed-Memory Mode Flag
SCF Set Carry Flag
SLP Sleep
STMIX Set Mixed-Memory Mode Flag
Table 133. Program Control Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
CALL Call Subroutine
CALL cc Conditional Call Subroutine
DJNZ Decrement and Jump if Nonzero
JP Jump
JP cc Conditional Jump
JR Jump Relative
JR cc Conditional Jump Relative
RET Return
RET cc Conditional Return
RETI Return from Interrupt
RETN Return from Nonmaskable interrupt
RST Restart
Table 134. Rotate and Shift Instructions
Mnemonic Instruction
RL Rotate Left
RLA Rotate Left–Accumulator
Table 132. Processor Control Instructions (Continued)
Mnemonic Instruction
PS015313-0508 eZ80® CPU Instruction Set
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
212
RLC Rotate Left Circular
RLCA Rotate Left Circular–Accumulator
RLD Rotate Left Decimal
RR Rotate Right
RRA Rotate Right–Accumulator
RRC Rotate Right Circular
RRCA Rotate Right Circular–Accumulator
RRD Rotate Right Decimal
SLA Shift Left Arithmetic
SRA Shift Right Arithmetic
SRL Shift Right Logical
Table 134. Rotate and Shift Instructions (Continued)
Mnemonic Instruction
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
213
Op-Code Map
Table 135 through Table 141 on page 219 list the hex values for each of the eZ80® CPU
instructions.
Table 135. Op Code Map—First Op Code
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0NOP
LD
BC,
Mmn
LD
(BC),A
INC
BC
INC
B
DEC
B
LD
B,n RLCA EX
AF,AF’
ADD
HL,BC
LD
A,(BC)
DEC
BC
INC
C
DEC
C
LD
C,n RRCA
1DJNZ
d
LD
DE,
Mmn
LD
(DE),A
INC
DE
INC
D
DEC
D
LD
D,n RLA JR
d
ADD
HL,DE
LD
A,(DE)
DEC
DE
INC
E
DEC
E
LD
E,n RRA
2JR
NZ,d
LD
HL,
Mmn
LD
(Mmn),
HL
INC
HL
INC
H
DEC
H
LD
H,n DAA JR
Z,d
ADD
HL,HL
LD
HL,
(Mmn)
DEC
HL
INC
L
DEC
L
LD
L,n CPL
3JR
NC,d
LD
SP,
Mmn
LD
(Mmn),
A
INC
SP
INC
(HL)
DEC
(HL)
LD
(HL),n SCF JR
CF,d
ADD
HL,SP
LD
A,
(Mmn)
DEC
SP
INC
A
DEC
A
LD
A,n CCF
4.SIS
suffix
LD
B,C
LD
B,D
LD
B,E
LD
B,H
LD
B,L
LD
B,(HL)
LD
B,A
LD
C,B
.LIS
suffix
LD
C,D
LD
C,E
LD
C,H
LD
C,L
LD
C,(HL)
LD
C,A
5LD
D,B
LD
D,C
.SIL
suffix
LD
D,E
LD
D,H
LD
D,L
LD
D,(HL)
LD
D,A
LD
E,B
LD
E,C
LD
E,D
.LIL
suffix
LD
E,H
LD
E,L
LD
E,(HL)
LD
E,A
6LD
H,B
LD
H,C
LD
H,D
LD
H,E
LD
H,H
LD
H,L
LD
H,(HL)
LD
H,A
LD
L,B
LD
L,C
LD
L,D
LD
L,E
LD
L,H
LD
L,L
LD
L,(HL)
LD
L,A
7LD
(HL),B
LD
(HL),C
LD
(HL),D
LD
(HL),E
LD
(HL),H
LD
(HL),L HALT LD
(HL),A
LD
A,B
LD
A,C
LD
A,D
LD
A,E
LD
A,H
LD
A,L
LD
A,(HL)
LD
A,A
8ADD
A,B
ADD
A,C
ADD
A,D
ADD
A,E
ADD
A,H
ADD
A,L
ADD
A,(HL)
ADD
A,A
ADC
A,B
ADC
A,C
ADC
A,D
ADC
A,E
ADC
A,H
ADC
A,L
ADC
A,(HL)
ADC
A,A
9SUB
A,B
SUB
A,C
SUB
A,D
SUB
A,E
SUB
A,H
SUB
A,L
SUB
A,(HL)
SUB
A,A
SBC
A,B
SBC
A,C
SBC
A,D
SBC
A,E
SBC
A,H
SBC
A,L
SBC
A,(HL)
SBC
A,A
AAND
A,B
AND
A,C
AND
A,D
AND
A,E
AND
A,H
AND
A,L
AND
A,(HL)
AND
A,A
XOR
A,B
XOR
A,C
XOR
A,D
XOR
A,E
XOR
A,H
XOR
A,L
XOR
A,(HL)
XOR
A,A
BOR
A,B
OR
A,C
OR
A,D
OR
A,E
OR
A,H
OR
A,L
OR
A,(HL)
OR
A,A
CP
A,B
CP
A,C
CP
A,D
CP
A,E
CP
A,H
CP
A,L
CP
A,(HL)
CP
A,A
CRET
NZ
POP
BC
JP
NZ,
Mmn
JP
Mmn
CALL
NZ,
Mmn
PUSH
BC
ADD
A,n
RST
00h
RET
ZRET
JP
Z,
Mmn
Table
136
CALL
Z,
Mmn
CALL
Mmn
ADC
A,n
RST
08h
DRET
NC
POP
DE
JP
NC,
Mmn
OUT
(n),A
CALL
NC,
Mmn
PUSH
DE
SUB
A,n
RST
10h
RET
CF EXX
JP
CF,
Mmn
IN
A,(n)
CALL
CF,
Mmn
Table
137
SBC
A,n
RST
18h
ERET
PO
POP
HL
JP
PO,
Mmn
EX
(SP),HL
CALL
PO,
Mmn
PUSH
HL
AND
A,n
RST
20h
RET
PE
JP
(HL)
JP
PE,
Mmn
EX
DE,HL
CALL
PE,
Mmn
Table
138
XOR
A,n
RST
28h
FRET
P
POP
AF
JP
P,
Mmn
DI
CALL
P,
Mmn
PUSH
AF
OR
A,n
RST
30h
RET
M
LD
SP,HL
JP
M,
Mmn
EI
CALL
M,
Mmn
Table
139
CP
A,n
RST
38h
Notes: n = 8-bit data; Mmn = 16- or 24-bit addr or data; d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
AND
4
A
Lower Op Code Nibble
Mnemonic
Second Operand
Upper
Op Code
Nibble
First Operand
A,H
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
214
Table 136. Op Code Map—Second Op Code after 0CBh
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0RLC
B
RLC
C
RLC
D
RLC
E
RLC
H
RLC
L
RLC
(HL)
RLC
A
RRC
B
RRC
C
RRC
D
RRC
E
RRC
H
RRC
L
RRC
(HL)
RRC
A
1RL
B
RL
C
RL
D
RL
E
RL
H
RL
L
RL
(HL)
RL
A
RR
B
RR
C
RR
D
RR
E
RR
H
RR
L
RR
(HL)
RR
A
2SLA
B
SLA
C
SLA
D
SLA
E
SLA
H
SLA
L
SLA
(HL)
SLA
A
SRA
B
SRA
C
SRA
D
SRA
E
SRA
H
SRA
L
SRA
(HL)
SRA
A
3SRL
B
SRL
C
SRL
D
SRL
E
SRL
H
SRL
L
SRL
(HL)
SRL
A
4BIT
0,B
BIT
0,C
BIT
0,D
BIT
0,E
BIT
0,H
BIT
0,L
BIT
0,(HL)
BIT
0,A
BIT
1,B
BIT
1,C
BIT
1,D
BIT
1,E
BIT
1,H
BIT
1,L
BIT
1,(HL)
BIT
1,A
5BIT
2,B
BIT
2,C
BIT
2,D
BIT
2,E
BIT
2,H
BIT
2,L
BIT
2,(HL)
BIT
2,A
BIT
3,B
BIT
3,C
BIT
3,D
BIT
3,E
BIT
3,H
BIT
3,L
BIT
3,(HL)
BIT
3,A
6BIT
4,B
BIT
4,C
BIT
4,D
BIT
4,E
BIT
4,H
BIT
4,L
BIT
4,(HL)
BIT
4,A
BIT
5,B
BIT
5,C
BIT
5,D
BIT
5,E
BIT
5,H
BIT
5,L
BIT
5,(HL)
BIT
5,A
7BIT
6,B
BIT
6,C
BIT
6,D
BIT
6,E
BIT
6,H
BIT
6,L
BIT
6,(HL)
BIT
6,A
BIT
7,B
BIT
7,C
BIT
7,D
BIT
7,E
BIT
7,H
BIT
7,L
BIT
7,(HL)
BIT
7,A
8RES
0,B
RES
0,C
RES
0,D
RES
0,E
RES
0,H
RES
0,L
RES
0,(HL)
RES
0,A
RES
1,B
RES
1,C
RES
1,D
RES
1,E
RES
1,H
RES
1,L
RES
1,(HL)
RES
1,A
9RES
2,B
RES
2,C
RES
2,D
RES
2,E
RES
2,H
RES
2,L
RES
2,(HL)
RES
2,A
RES
3,B
RES
3,C
RES
3,D
RES
3,E
RES
3,H
RES
3,L
RES
3,(HL)
RES
3,A
ARES
4,B
RES
4,C
RES
4,D
RES
4,E
RES
4,H
RES
4,L
RES
4,(HL)
RES
4,A
RES
5,B
RES
5,C
RES
5,D
RES
5,E
RES
5,H
RES
5,L
RES
5,(HL)
RES
5,A
BRES
6,B
RES
6,C
RES
6,D
RES
6,E
RES
6,H
RES
6,L
RES
6,(HL)
RES
6,A
RES
7,B
RES
7,C
RES
7,D
RES
7,E
RES
7,H
RES
7,L
RES
7,(HL)
RES
7,A
CSET
0,B
SET
0,C
SET
0,D
SET
0,E
SET
0,H
SET
0,L
SET
0,(HL)
SET
0,A
SET
1,B
SET
1,C
SET
1,D
SET
1,E
SET
1,H
SET
1,L
SET
1,(HL)
SET
1,A
DSET
2,B
SET
2,C
SET
2,D
SET
2,E
SET
2,H
SET
2,L
SET
2,(HL)
SET
2,A
SET
3,B
SET
3,C
SET
3,D
SET
3,E
SET
3,H
SET
3,L
SET
3,(HL)
SET
3,A
ESET
4,B
SET
4,C
SET
4,D
SET
4,E
SET
4,H
SET
4,L
SET
4,(HL)
SET
4,A
SET
5,B
SET
5,C
SET
5,D
SET
5,E
SET
5,H
SET
5,L
SET
5,(HL)
SET
5,A
FSET
6,B
SET
6,C
SET
6,D
SET
6,E
SET
6,H
SET
6,L
SET
6,(HL)
SET
6,A
SET
7,B
SET
7,C
SET
7,D
SET
7,E
SET
7,H
SET
7,L
SET
7,(HL)
SET
7,A
Notes: n = 8-bit data; Mmn = 16- or 24-bit addr or data; d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
RES
4
A
Lower Nibble of 2nd Op Code
Mnemonic
Second Operand
Upper
Op Code
First Operand
4,H
of Second
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
215
Table 137. Op Code Map—Second Op Code After 0DDh
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0LD BC,
(IX+d)
ADD
IX,BC
LD
(IX+d),
BC
1LD DE,
(IX+d)
ADD
IX,DE
LD
(IX+d),
DE
2
LD
IX,
Mmn
LD
(Mmn),
IX
INC
IX
INC
IXH
DEC
IXH
LD
IXH,n
LD HL,
(IX+d)
ADD
IX,IX
LD
IX,
(Mmn)
DEC
IX
INC
IXL
DEC
IXL
LD
IXL,n
LD
(IX+d),
HL
3LD IY,
(IX+d)
INC
(IX+d)
DEC
(IX+d)
LD (IX
+d),n
LD IX,
(IX+d)
ADD
IX,SP
LD
(IX+d),
IY
LD
(IX+d),
IX
4LD
B,IXH LD B,IXL LD B,
(IX+d)
LD
C,IXH
LD
C,IXL
LD C,
(IX+d)
5LD
D,IXH
LD
D,IXL
LD D,
(IX+d)
LD
E,IXH LD E,IXL LD E,
(IX+d)
6LD
IXH,B
LD
IXH,C
LD
IXH,D
LD
IXH,E
LD
IXH,IXH
LD
IXH,IXL
LD H,
(IX+d)
LD
IXH,A LD IXL,B LD
IXL,C
LD
IXL,D LD IXL,E LD
IXL,IXH
LD
IXL,IXL
LD L,
(IX+d) LD IXL,A
7LD
(IX+d),B
LD
(IX+d),C
LD
(IX+d),D
LD
(IX+d),E
LD
(IX+d),H
LD
(IX+d),L
LD
(IX+d),A
LD
A,IXH LD A,IXL LD A,
(IX+d)
8ADD
A,IXH
ADD
A,IXL
ADD A,
(IX+d)
ADC
A,IXH
ADC
A,IXL
ADC A,
(IX+d)
9SUB
A,IXH
SUB
A,IXL
SUB A,
(IX+d)
SBC
A,IXH
SBC
A,IXL
SBC A,
(IX+d)
AAND
A,IXH
AND
A,IXL
AND A,
(IX+d)
XOR
A,IXH
XOR
A,IXL
XOR A,
(IX+d)
BOR
A,IXH
OR
A,IXL
OR A,
(IX+d)
CP
A,IXH
CP
A,IXL
CP A,
(IX+d)
CTable
140
D
EPOP
IX
EX
(SP),IX
PUSH
IX
JP
(IX)
FLD
SP,IX
Notes: n = 8-bit data; Mmn = 16- or 24-bit addr or data; d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
LD
9
FMnemonic
Second Operand
First Operand
SP,IX
Lower Nibble of 2nd Op Code
Upper
Op Code
of Second
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
216
Table 138. Op Code Map—Second Op Code After 0EDh
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0IN0
B,(n)
OUT0
(n),B
LEA BC,
IX+d
LEA BC,
IY+d
TST
A,B
LD BC,
(HL)
IN0
C,(n)
OUT0
(n),C
TST
A,C
LD (HL),
BC
1IN0
D,(n)
OUT0
(n),D
LEA DE,
IX+d
LEA DE,
IY+d
TST
A,D
LD DE,
(HL)
IN0
E,(n)
OUT0
(n),E
TST
A,E
LD(HL),
DE
2IN0
H,(n)
OUT0
(n),H
LEA HL
,IX+d
LEA HL
,IY+d
TST
A,H
LD HL,
(HL)
IN0
L,(n)
OUT0
(n),L
TST
A,L
LD (HL),
HL
3LD IY,
(HL)
LEA IX
,IX+d
LEA IY
,IY+d
TST
A,(HL)
LD IX,
(HL)
IN0
A,(n)
OUT0
(n),A
TST
A,A
LD
(HL),IY
LD (HL),
IX
4IN
B,(BC)
OUT
(BC),B
SBC
HL,BC
LD
(Mmn),
BC
NEG RETN IM 0 LD
I,A
IN
C,(C)
OUT
(C),C
ADC
HL,BC
LD
BC,
(Mmn)
MLT
BC RETI LD
R,A
5IN
D,(BC)
OUT
(BC),D
SBC
HL,DE
LD
(Mmn),
DE
LEA IX,
IY+d
LEA IY,
IX+d IM 1 LD
A,I
IN
E,(C)
OUT
(C),E
ADC
HL,DE
LD
DE,
(Mmn)
MLT
DE IM 2 LD
A,R
6IBN
H,(C)
OUT
(BC),H
SBC
HL,HL
LD
(Mmn),
HL
TST
A,n
PEA
IX+d
PEA
IY+d RRD IN
L,(C)
OUT
(C),L
ADC
HL,HL
LD
HL,
(Mmn)
MLT
HL
LD
MB,A
LD
A,MB RLD
7SBC
HL,SP
LD
(Mmn),
SP
TSTIO
nSLP IN
A,(C)
OUT
(C),A
ADC
HL,SP
LD
SP,
(Mmn)
MLT
SP STMIX RSMIX
8 INIM OTIM INI2 INDM OTDM IND2
9 INIMR OTIMR INI2R INDMR OTDMR IND2R
A LDI CPI INI OUTI OUTI2 LDD CPD IND OUTD OUTD2
B LDIR CPIR INIR OTIR OTI2R LDDR CPDR INDR OTDR OTD2R
C INIRX OTIRX INDRX OTDRX
D
E
F
Notes: n = 8-bit data; Mmn = 16- or 24-bit addr or data; d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
SBC
2
4Mnemonic
Second Operand
First Operand
HL,BC
Lower Nibble of 2nd Op Code
Upper
Op Code
of Second
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
217
Table 139. Op Code Map—Second Op Code After 0FDh
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0LD BC,
(IY+d)
ADD
IY,BC
LD (IY
+d),BC
1LD DE,
(IY+d)
ADD
IY,DE
LD (IY
+d),DE
2LD
IY,Mmn
LD
(Mmn),I
Y
INC
IY
INC
IYH
DEC
IYH
LD
IYH,n
LD HL,
(IY+d)
ADD
IY,IY
LD
IY,
(Mmn)
DEC
IY
INC
IYL
DEC
IYL
LD
IYL,n
LD (IY
+d),HL
3LD IX,
(IY+d)
INC
(IY+d)
DEC
(IY+d)
LD (IY
+d),n
LD IY,
(IY+d)
ADD
IY,SP
LD (IY
+d),IX
LD (IY
+d),IY
4LD
B,IYH LD B,IYL LD B,
(IY+d)
LD
C,IYH
LD
C,IYL
LD C,
(IY+d)
5LD
D,IYH
LD
D,IYL
LD D,
(IY+d)
LD
E,IYH LD E,IYL LD E,
(IY+d)
6LD
IYH,B
LD
IYH,C
LD
IYH,D
LD
IYH,E
LD
IYH,IYH
LD
IYH,IYL
LD H,
(IY+d)
LD
IYH,A LD IYL,B LD
IYL,C
LD
IYL,D LD IYL,E LD
IYL,IYH
LD
IYL,IYL
LD L,
(IY+d) LD IYL,A
7LD (IY
+d),B
LD (IY
+d),C
LD (IY
+d),D
LD (IY
+d),E
LD (IY
+d),H
LD (IY
+d),L
LD (IY
+d),A
LD
A,IYH LD A,IYL LD A,
(IY+d)
8ADD
A,IYH
ADD
A,IYL
ADD A,
(IY+d)
ADC
A,IYH
ADC
A,IYL
ADC A,
(IY+d)
9SUB
A,IYH
SUB
A,IYL
SUB A,
(IY+d)
SBC
A,IYH
SBC
A,IYL
SBC A,
(IY+d)
AAND
A,IYH
AND
A,IYL
AND A,
(IY+d)
XOR
A,IYH
XOR
A,IYL
XOR A,
(IY+d)
BOR
A,IYH
OR
A,IYL
OR A,
(IY+d)
CP
A,IYH
CP
A,IYL
CP A,
(IY+d)
CTable
141
D
EPOP
IY
EX
(SP),IY
PUSH
IY
JP
(IY)
FLD
SP,IY
Notes: n = 8-bit data; Mmn = 16- or 24-bit addr or data; d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
LD
9
FMnemonic
Second Operand
First Operand
SP,IY
Lower Nibble of 2nd Op Code
Upper
Op Code
of Second
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
218
Table 140. Op Code Map—Fourth Byte After 0DDh, 0CBh, and dd
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0RLC
(IX+d)
RRC
(IX+d)
1RL
(IX+d)
RR
(IX+d)
2SLA
(IX+d)
SRA
(IX+d)
3SRL
(IX+d)
4BIT 0,
(IX+d)
BIT 1,
(IX+d)
5BIT 2,
(IX+d)
BIT 3,
(IX+d)
6BIT 4,
(IX+d)
BIT 5,
(IX+d)
7BIT 6,
(IX+d)
BIT 7,
(IX+d)
8RES 0,
(IX+d)
RES 1,
(IX+d)
9RES 2,
(IX+d)
RES 3,
(IX+d)
ARES 4,
(IX+d)
RES 5,
(IX+d)
BRES 6,
(IX+d)
RES 7,
(IX+d)
CSET 0,
(IX+d)
SET 1,
(IX+d)
DSET 2,
(IX+d)
SET 3,
(IX+d)
ESET 4,
(IX+d)
SET 5,
(IX+d)
FSET 6,
(IX+d)
SET 7,
(IX+d)
Notes: d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
BIT
6
4
Lower Nibble of 4th Byte
Mnemonic
Second Operand
Upper
Byte
First Operand
0,(IX+d)
of Fourth
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 Op-Code Map
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
219
Table 141. Op Code Map—Fourth Byte After 0FDh, 0CBh, and dd*
Lower Nibble (Hex)
0123456789ABCDEF
Upper Nibble (Hex)
0RLC
(IY+d)
RRC
(IY+d)
1RL
(IY+d)
RR
(IY+d)
2SLA
(IY+d)
SRA
(IY+d)
3SRL
(IY+d)
4BIT 0,
(IY+d)
BIT 1,
(IY+d)
5BIT 2,
(IY+d)
BIT 3,
(IY+d)
6BIT 4,
(IY+d)
BIT 5,
(IY+d)
7BIT 6,
(IY+d)
BIT 7,
(IY+d)
8RES 0,
(IY+d)
RES 1,
(IY+d)
9RES 2,
(IY+d)
RES 3,
(IY+d)
ARES 4,
(IY+d)
RES 5,
(IY+d)
BRES 6,
(IY+d)
RES 7,
(IY+d)
CSET 0,
(IY+d)
SET 1,
(IY+d)
DSET 2,
(IY+d)
SET 3,
(IY+d)
ESET 4,
(IY+d)
SET 5,
(IY+d)
FSET 6,
(IY+d)
SET 7,
(IY+d)
Notes: d = 8-bit two’s-complement displacement.
BIT
6
4
Lower Nibble of 4th Byte
Mnemonic
Second Operand
Upper
Byte
First Operand
0,(IY+d)
of Fourth
Nibble
Legend
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Oscillators
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
219
On-Chip Oscillators
The eZ80F92 device features two on-chip oscillators for use with an external crystal. The
primary oscillator generates the system clock for the internal CPU and the majority of the
on-chip peripherals. Alternatively, the XIN input pin can also accept a CMOS-level clock
input signal. If an external clock generator is used, the XOUT pin must be left unconnected.
The secondary oscillator can drive a 32 kHz crystal to generate the time-base for the Real-
Time Clock.
20 MHz Primary Crystal Oscillator Operation
Figure 51 displays a recommended configuration for connection with an external
20 MHz, fundamental-mode, parallel-resonant crystal. Recommended crystal specifica-
tions are listed in Table 142 on page 220. Resistor R1 limits total power dissipation by the
crystal. Printed circuit board layout should add no more than 4 pF of stray capacitance to
either the XIN or XOUT pins. If oscillation does not occur, reduce the values of capacitors
C1 and C2 to decrease loading.
Figure 51. Recommended Crystal Oscillator Configuration (20 MHz operation)
X
C = 22 pF
IN XOUT
2
5 ȍ
1
5 .ȍ
2
C = 22 pF
2
20 MHz Crystal
(Fundamental Mode)
On-Chip Oscillator
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Oscillators
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
220
32 kHz Real-Time Clock Crystal Oscillator Operation
Figure 52 displays a recommended configuration for connecting the Real-Time Clock
oscillator with an external 32 kHz, fundamental-mode, parallel-resonant crystal. The rec-
ommended crystal specifications are listed in Table 143 on page 221. A printed circuit
board layout should add no more than 4 pF of stray capacitance to either the RTC_XIN or
RTC_XOUT pins. If oscillation does not occur, reduce the values of capacitors C1 and C2
to decrease loading.
An on-chip MOS resistor sets the crystal drive current limit. This configuration does not
require an external bias resistor across the crystal. An on-chip MOS resistor provides the
biasing.
Table 142. Recommended Crystal Oscillator Specifications(20 MHz Operation)
Parameter Value Units Comments
Frequency 20 MHz
Resonance Parallel
Mode Fundamental
Series Resistance (RS)25 ΩMaximum
Load Capacitance (CL)20 pF Maximum
Shunt Capacitance (C0) 7 pF Maximum
Drive Level 1 mΩMaximum
Figure 52. Recommended Crystal Oscillator Configuration (32 kHz operation)
RTC_X
C = 18 pF
IN
RTC_X
OUT
2
5 ȍ
1
C = 18 pF
2
32 MHz Crystal
(Fundamental Mode)
On-Chip Oscillator
PS015313-0508 On-Chip Oscillators
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
221
Table 143. Recommended Crystal Oscillator Specifications(32 kHz Operation)
Parameter Value Units Comments
Frequency 32 kHz 32768 Hz
Resonance Parallel
Mode Fundamental
Series Resistance (RS)40 KΩMaximum
Load Capacitance (CL) 12.5 pF Maximum
Shunt Capacitance (C0) 3 pF Maximum
Drive Level 1 µΩMaximum
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
222
Electrical Characteristics
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Stresses greater than those listed in Table 144 may cause permanent damage to the device.
These ratings are stress ratings only. Operation of the device at any condition outside those
indicated in the operational sections of these specifications is not implied. Exposure to
absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
For improved reliability, unused inputs must be tied to one of the supply voltages (VDD or
VSS).
Table 144. Absolute Maximum Ratings
Parameter Min Max Units Notes
Ambient temperature under bias (ºC) –40 +105 C 1
Storage temperature (ºC) –65 +150 C
Voltage on any pin with respect to VSS –0.3 +5.5 V 2
Voltage on VDD pin with respect to VSS –0.3 +3.6 V
Total power dissipation 520 mW
Maximum current out of VSS 145 mA
Maximum current into VDD 145 mA
Maximum current on input and/or inactive output pin –25 +25 µA
Maximum output current from active output pin –8 +8 mA
Flash memory writes to same single address - 2 - 3
Flash memory data retention 100 - Years
Flash memory write/erase endurance 10,000 Cycles 4
Notes
1. Operating temperature is specified in DC Characteristics.
2. This voltage applies to all pins except where noted otherwise.
3. Before next erase operation.
4. Write cycles.
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
223
DC Characteristics
Table 145 lists the DC characteristics of the eZ80F92 device.
Table 145. DC Characteristics
Symbol Parameter
TA = 0 ºC to 70 ºC TA = 0 ºC to 105 ºC
Units ConditionsMin Max Min Max
VDD Supply Voltage 3.0 3.6 3.0 3.6 V
VIL Low Level
Input Voltage
–0.3 0.8 –0.3 0.8 V
VIH High Level
Input Voltage
0.7 x VDD 5.5 0.7 x VDD 5.5 V
VOL Low Level
Output Voltage
0.4 0.4 V VDD = 3.0 V;
IOL = 1 mA
VOH High Level
Output Voltage
2.4 2.4 V VDD = 3.0 V;
IOH = –1 mA
IIL Input Leakage
Current
–10 +10 –20 +20 μAV
DD = 3.6 V;
VIN = VDD or VSS1
ITL Tristate Leakage
Current
–10 +10 –20 +20 μAV
DD = 3.6 V
IPU Internal Pull-Up
Current
100
Typical
100
Typical
μAV
DD = 3.6 V;
25 ºC
IDD
Power Dissipation
(normal operation)
33
Typical
33
Typical
mA F = 20 MHz;
VDD = 3.3 V;
7 Wait States;
25 ºC
Power Dissipation
(HALT mode)
21
Typical
21
Typical
mA F = 20 MHz;
VDD = 3.3 V;
25 ºC
Power Dissipation
(SLEEP mode)
375
Typical
375
Typical
µA VDD = 3.3 V;
25 ºC
RTC_VDD RTC Supply
Voltage
3.0 3.6 3.0 3.6 V
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
224
POR and VBO Electrical Characteristics
Table 146 lists the Power-On Reset and Voltage Brownout characteristics of the eZ80F92
device.
Typical Current Consumption Under Various Operating Conditions
In the following pages, Figure 53 on page 225 displays the typical current consumption of
the eZ80F92 device versus the number of WAIT states while operating 25 ºC, 3.3 V, and
with either a 5 MHz, 10 MHz, 15 MHz, or 20 MHz system clock. Figure 54 on page 226
displays the typical current consumption of the eZ80F92 device versus the system clock
frequency while operating 25 ºC, 3.3 V, and using 0, 2, or 7 WAIT states. Figure 55 on
page 227 displays the typical current consumption of the eZ80F92 device versus tempera-
ture while operating at 3.3 V, 7 WAIT states, and with either a 5 MHz, 10 MHz, 15 MHz
or 20 MHz system clock. Figure 56 on page 228 displays the typical current consumption
IRTC RTC Supply
Current
2.5 10
Typical
2.5 10
Typical
µA Supply current into
RTC_VDD;
SLEEP mode2.
Notes
1. This condition excludes all pins with on-chip pull-ups when driven Low.
2. RTC current increases when the eZ80F92 device is not in SLEEP mode as the RTC_VDD pin supplies power to
system clock buffers within the Real-Time Clock circuit.
Table 146. POR and VBO Electrical Characteristics
Symbol Parameter
TA = 0 ºC to +105 ºC
Unit ConditionsMin Typ Max
VVBO VBO Voltage Threshold 2.40 2.55 2.85 V VCC = VVBO
VPOR POR Voltage Threshold 2.45 2.65 2.90 V VCC = VPOR
VHYST POR/VBO Hysteresis 50 100 150 mV
TANA POR/VBO analog RESET duration 40 100 µs
TVBO_MIN VBO pulse reject period 10 µs
VCCRAMP VCC ramp rate requirements to
guarantee proper RESET occurs
0.1 100 V/ms
Table 145. DC Characteristics (Continued)
Symbol Parameter
TA = 0 ºC to 70 ºC TA = 0 ºC to 105 ºC
Units ConditionsMin Max Min Max
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
225
of the eZ80F92 device versus system clock frequency while operating in HALT mode.
Figure 57 on page 229 displays the typical current consumption of the eZ80F92 device
versus temperature while operating in SLEEP mode.
Figure 53. ICC Versus WAIT States as a Function of Frequency
ICC vs. WAIT States (Typical @ 3.3V, 25C)
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
01234567
WAIT States
Current (mA)
5 MHz
10 MHz
15 MHz
20 MHz
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
226
Figure 54. ICC Versus Frequency as a Function of WAIT States
ICC vs. Frequency (Typical @3.3V, 25C)
0.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
40.00
50.00
60.00
5 101520
Frequency (MHz)
Current (mA)
0 WAIT
2 WAIT
7 WAIT
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
227
Figure 55. ICC Versus Temperature as a Function of Frequency
ICC versus Temp with 7 WAIT States (Typical @ 3.3V)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
-40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100
Temperature (C)
Current (mA)
5Mhz
10Mhz
15Mhz
20Mhz
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
228
Figure 56. ICC Versus Frequency in HALT Mode
ICC vs. Frequency in HALT mode (Typical @ 3.3V)
0
5
10
15
20
25
0 5 10 15 20
Frequency (MHz)
Current (mA)
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
229
AC Characteristics
The section provides information about the AC characteristics and timing of the eZ80F92
device. All AC timing information assumes a standard load of 50 pF on all outputs.
See Table 147.
Figure 57. ICC Versus Temperature in SLEEP Mode
IC C vs . Tem pe rature in S LE E P m o de (T ypica l @ 3 .3V, R T C ope ra tin g at 3 2KH z)
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
-40-20 0 20406080100
Temperature (C)
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
230
External Memory Read Timing
Figure 58 and Table 148 on page 231display the timing for external reads.
Table 147. AC Characteristics
Symbol Parameter
TA = 0 ºC to 70 ºC TA = 0 ºC to 105 ºC
Units ConditionsMin Max Min Max
TXIN System Clock
Cycle Time
50 50 ns VDD = 3.0–3.6 V
TXINH System Clock
High Time
20 20 ns VDD = 3.0–3.6 V;
TCLK = 50 ns
TXINL System Clock
Low Time
20 20 ns VDD = 3.0–3.6 V;
TCLK = 50 ns
TXINR System Clock
Rise Time
33nsV
DD = 3.0–3.6 V;
TCLK = 50 ns
TXINF System Clock
Fall Time
33nsV
DD = 3.0–3.6 V;
TCLK = 50 ns
Figure 58.External Memory Read Timing
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(input)
CSx
MREQ
RD
IN
T1T2
T3T4
T8
T6
T10
T7
T5
T9
TCLK
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
231
External Memory Write Timing
Figure 59 and Table 149 on page 232 display the timing for external writes.
Table 148. External Read Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to ADDR Valid Delay 13
T2Clock Rise to ADDR Hold Time 2.0
T3Input DATA Valid to Clock Rise Setup Time 1.0
T4Clock Rise to DATA Hold Time 2.0
T5Clock Rise to CSx Assertion Delay 2.0 19.0
T6Clock Rise to CSx Deassertion Delay 2.0 18.0
T7Clock Rise to MREQ Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T8Clock Rise to MREQ Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T9Clock Rise to RD Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T10 Clock Rise to RD Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
Figure 59.External Memory Write Timing
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(output)
CSx
MREQ
WR
IN
T1T2
T3T4
T8
T6
T10
T7
T5
T9
TCLK
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
232
Table 149. External Write Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to ADDR Valid Delay 13
T2Clock Rise to ADDR Hold Time 2.0
T3Clock Fall to Output DATA Valid Delay 11
T4Clock Rise to DATA Hold Time 2.0
T5Clock Rise to CSx Assertion Delay 2.0 19.0
T6Clock Rise to CSx Deassertion Delay 2.0 18.0
T7Clock Rise to MREQ Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T8Clock Rise to MREQ Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T9Clock Fall to WR Assertion Delay 1.8 6.5
T10 Clock Rise to WR Deassertion Delay* 1.6 6.5
WR Deassertion to ADDR Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to DATA Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to CSx Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to MREQ Hold Time 0.25
Note: *At the conclusion of a Write cycle, deassertion of WR always occurs before any change to
ADDR, DATA, CSx, or MREQ.
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
233
External I/O Read Timing
Figure 60 and Table 150 display the timing for external I/O Reads. Clock rise/fall to
signal transition timing is independent of the particular bus mode employed (eZ80®,
Z80®, IntelTM, or Motorola®).
Figure 60.External I/O Read Timing
Table 150. External I/O Read Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to ADDR Valid Delay 13
T2Clock Rise to ADDR Hold Time 2.0
T3Input DATA Valid to Clock Rise Setup Time 1.0
T4Clock Rise to DATA Hold Time 2.0
T5Clock Rise to CSx Assertion Delay 2.0 19.0
T6Clock Rise to CSx Deassertion Delay 2.0 18.0
T7Clock Rise to IORQ Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T8Clock Rise to IORQ Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T9Clock Rise to RD Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T10 Clock Rise to RD Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(input)
CSx
IORQ
RD
IN
T1T2
T3T4
T8
T6
T10
T7
T5
T9
TCLK
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
234
External I/O Write Timing
Figure 61 and Table 151 display the timing for external I/O writes. Clock rise/fall to signal
transition timing is independent of the particular bus mode employed (eZ80®, Z80
®
,
IntelTM, or Motorola®).
Figure 61.External I/O Write Timing
Table 151. External I/O Write Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to ADDR Valid Delay 13
T2Clock Rise to ADDR Hold Time 2.0
T3Clock Fall to Output DATA Valid Delay 11
T4Clock Rise to DATA Hold Time 2.0
T5Clock Rise to CSx Assertion Delay 2.0 19.0
T6Clock Rise to CSx Deassertion Delay 2.0 18.0
T7Clock Rise to IORQ Assertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T8Clock Rise to IORQ Deassertion Delay 2.0 16.0
T9Clock Fall to WR Assertion Delay 1.8 6.5
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(output)
CSx
IORQ
WR
IN
T
1
T
2
T
3
T
4
T
8
T
6
T
10
T
7
T
5
T
9
T
CLK
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
235
Wait State Timing for Read Operations
Figure 62 displays the extension of the memory access signals using a single WAIT state
for a Read operation. This WAIT state is generated by setting CS_WAIT to 001h in the
Chip Select Control Register.
T10 Clock Rise to WR Deassertion Delay* 1.6 6.5
WR Deassertion to ADDR Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to DATA Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to CSx Hold Time 0.25
WR Deassertion to IORQ Hold Time 0.25
Note: *At the conclusion of a Write cycle, deassertion of WR always occurs before any change to
ADDR, DATA, CSx, or IORQ.
Figure 62.Wait State Timing for Read Operations
Table 151. External I/O Write Timing (Continued)
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
TCLK TWAIT
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(output)
CSx
MREQ
RD
IN
INSTRD
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
236
Wait State Timing for Write Operations
Figure 63 displays the extension of the memory access signals using a single WAIT state
for a Write operation. This WAIT state is generated by setting CS_WAIT to 001h in the
Chip Select Control Register.
Figure 63.Wait State Timing for Write Operations
TCLK TWAIT
X
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[7:0]
(output)
CSx
MREQ
WR
IN
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
237
General Purpose I/O Port Input Sample Timing
Figure 64 displays timing of the GPIO input sampling. The input value on a GPIO port pin
is sampled on the rising edge of the system clock. The port value is then available to the
CPU on the second rising clock edge following the change of the port value.
Figure 64.Port Input Sample Timing
Table 152. GPIO Port Output Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to Port Output Delay 2.0 15.0
TCLK
System
Clock
GPIO Pin
Input Value
GPIO Input
Data Latch
GPIO Data
READ on Data Bus
Port Value
Changes to 0
0 Latched
Into GPIO
Data Register
GPIO Data Register
Value 0 Read
by eZ80
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
238
External Bus Acknowledge Timing
Table 153 lists information about the bus acknowledge timing. Once the external bus mas-
ter detects BUSACK asserted and drives IORQN, MREQN, A[23:0] there is an asynchro-
nous prop delay to the CS[3:0] outputs being valid.
External System Clock Driver (PHI) Timing
Table 154 lists timing information for the PHI pin. The PHI pin allows external peripher-
als to synchronize with the internal system clock driver on the eZ80F92 device.
Table 153. Bus Acknowledge Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock Rise to BUSACK Assertion Delay 2.0 14.0
T2Clock Rise to BUSACK Deassertion Delay 2.0 14.0
T3IORQN, MREQN, A[23:0] input to CS[3:0]
output prop delay
—10.0
Table 154. PHI System Clock Timing
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
T1Clock (XIN) Rise to PHI Rise 6.0
T2Clock (XIN) Fall to PHI Fall 6.0
PS015313-0508 Electrical Characteristics
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
239
Zilog Debug Interface Timing
Figure 65 and Table 155 display timing information for TCK, TDI, TDO, TMS pins.
Figure 65.ZDI Timing
Table 155. ZDI Timing Specifications
Parameter Abbreviation
Delay (ns)
Min Max
TTCK TCK Period 2 x TXIN
T1TDI/TMS setup to TCK Rise 4
T2TDI/TMS hold after TCK Rise Fall 4
T3TCK Rise to TDO change 10
T1 T2
T3
TCK
TDI
TMS
TDO
PS015313-0508 Packaging
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
240
Packaging
Figure 66 displays the 100-pin low-profile quad flat package (LQFP) for the eZ80F92
device.
Figure 66.100-Lead Plastic Low-Profile Quad Flat Package (LQFP)
PS015313-0508 Ordering Information
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
241
Ordering Information
Table 156 lists a part name, a product specification index code, and a brief description of
each part.
Navigate your browser to Zilog’s website to order the eZ80F92 or the eZ80F93. Or,
contact your local Zilog Sales Office to order these devices. Zilog provides additional
assistance on its Customer Service page, and is also here to help with technical support
issues.
For Zilog’s valuable software development tools and downloadable software, visit
www.zilog.com.
Part Number Description
Zilog part numbers consist of a number of components, as listed in the following exam-
ples:
Table 156. Ordering Information;
Part Name PSI Description
eZ80F92 eZ80F92AZ020SC,
eZ80F92AZ020SG
100-pin LQFP, 128 KB Flash memory, 8 KB SRAM, 20 MHz,
Standard Temperature.
eZ80F92AZ020EC,
eZ80F92AZ020EG
100-pin LQFP, 128 KB Flash memory, 8 KB SRAM, 20 MHz,
Extended Temperature.
eZ80F93 eZ80F93AZ020SC,
eZ80F93AZ020SG
100-pin LQFP, 64 KB Flash memory, 4 KB SRAM, 20 MHz,
Standard Temperature.
eZ80F93AZ020EC,
eZ80F93AZ020EG
100-pin LQFP, 64 KB Flash memory, 4 KB SRAM, 20 MHz,
Extended Temperature.
Zilog Base Products
eZ80®Zilog eZ80 CPU
F92 Product Number
AZ Package
020 Speed
S or E Temperature
C or G Environmental Flow
PS015313-0508 Ordering Information
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
242
Example. Part number eZ80F92AZ020SC is an eZ80Acclaim!® product in an LQFP
package, operating with a 20 MHz external clock frequency over a 0 ºC to +70 ºC
temperature range and built using the Plastic Standard environmental flow.
Package AZ = LQFP (also called the VQFP)
Speed 020 = 20 MHz
Standard Temperature S = 0 ºC to +70 ºC
Extended Temperature E = –40 ºC to +105 ºC
Environmental Flow C = Plastic Standard; G = Lead-Free
PS015313-0508 P R E L I M I N A R Y DRAFT Index
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
243
Index
Numerics
100-pin LQFP package 4, 20
16-bit clock divisor value 110, 135
16-bit divisor count 110, 135
20 MHz Primary Crystal Oscillator Operation 219
32 KHz Real-Time Clock Crystal Oscillator Opera-
tion 220
A
AAK 143, 147, 148, 149, 151, 156
AAK bit 151, 152
Absolute Maximum Ratings 222
Absolute maximum ratings 222
AC Characteristics 229
ACK 143, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 153, 158, 159
Acknowledge 143
Address Bus 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
address bus 46, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 60, 63, 64,
67, 68, 90, 169, 179, 185
address bus, 24-bit 25
Addressing 153
ADL Memory mode 181, 185
ALARM 89, 103
alarm condition 89, 90, 102, 103
ALARM flag 102
Arbitration 145
Architectural Overview 1
asynchronous serial data 13, 15
B
Baud Rate Generator 109
Baud Rate Generator Functional Description 134
BCD—see binary-coded-decimal operation 88,
102, 103
Binary Operation 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97
binary operation 88
Binary-Coded-Decimal Operation 90, 91, 92, 93,
94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101
binary-coded-decimal operation 88
bit generation 104
Block Diagram 2
Boundary-Scan Architecture 187
break detection 104, 113
break point trigger functions 187
BRG Control Registers 110
Bus Acknowledge 12
bus acknowledge pin 52, 179
Bus Arbitration Overview 141
Bus Enable bit 155
Bus Mode Controller 53
bus mode state 53, 54, 57, 61, 65, 71
Bus Modes 66
Bus modes 53
bus modes 70
Bus Request 11
Bus Requests During ZDI Debug Mode 169
BUSACK 12, 22, 52, 169, 179, 185, 238
BUSREQ 11, 22, 52, 169, 179, 185
Byte Format 143
C
Characteristics, electrical
Absolute maximum ratings 222
Chip Select 0 9
Chip Select 1 9
Chip Select 2 9
Chip Select 3 9
Chip Select Registers 67
Chip Select x Bus Mode Control Register 70
Chip Select x Control Register 69
Chip Select x Lower Bound Register 67
Chip Select x Upper Bound Register 68
Chip Select/Wait State Generator block 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Chip Selects and Wait States 48
Chip Selects During Bus Request/Bus Acknowl-
edge Cycles 52
Clear to Send 14, 16, 122
clock divisor value, 16-bit 110, 135
clock initialization circuitry 187
Clock Peripheral Power-Down Registers 36
Clock Synchronization 144
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Product Specification
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Clocking Overview 141
Complex triggers 187
CONTINUOUS mode 76, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85
CPHA 132
CPHA bit 133
CPOL 132
CPOL bit 133
CPU system clock cycle 54
CS0 9, 21, 48, 49, 50, 51
CS1 9, 21, 48, 49, 50, 51
CS2 9, 21, 48, 50, 51
CS3 9, 21, 48, 50, 51
CTS 119, 122
CTS0 14, 128
CTS1 16
Customer Information 253
D
DATA bus 60
Data Bus 10
data bus 52, 53, 55, 56, 57, 64, 70, 90, 169, 179, 185
Data Carrier Detect 14, 17, 122
Data Set Ready 14, 16, 122
Data Terminal Ready 14, 16, 119
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI configured as a
Slave 135
Data Transfer Procedure with SPI Configured as the
Master 135
data transfer, SPI 138
Data Validity 142
DC Characteristics 223
DCD 119, 122
DCD0 14, 128
DCD1 17
DCTS 122
DDCD 122
DDSR 122
divisor count 110, 135
DSR 119, 122
DSR0 14, 128
DSR1 16
DTACK 64
DTR 119, 122
DTR0 14, 128
DTR1 16
E
edge-selectable interrupts 43
edge-triggered interrupt input 128
edge-triggered interrupt mode 41, 43
Edge-Triggered Interrupts 42
EI, Op Code Map 213
Electrical Characteristics 222
ENAB 157
Enabling and Disabling the WDT 73
ENAB—see Bus Enable bit 155
Endec 129
endec 125, 128
endec—see Infrared Encoder/Decoder 37, 124, 128
Erase operations 193, 194
Event Counter 80
External Bus Acknowledge Timing 238
external bus request 52, 165, 169
External I/O Chip Selects 25
External I/O Read Timing 233
External I/O Write Timing 234
External Memory Read Timing 230
External Memory Write Timing 231
external pull-down resistor 40
External System Clock Driver (PHI) Timing 238
eZ80 bus mode 66, 70
eZ80 CPU 11, 35, 52, 56, 57, 64, 171, 187
eZ80 CPU Core 31
eZ80 CPU Instruction Set 208
eZ80 Product ID Low and High Byte Registers 182
eZ80 Product ID Revision Register 183
eZ80 system clock cycle 53, 54, 57, 60
eZ80 Webserver-i 208
eZ80F92 3, 72, 171, 183
eZ80F92 device 1, 4, 5, 10, 25, 35, 39, 45, 46, 48,
50, 66, 76, 80, 108, 110, 153, 163, 164, 165, 167,
175, 176, 180, 181, 185, 219, 223, 224, 229, 238
eZ80F92 processor 2
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245
F
f 22, 54, 56, 231
FAST mode 141, 161
Features 1
Features, eZ80 CPU Core 31
Flash Memory 191, 193
Flash memory 1
Flash Memory Arrangement in the eZ80F93 194
Flash Memory Overview 194
framing error 104, 106, 113
full-duplex transmission 133
Functional Description, Infrared Encoder/Decoder
124
G
General Purpose I/O Port Input Sample Timing 237
General Purpose I/O Port Output Timing 239
General-Purpose Input/Output 39
GND 2
GPIO Control Registers 43
GPIO Interrupts 42
GPIO modes 40, 41
GPIO Operation 39
GPIO Overview 39
GPIO port pins 32, 39, 44
H
HALT 175, 183, 211
HALT instruction 35
HALT Mode 36, 228
HALT mode 1, 12, 36, 223, 225
HALT, Op-Code Map 213
HALT_SLP 12
Handshake 146
handshake 104
high-frequency system clock 134
I
I/O Chip Select Operation 50
I/O Chip Selects 25
I/O space 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 48, 50
I2C Acknowledge bit 143, 156
I2C bus 141, 145, 153
I2C bus clock 141
I2C bus protocol 142
I2C Clock Control Register 160
I2C Control Register 155
I2C Data Register 155
I2C Extended Slave Address Register 154
I2C General Characteristics 141
I2C Registers 153
I2C Serial Clock 20
I2C Serial Data 20
I2C Serial I/O Interface 141
I2C Slave Address Register 153
I2C Software Reset Register 161
I2C Status Register 158
IEEE Standard 1149.1 187, 188
IEF1 46, 47, 184
IEF2 46, 47
IFLG bit 141, 146, 149, 151, 152, 156, 158, 159
IM 0, Op Code Map 216
IM 1, Op Code Map 216
IM 2, Op Code Map 216
Information Page 193, 194, 197, 202, 204, 205, 206
Infrared Encoder/Decoder 124
Infrared Encoder/Decoder Register 129
Infrared Encoder/Decoder Signal Pins 128
Input/Output Request 11
INSTRD 11, 22
Instruction Read Indicator 11
Instruction Store 4
0 Registers 180
Intel- 53
Intel Bus Mode (Multiplexed Address and Data
Bus) 60
Intel Bus Mode (Separate Address and Data Buses)
56
internal pull-up 40
internal system clock 51
Interrupt Controller 45
interrupt enable 11
Interrupt Enable bit 155
interrupt enable bit 89, 107
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Product Specification
246
Interrupt Enable Flag 184
Interrupt Enable flags 47
interrupt input 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19
interrupt request 41, 42, 43, 45, 46, 47, 82, 203
interrupt service routine 45, 47
interrupt service routine, SPI 45
interrupt vector 45, 46
interrupt vector address 46, 47
interrupt, highest-priority 45, 46
interrupts, edge-selectable 43
Introduction to On-Chip Instrumentation 187
Introduction, Zilog Debug Interface 162
IORQ 11, 12, 22, 51, 53, 54, 56, 57, 60
IORQ Assertion Delay 233, 234
IORQ Deassertion Delay 233, 234
IORQ Hold Time 235
IR_RxD 13, 126, 127, 128
IR_RxD modulation signal 13, 125, 128, 129
IR_TxD 13
IR_TxD modulation signal 13, 125, 128, 129
IrDA Encoder/Decoder 128
IrDA encoder/decoder 13
IrDA endec 37
IrDA specifications 124
IrDA standard 124
IrDA standard baud rates 124
IrDA transceiver 128
IrDA Transmit Data 13
IrDA—see Infrared Data Association 124
IRQ 46
irq_en 82, 134, 137
irq_en bit 79
IVECT 45, 46, 47
J
Jitter, Infrared Encoder/Decoder 128
JTAG interface 187
JTAG mode selection 188
JTAG Test Clock 12
JTAG Test Data In 12
JTAG Test Data Out 12
JTAG Test Mode 12
JTAG Test Trigger Output 12
L
least-significant bit 105, 164
least-significant byte 46, 84
level-sensitive interrupt input 128
level-sensitive interrupt modes 41
level-sensitive interrupts 43
Level-Triggered Interrupts 42
Line break detection 104
Loopback Testing, Infrared Encoder/Decoder 128
low-byte vector 45
Low-Power Modes 35
LSB 160
lsb 84
lsb—see least-significant bit 83, 84, 146, 147, 149,
152
LSB—see least-significant byte 46, 47, 84
M
maskable interrupt 36
maskable interrupt sources 45
maskable interrupt vectors 46
Maskable Interrupts 45
Mass Erase 197
Mass Erase operation 202, 203, 205, 206, 207
Mass Erase Violation 203
Master In, Slave Out 19, 131
MASTER mode 132, 141, 156, 158, 159, 160, 161
Master mode 152, 157
master mode 151
Master Mode Start bit 156
Master Mode Stop bit 156
MASTER mode, SPI 133
Master Out, Slave In 19, 131
Master Receive 141, 149
Master Transmit 146
MASTER TRANSMIT mode 141
master_en bit 134
Memory and I/O Chip Selects 48
Memory Chip Select Example 49
Memory Chip Select Operation 48
Memory Chip Select Priority 49
Memory Request 11
memory space 48, 50
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Product Specification
247
Memory Write 197
MISO 19, 131, 133
Mode Fault 134
mode fault 138
Mode Fault error flag 131
Mode Fault flag 134
Modem status signal 14, 16
MODF 131, 134, 138
MOSI 19, 131, 133
most-significant bit 106, 131, 143, 155, 167
most-significant byte 85
Motorola Bus Mode 63
Motorola-compatible 53
MREQ 11, 12, 22, 48, 53, 54, 56, 57, 60, 231, 232
MREQ Hold Time 232
msb 85
msb—see most significant bit 84, 85, 143, 167, 204
MSB—see most-significant byte 85
Multibyte I/O Write (Row Programming) 196
multimaster conflict 134, 138
N
NACK 143, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 156, 159
NMI 11, 22, 31, 36, 45, 47, 72, 73, 74
NMI_flag bit 74
nmi_out bit 74
Nonmaskable Interrupt 11, 31
nonmaskable interrupt 36, 46, 72, 73, 74
Nonmaskable interrupt, Return from 211
Nonmaskable Interrupts 47
Not Acknowledge 143
O
OCI Activation 187
OCI clock pin 187
OCI Information Requests 189
OCI Interface 188
OCI pins 188
On-Chip Instrumentation 187
On-Chip Instrumentation, Introduction to 187
On-Chip Oscillators 219
On-chip pull-up 188
Op Code maps 213
Open source I/O 40
Open-drain I/O 40
open-drain mode 40
Open-drain output 40
open-drain output 141
open-source mode 40
Open-source output 40
open-source output 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19
Operating Modes 146
Operation of the eZ80F92 Device During ZDI
Breakpoints 168
Ordering Information 241
overrun error 104, 106, 113, 121
Overview, Low-Power Modes 35
P
Packaging 240
Page Erase 197
Page Erase operation 203, 204, 206, 207
Page Erase operations 197
Page Erase Violation 203
Part Number Description 241
PB1 80
PHI 20, 24
Pin Characteristics 20
Pin Description 4
POP, Op Code Map 213, 215, 217
POR 32
POR and VBO Electrical Characteristics 224
POR Voltage Threshold 224
POR voltage threshold 32, 33
Port x Alternate Register 1 44
Port x Alternate Register 2 44
Port x Data Direction Registers 44
Port x Data Registers 43
Power connections 2
Power-On Reset 32, 224
Program Counter 35, 36, 46, 47
Programmable Reload Timer Operation 77
Programmable Reload Timer Registers 81
Programmable Reload Timers 76
Programmable Reload Timers Overview 76
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Programming Flash Memory 195
pull-up resistor, external 40, 141
PUSH, Op Code Map 213, 215, 217
R
RAM 190
RAM Address Upper Byte Register 192
RAM Control Register 192
Random Access Memory 190
RD 11, 22, 48, 51, 53, 56, 57, 60
RD Assertion Delay 231, 233
RD Deassertion Delay 231, 233
Reading the Current Count Value 79
Real-Time Clock 32, 35, 88, 219, 220
Real-Time Clock Alarm 89
Real-Time Clock alarm 35
Real-Time Clock Alarm Control Register 102
Real-Time Clock Alarm Day-of-the-Week Register
101
Real-Time Clock Alarm Hours Register 100
Real-Time Clock Alarm Minutes Register 99
Real-Time Clock Alarm Seconds Register 98
Real-Time Clock Battery Backup 89
Real-Time Clock Century Register 97
Real-Time Clock circuit 224
Real-Time Clock Control Register 102
Real-Time Clock Crystal Input 12
Real-Time Clock Crystal Output 12
Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Month Register 94
Real-Time Clock Day-of-the-Week Register 93
Real-Time Clock Hours Register 92
Real-Time Clock Minutes Register 91
Real-Time Clock Month Register 95
Real-Time Clock Oscillator and Source Selection
89
Real-Time Clock Overview 88
Real-Time Clock Power Supply 12
Real-Time Clock Recommended Operation 89
Real-Time Clock Registers 90
Real-Time Clock Seconds Register 90
Real-Time Clock source 72, 74, 76, 80, 86, 87
Real-Time Clock Year Register 96
Receive, Infrared Encoder/Decoder 125
Recommended Usage of the Baud Rate Generator
110
Register Map 25
Request to Send 13, 16, 119
RESET 11, 22, 32, 33, 35, 36, 40, 48, 72, 73, 74, 89,
90, 102, 109, 110, 111, 129, 135, 173, 175, 187,
188, 190, 192, 200, 202, 224
Reset 32
Reset controller 32, 33
RESET event 39
RESET mode timer 32
Reset Operation 32
RESET Or NMI Generation 73
Reset States 49
Resetting the I2C Registers 153
RI 106, 119, 122
RI0 15, 128
RI1 17, 41
Ring Indicator 15, 17, 122
Row Program Time-out 203
rst_flag bit 73
RTC 12, 29, 30, 76, 88
RTC alarm condition 102
RTC alarm registers 90
RTC clock source 103
RTC count 89, 102
RTC count registers 90
RTC Supply Current 224
RTC Supply Voltage 223
RTC_UNLOCK 103
RTC_UNLOCK bit 89, 90, 102
RTC_VDD 12, 22
RTC_XIN 12, 22
RTC_XOUT 12, 22
RTS 119, 122, 128
RTS0 13
RTS1 16
RxD0 13
RxD1 15
S
Schmitt Trigger 11
Schmitt Trigger Input 20
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Product Specification
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SCK 18, 131, 132
SCK Idle State 133
SCK pin 133, 137
SCK Receive Edge 133
SCK signal 133
SCK Transmit Edge 133
SCL 20, 24, 141, 142, 143, 160
SCL line 144, 145, 146
SCLK 32
SDA 20, 23, 141, 142, 143, 145, 152
serial bus, SPI 139
Serial Clock 132, 141
Serial Clock, I2C 20
Serial Clock, SPI 18, 131
Serial Data 141
serial data 131
Serial Data, I2C 20
Serial Peripheral Interface 130
Setting Timer Duration 77
SINGLE PASS mode 76, 78, 79, 81
Single Pass Mode 77
Single-Byte I/O Write Operations 195
SLA 148, 150, 154, 212
SLA, Op Code Map 218, 219
SLA, Op Code map 214
SLAVE mode 141, 156, 159
slave mode 152, 153, 154
SLAVE mode, SPI 133
Slave Receive 141, 152
Slave Select 18, 131
Slave Transmit 141, 151
slave transmit mode 151
SLEEP 175
SLEEP Mode 35, 229
SLEEP mode 12, 35, 102, 183, 223, 225
sleep-mode recovery 102
sleep-mode recovery reset 30
Software break point instruction 187
SPI 37, 45, 130, 131, 133
SPI Baud Rate Generator 134
SPI Baud Rate Generator Register 27
SPI Baud Rate Generator Registers—Low Byte and
High Byte 135
SPI Block 27
SPI Control Register 27, 136
SPI Data Rate 134
SPI Flags 134
SPI Functional Description 133
SPI interrupt service routine 45
SPI Master device 135
SPI master device 19
SPI MASTER mode 133
SPI mode 18
SPI Receive Buffer Register 27, 139
SPI Registers 135
SPI serial bus 139
SPI Serial Clock 18
SPI Signals 131
SPI slave device 19
SPI SLAVE mode 133
SPI Status Register 27, 137
SPI Status register 134
SPI Transmit Shift Register 27, 135, 139
SPI Transmit Shift register 134
SPIF 133
spiF 138
SPIF bit 139
SPIF flag 133
SPIF status bit 139
SRA 212
SRA, Op Code Map 214, 218
SRAM 1, 162, 199, 241
SS 18, 131, 133, 135, 137
STA 146, 147, 148, 150, 151, 153, 156, 157, 159
standard mode 141
START and STOP Conditions 142
START bit 164
START condition 142, 144, 145, 148, 149, 150,
152, 153, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161
Start Condition, ZDI 164
Starting Program Counter 46, 47
STOP condition 142, 143, 145, 146, 149, 151, 152,
156, 157, 159, 160, 161
STP 147, 148, 150, 151, 153, 156, 157, 159
Supply Voltage 223
supply voltage 2, 32, 33, 40, 141, 222
Switching Between Bus Modes 66
System Clock 20
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Product Specification
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System clock 37, 38
system clock 32, 35, 36, 41, 42, 72, 74, 76, 80, 109,
134, 160, 161, 168
system clock cycle, CPU 53, 54, 57, 60
system clock cycles 11, 51, 52, 53, 57, 61, 65, 73,
187
system clock delay 66
System Clock Frequency 77, 163
system clock frequency 80, 85, 163
System Clock Oscillator Input 17
System Clock Oscillator Output 17
system clock period 188
system clock rising edge 85, 109, 134
system clock, high-frequency 134
system clock, internal 51
System Reset 11
system reset 32
T
T0_IN 18
T1_IN 18
T4_OUT 19
T5_OUT 19
TCK 12, 22, 164, 187, 188, 239
TDI 12, 22, 164, 188, 239
TDO 12, 22, 188, 239
TERI 122
Test Access Port 187
Test Mode 188
Time-Out Period Selection 73
Timer 0 In 18
Timer 1 In 18
Timer Control Register 81
Timer Data Register—High Byte 83
Timer Data Register—Low Byte 83
Timer Input Source Select Register 85
Timer Input Source Selection 80
Timer Interrupts 79
Timer Output 80
Timer Reload Register—High Byte 85
TMS 12, 22, 188, 239
Trace buffer memory 187
Trace history buffer 187
Transferring Data 143
transmit shift register 105, 113, 117, 120, 133
Transmit Shift Register, SPI 135, 139
Transmit Shift register, SPI 134
Transmit, Infrared Encoder/Decoder 125
TRIGOUT 12, 22, 188
TxD0 13
TxD1 15
U
UART Baud Rate Generator Register —Low and
High Bytes 110
UART FIFO Control Register 115
UART Functional Description 105
UART Functions 105
UART Interrupt Enable Register 113
UART Interrupt Identification Register 114
UART Interrupts 106
UART Line Control Register 116
UART Line Status Register 120
UART Modem Control 106
UART Modem Control Register 119
UART Modem Status Interrupt 107
UART Modem Status Register 121
UART Receive Buffer Register 112
UART Receiver 106
UART Receiver Interrupts 107
UART Recommended Usage 108
UART Registers 111
UART Scratch Pad Register 123
UART Transmit Holding Register 111
UART Transmitter 105
UART Transmitter Interrupt 107
V
VBO 32
VBO protection circuitry 33
VBO Voltage Threshold 224
VCC—see supply voltage 33, 224
Voltage Brown-Out 32, 224
Voltage Brown-Out Reset 33
Voltage Brown-Out threshold 33
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voltage brown-out threshold 32
voltage, supply 2, 32, 33, 40, 141, 222, 223
VVBO—see Voltage Brown-Out threshold 33, 224
W
WAIT 1, 11, 22, 57, 60, 64
WAIT condition 206
WAIT Input Signal 51
WAIT pin, external 53, 54
WAIT Request 11
WAIT state 61, 235, 236
wait state 54
Wait State Timing for Read Operations 235
Wait State Timing for Write Operations 236
WAIT States 225, 226
WAIT states 46, 51, 52, 53, 54, 60, 69, 169, 190,
200, 224
Wait States 51, 223
Wait states 200
wait states 48
Watch-Dog Timer 32, 35, 72, 168
Watch-Dog Timer Control Register 74
Watch-Dog Timer Control register 30
Watch-Dog Timer Operation 73
Watch-Dog Timer Overview 72
Watch-Dog Timer Registers 74
Watch-Dog Timer reset 30
Watch-Dog Timer Reset Register 75
Watch-Dog Timer time-out 36
Watch-Dog Timer time-out reset 30
WCOL 133, 134
wcOl 138
WDT 32, 35, 72, 73, 74
WDT clock source 72, 74
WDT clock sources 73
WDT RESET 74
WDT time-out 72, 73, 74, 75
WDT time-out period 73, 75
WDT time-out values 73
WR 11, 22, 48, 51, 54, 57, 60, 232, 234
Write Collision 134
write collision 133
write collision, SPI 138
Write Violation 203
X
XIN 17, 23
XOUT 17, 23
Z
Z80- 53
Z80 Bus Mode 53
Z80 Memory mode 181, 185
ZCL 164, 166, 173
ZCL pin 164
ZDA 164, 173, 188
ZDA pin 164
ZDI 187
ZDI Address Match Registers 171
ZDI Block Read 168
ZDI BLOCK WRITE 167
ZDI Break 174
ZDI BREAK Control Register 172
ZDI BREAK mode 184
ZDI Bus Control Register 179
ZDI Bus Status Register 185
ZDI Clock and Data Conventions 164
ZDI Clock Frequency 163
ZDI data transfer 165
ZDI debug control 187
ZDI Debug mode 165, 179, 185
ZDI master 165, 167, 168, 180, 181, 185
ZDI Master Control Register 175
ZDI Read Memory Register 185
ZDI Read Operations 167
ZDI Read Register Low, High, and Upper 184
ZDI Read/Write Control Register 176
ZDI Read-Only Registers 171
ZDI Register Addressing 165
ZDI Register Definitions 171
ZDI Single-Bit Byte Separator 165
ZDI Single-Byte Read 167
ZDI SINGLE-BYTE WRITE 166
ZDI slave 164, 167, 168
ZDI START command 165
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ZDI Start Condition 164
ZDI START signal 164
ZDI Status Register 183
ZDI Write Data Registers 176
ZDI Write Memory Register 181
ZDI Write Operations 166
ZDI Write-Only Registers 170
ZDI_BUS_STAT 169, 171, 185
ZDI_BUSACK_EN 169
ZDI_BUSAcK_En 185
ZDI—see Zilog Debug Interface 162, 163, 164
ZDI-Supported Protocol 163
Zilog Debug Interface 162, 187
PS015313-0508 Customer Support
eZ80F92/eZ80F93
Product Specification
253
Customer Support
For answers to technical questions about the product, documentation, or any other issues
with Zilog’s offerings, please visit Zilog’s Knowledge Base at http://www.zilog.com/kb.
For any comments, detail technical questions, or reporting problems, please visit Zilog’s
Technical Support at http://support.zilog.com.