FDC37C935 [SMSC]
Multifunction Peripheral, CMOS, PQFP16, QFP-160;型号: | FDC37C935 |
厂家: | SMSC CORPORATION |
描述: | Multifunction Peripheral, CMOS, PQFP16, QFP-160 时钟 PC |
文件: | 总202页 (文件大小:566K) |
中文: | 中文翻译 | 下载: | 下载PDF数据表文档文件 |
FDC37C93x
Plug and Play Compatible Ultra I/OÔ Controller
FEATURES
·
·
5 Volt Operation
ISA Plug-and-Play Standard (Version 1.0a)
Compatible Register Set
·
Licensed CMOS 765B Floppy Disk
Controller Core
-
-
-
-
Supports Vertical Recording Format
16 Byte Data FIFO
100% IBM® Compatibility
Detects All Overrun and Underrun
Conditions
·
8042 Keyboard Controller
-
-
-
2K Program ROM
256 Bytes Data RAM
Asynchronous Access to Two Data
Registers and One Status Register
Supports Interrupt and Polling Access
8 Bit Timer/Counter
-
48 mA Drivers and Schmitt Trigger
Inputs
-
-
-
-
DMA Enable Logic
Data Rate and Drive Control Registers
·
Real Time Clock
·
·
Enhanced Digital Data Separator
-
-
MC146818 and DS1287 Compatible
256 Bytes of Battery Backed CMOS in
Two Banks of 128 Bytes
-
-
-
Low Cost Implementation
No Filter Components Required
2 Mbps, 1 Mbps, 500 Kbps, 300 Kbps,
250 Kbps Data Rates
-
128 Bytes of CMOS RAM Lockable in
4x32 Byte Blocks
-
Programmable Precompensation Modes
-
-
-
12 and 24 Hour Time Format
Binary and BCD Format
1ma Standby Current (typ)
Serial Ports
-
-
-
Relocatable to 480 Different Addresses
13 IRQ Options
Two High Speed NS16C550 Compatible
UARTs with Send/Receive 16 Byte
FIFOs
·
·
Intelligent Auto Power Management
2.88MB Super I/O Floppy Disk Controller
-
-
-
-
Relocatable to 480 Different Addresses
13 IRQ Options
4 DMA Options
Licensed CMOS 765B Floppy Disk
Controller
-
-
Programmable Baud Rate Generator
Modem Control Circuitry Including 230K
and 460K Baud
-
IrDA, HP-SIR, ASK-IR Support
-
-
Advanced Digital Data Separator
Software and Register Compatible with
SMSC's Proprietary 82077AA
Compatible Core
·
IDE Interface
-
-
Relocatable to 480 Different Addresses
13 IRQ Options (IRQ Steering through
chip)
-
Sophisticated Power Control Circuitry
(PCC) Including Multiple Powerdown
Modes for Reduced Power Consumption
Game Port Select Logic
Supports Two Floppy Drives Directly
24 mA AT Bus Drivers
-
-
Two Channel/Four Drive Support
On-Chip Decode and Select Logic
Compatible with IBM PC/XT® and
PC/AT® Embedded Hard Disk Drives
-
-
-
-
·
·
Serial EEPROM Interface
Multi-ModeÔ Parallel Port with ChiProtectÔ
Low Power CMOS Design
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FEATURES ........................................................................................................................................1
GENERAL DESCRIPTION..................................................................................................................3
PIN CONFIGURATION.......................................................................................................................4
DESCRIPTION OF PIN FUNCTIONS .................................................................................................5
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION..........................................................................................................11
SUPER I/O REGISTERS ..................................................................................................................11
HOST PROCESSOR INTERFACE....................................................................................................11
FLOPPY DISK CONTROLLER .........................................................................................................12
FDC INTERNAL REGISTERS...........................................................................................................12
COMMAND SET/DESCRIPTIONS....................................................................................................36
INSTRUCTION SET .........................................................................................................................40
SERIAL PORT (UART).....................................................................................................................66
INFRARED INTERFACE...................................................................................................................80
PARALLEL PORT.............................................................................................................................81
IBM XT/AT COMPATIBLE, BI-DIRECTIONAL AND EPP MODES ....................................................83
EXTENDED CAPABILITIES PARALLEL PORT.................................................................................89
AUTO POWER MANAGEMENT .....................................................................................................102
INTEGRATED DRIVE ELECTRONICS INTERFACE .......................................................................107
HOST FILE REGISTERS................................................................................................................107
TASK FILE REGISTERS ................................................................................................................107
IDE OUTPUT ENABLES.................................................................................................................108
BIOS BUFFER................................................................................................................................109
GENERAL PURPOSE I/O FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION ...............................................................111
8042 KEYBOARD CONTROLLER AND REAL TIME CLOCK FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION...........122
CONFIGURATION..........................................................................................................................137
OPERATIONAL DESCRIPTION......................................................................................................170
MAXIMUM GUARANTEED RATINGS*............................................................................................170
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS ..........................................................................................170
TIMING DIAGRAMS.......................................................................................................................174
ECP PARALLEL PORT TIMING......................................................................................................196
FDC37C93x ERRATA SHEET.........................................................................................................201
80 Arkay Dr.
Hauppauge, NY. 11788
(516) 435-6000
FAX (516) 273-3123
2
-
-
-
-
-
Relocatable to 480 Different Addresses
13 IRQ Options
4 DMA Options
Enhanced Mode
Standard Mode:
-
-
High Speed Mode
Microsoft and Hewlett Packard
Extended Capabilities Port (ECP)
Compatible (IEEE 1284 Compliant)
-
-
Incorporates ChiProtectÔ Circuitry for
Protection Against Damage Due to
Printer Power-On
-
IBM PC/XT, PC/AT, and PS/2Ô
Compatible Bidirectional Parallel Port
Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP)
Compatible - EPP 1.7 and EPP 1.9
(IEEE 1284 Compliant)
-
12 mA Output Drivers
·
·
·
ISA Host Interface
16 Bit Address Qualification
160 Pin QFP Package
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
keyboard The FDC37C93x provides support for the ISA
The FDC37C93x incorporates
a
interface, real-time clock, SMSC's true CMOS
765B floppy disk controller, advanced digital
data separator, 16 byte data FIFO, two 16C550
compatible UARTs, one Multi-Mode parallel port
which includes ChiProtect circuitry plus EPP
and ECP support, IDE interface, on-chip 24 mA
AT bus drivers, game port chip select and two
floppy direct drive support. The true CMOS
765B core provides 100% compatibility with IBM
PC/XT and PC/AT architectures in addition to
providing data overflow and underflow
protection. The SMSC advanced digital data
separator incorporates SMSC's patented data
separator technology, allowing for ease of
testing and use. Both on-chip UARTs are
compatible with the NS16C550. The parallel
port, the IDE interface, and the game port select
logic are compatible with IBM PC/AT
architecture, as well as EPP and ECP. The
FDC37C93x incorporates sophisticated power
control circuitry (PCC). The PCC supports
multiple low power down modes.
Plug-and-Play Standard (Version 1.0a) and
provides for the recommended functionality to
support Windows '95. Through internal
configuration
registers,
each
of
the
FDC37C93x's logical device's I/O address, DMA
channel and IRQ channel may be programmed.
There are 480 I/O address location options, 13
IRQ options, and three DMA channel options for
each logical device.
The FDC37C93x does not require any external
filter components and is, therefore, easy to use
and offers lower system cost and reduced board
area. The FDC37C93x is software and register
compatible with SMSC's proprietary 82077AA
core.
IBM, PC/XT and PC/AT are registered trademarks and PS/2 is
a trademark of International Business Machines Corporation
SMSC is a registered trademark and Ultra I/O, ChiProtect, and
Multi-Mode are trademarks of Standard Microsystems
Corporation
3
PIN CONFIGURATION
GND
DRVDEN0
DRVDEN1
nMTR0
nROMDIR
nROMCS
RD7
RD6
RD5
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
120
119
118
117
116
115
114
113
112
111
nDS1
nDS0
nMTR1
GND
nDIR
RD4
RD3
RD2
RD1
nSTEP
RD0
nWDATA
nWGATE
nHDSEL
nINDEX
nTRK0
nWRTPRT
nRDATA
nDSKCHG
MEDIA_ID1
mEDIA_ID0
VCC
GP25
GP24
GP23
GP22
GP21
GP20
GP17
GP16
GP15
VCC
GP14
GP13
GP12
GP11
GP10
GND
MCLK
MDAT
KCLK
KDAT
IOCHRDY
TC
DRQ3
nDACK3
DRQ2
nDACK2
DRQ1
nDACK1
DRQ0
nDACK0
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
110
109
108
107
106
105
104
103
102
101
100
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
91
FDC37C93x
160 Pin QFP
CLOCKI
nIDE1_OE
nHDCS0
nHDCS1
IDE1_IRQ
nHDCS2/SA13
nHDCS3/SA14
IDE2_IRQ/SA15
nIOROP
nIOWOP
A2
90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
A1
A0
24CLK
16CLK
CLK01
CLK02
CLK03
GND
82
81
4
DESCRIPTION OF PIN FUNCTIONS
NAME SYMBOL
PROCESSOR/HOST INTERFACE
SD[0:7]
PIN NO.
BUFFER TYPE
72:79
41:52
53
System Data Bus
I/O24
System Address Bus
SA[0:11]
nCS
I
Chip Select/SA12 (Active Low)(Note 1)
Address Enable (DMA master has bus control)
I/O Channel Ready
I
I
70
AEN
90
IOCHRDY
RESET_DRV
OD24
IS
80
Reset Drive
67:61,
59:54
Interrupt Requests [1,3:12,14,15]
(Polarity control for IRQ8)
IRQ[1,3:12,
14,15]
OD24
82,84,
86,88
DMA Requests
DRQ[0:3]
O24
I
81,83,
85,87
DMA Acknowledge
nDACK[0:3]
89
68
69
35
36
22
37
38
39
Terminal Count
TC
I
I/O Read
nIOR
I
I/O Write
nIOW
24CLK
16CLK
CLOCKI
CLKO1
CLKO2
CLKO3
I
Serial Clock Out (24 MHz)
16 MHz Out
08SR
08SR
ICLK
O16SR
08SR
08SR
14.318MHz Clock Input
14.318MHz Clock Output 1
14.318MHz Clock Output 2
14.318MHz Clock Output 3
POWER PINS
21, 60,
101, 125,
139
+5V Supply Voltage
VCC
GND
1, 8, 40, Ground
71, 95,
123, 130
FDD INTERFACE
17
12
11
Read Disk Data
nRDATA
nWGATE
nWDATA
IS
Write Gate
OD48
OD48
Write Disk Data
5
DESCRIPTION OF PIN FUNCTIONS
NAME SYMBOL
Head Select (1 = side 0 ) nHDSEL
PIN NO.
13
BUFFER TYPE
OD48
OD48
OD48
IS
9
Step Direction (1 = out )
Step Pulse
nDIR
10
nSTEP
18
Disk Change
nDSKCHG
nDS[1:0]
nMTR[1:0]
nWPROT
nTR0
5,6
7,4
16
Drive Select Lines
Motor On Lines
Write Protected
Track 0
OD48
OD48
IS
15
IS
14
Index Pulse Input
Drive Density Select [1:0]
nINDEX
DRVDEN [1:0]
MID[1:0]
IS
3,2
19,20
OD48
IS
Media ID inputs. In floppy enhanced mode 2
these inputs are the media ID [1:0] inputs.
SERIAL PORT 1 INTERFACE
145
146
148
149
150
147
152
151
Receive Serial Data 1
Transmit Serial Data 1
Request to Send 1
Clear to Send 1
RXD1
TXD1
I
O4
nRTS1
nCTS1
nDTR1
nDSR1
nDCD1
nRI1
O4
I
Data Terminal Ready 1
Data Set Ready 1
O4
I
I
I
Data Carrier Detect 1
Ring Indicator 1
SERIAL PORT 2 INTERFACE
155
156
158
159
160
157
154
153
Receive Serial Data 2
Transmit Serial Data 2
Request to Send 2
Clear to Send 2
RXD2
TXD2
I
O4
nRTS2
nCTS2
nDTR2
nDSR2
nDCD2
nRI2
O4
I
Data Terminal Ready 2
Data Set Ready 2
O4
I
I
I
Data Carrier Detect 2
Ring Indicator 2
IDE1 INTERFACE
6
DESCRIPTION OF PIN FUNCTIONS
PIN NO.
23
NAME
SYMBOL
nIDE1_OE
nHDCS0
nHDCS1
nIOROP
nIOWOP
A[2:0]
BUFFER TYPE
IDE1 Enable
O4
O24
O24
024
024
024
I
24
IDE1 Chip Select 0
IDE1 Chip Select 1
IOR Output
25
30
31
IOW Output
32:34
26
Address [2:0] Output
IDE1 Interrupt Request
IDE1_IRQ
IDE2 INTERFACE
27
28
29
IDE2 Chip Select 2/SA13 (Note 3)
IDE2 Chip Select 3/SA14 (Note 3)
IDE2 Interrupt Request/SA15
nHDCS2
nHDCS3
IDE2_IRQ
I/O24
I/O24
I
PARALLEL PORT INTERFACE
138:131 Parallel Port Data Bus
PD[0:7]
nSLCTIN
nINIT
I/OP24
140
141
143
144
128
129
127
126
142
Printer Select
OD24/OP24
Initiate Output
Auto Line Feed
Strobe Signal
OD24/OP24
nALF
OD24/OP24
nSTB
OD24/OP24
Busy Signal
BUSY
nACK
PE
I
I
I
I
I
Acknowledge Handshake
Paper End
Printer Selected
Error at Printer
SLCT
nERROR
REAL-TIME CLOCK
KEYBOARD/MOUSE
122
124
121
32Khz Crystal Input
32Khz Crystal Output
Battery Voltage
XTAL1
XTAL2
Vbat
ICLK2
OCLK2
91
92
93
Keyboard Data
Keyboard Clock
Mouse Data
KDAT
KCLK
MDAT
I/OD16P
I/OD16P
I/OD16P
7
DESCRIPTION OF PIN FUNCTIONS
NAME SYMBOL
MCLK
GENERAL PURPOSE I/O
PIN NO.
BUFFER TYPE
94
Mouse Clock
I/OD16P
96
97
GP I/O; IRQ in
GP I/O; IRQ in
GP10
GP11
GP12
GP13
GP14
GP15
GP16
GP17
GP20
GP21
GP22
GP23
GP24
GP25
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O24
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
I/O4
98
GP I/O; WD Timer Output /IRRX
GP I/O; Power Led output /IRTX
GP I/O; GP Address Decode
GP I/O; GP Write Strobe
99
100
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
GP I/O; JOY Read Strobe/JOYCS
GP I/O; Joy Write Strobe
GP I/O; IDE2 Output Enable/8042 P20
GP I/O; Serial EEPROM Data In
GP I/O; Serial EEPROM Data Out
GP I/O; Serial EEPROM Clock
GP I/O; Serial EEPROM Enable
GP I/O; 8042 P21
BIOS BUFFERS
111:118 ROM Bus (I/O to the SD Bus)
RD[0:7]
I/O4
119
120
ROM Chip Select (only used for ROM)
ROM Output Enable (DIR) (only used for ROM)
nROMCS
nROMDIR
I
I
Note 1:
nCS -This pin is the active low chip select, it must be low for all chip accesses. For 12 bit
addressing, SA0:SA11, this input should be tied to GND. For 16 bit address qualification,
address bits SA12:SA15 can be "ORed" together and applied to this pin. If IDE2 is not
used, SA12 can be connected to nCS, pin 27 to SA13, pin 28 to SA14 and pin 29 to SA15.
nYY - The "n" as the first letter of a signal name indicates an "Active Low" signal.
nHDCS2 and nHDCS3 require a pull-up to ensure a logic high at power-up when used for
IDE2 until the Active Bit is set to 1.
Note 2:
Note 3:
8
Buffer Type Descriptions
I
IS
Input, TTL compatible.
Input with Schmitt trigger.
I/OD16P Input/Output, 16mA sink, 90uA pull-up.
I/O24
I/O4
Input/Output, 24mA sink, 12mA source.
Input/Output, 4mA sink, 2mA source
O4
Output, 4mA sink, 2mA source.
O8SR
Output, 8mA sink, 4mA source with Slew Rate Limiting
O16SR Output, 16mA sink, 8mA source with Slew Rate Limiting
O24
Output, 24mA sink, 12mA source.
Output, Open Drain, 24mA sink.
Output, Open Drain, 48mA sink.
Output, 24mA sink, 12mA source.
Input/Output, 24mA sink, 12mA source, 90mA pull-up
Clock Input
OD24
OD48
OP24
I/OP24
ICLK
ICLK2
Clock Input
OCLK2 Clock Output
9
nGPA
nGPCS*
5 V
Vcc (5)
nGPWR*
Vss (7)
nROMDIR
nROMCS
RD[0:7]
BIOS
BUFFER
POWER
MANAGEMENT
DECODER
PD0-7
MULTI-MODE
PARALLEL
PORT/FDC
MUX
BUSY, SLCT, PE,
nERROR, nACK
DATA BUS
nSTROBE, nSLCTIN,
nINIT, nAUTOFD
GP1[0:7]*
GP2[0:5]*
DATAIN*
DATAOUT*
ADDRESS BUS
GENERAL
PURPOSE
I/O
SERIAL
EEPROM
CLK*, ENABLE*
CONFIGURATION
REGISTERS
TXD1, nCTS1, nRTS1
16C550
COMPATIBLE
SERIAL
nIDE_ACK
nIOR
RXD1
nDSR1, nDCD1, nRI1, nDTR1
PORT 1
CONTROL BUS
nIOW
AEN
IRRX*, IRTX*
WDATA
16C550
COMPATIBLE
SERIAL
PORT 2 WITH
INFRARED
SA[0:12]
SA[13-15]
SD[O:7]
TXD2(IRTX), nCTS2, nRTS2
WCLOCK
HOST
CPU
RXD2(IRRX)
nDSR2, nDCD2, nRI2, nDTR2
SMSC
PROPRIETARY
DIGITAL
DATA
SEPARATOR
WITH WRITE
PRECOM-
INTERFACE
nHDCS2,3
82077 COMPATIBLE
VERTICAL
IDE2
OPTIONAL
IDE2_IRQ
IDE1_IRQ
DRQ[0:3]
FLOPPYDISK
CONTROLLER
CORE
PENSATION
nIDE_DMA_ACK
nDACK[0:3]
nIDE1_OE
nIOWOP
nIOROP
IDE
RCLOCK
RDATA
INTERFACE
TC
IRQ[1,3-12,14,15]
RESET_DRV
nHDCS0, nHDCS1
A[2:0]
CLOCK
GEN
KBCLK
KBDATA
MSCLK
MSDATA
P21*
8042
RTC
DENSEL
nDIR
nINDEX
nTRK0
nDS0,1
nMTR0,1
IOCHRDY
nWDATA nRDATA
nDSKCHG nSTEP DRVDEN0
XTAL1,2
VBAT
nHDSEL
nWRPRT
nWGATE
DRVDEN1
MID0
CLK 1
(14.318)
MID1
24CLK
16CLK
CLK0[1:3]
(14.318)
*Multi-Function I/O Pin - Optional
FIGURE 1 - FDC37C93x BLOCK DIAGRAM
10
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
SUPER I/O REGISTERS
HOST PROCESSOR INTERFACE
The address map, shown below in Table 1,
shows the addresses of the different blocks of
the Super I/O immediately after power up. The
base addresses of the FDC, IDE, serial and
parallel ports can be moved via the
configuration registers. Some addresses are
used to access more than one register.
The host processor communicates with the
FDC37C93x through a series of read/write
registers. The port addresses for these registers
are shown in Table 1. Register access is
accomplished through programmed I/O or DMA
transfers. All registers are 8 bits wide except
the IDE data register at port 1F0H which is 16
bits wide. All host interface output buffers are
capable of sinking a minimum of 12 mA.
Table 1 - Super I/O Block Addresses
LOGICAL
DEVICE
ADDRESS
Base+(0-5) and +(7)
Base+(0-7)
BLOCK NAME
NOTES
Floppy Disk
0
4
5
3
Serial Port Com 1
Serial Port Com 2
Base+(0-7)
IR Support
Parallel Port
SPP
Base+(0-3)
Base+(0-7)
EPP
Base+(0-3), +(400-402)
Base+(0-7), +(400-402)
ECP
ECP+EPP+SPP
Base1+(0-7), Base2+(0)
Base1+(0-7), Base2+(0)
IDE 1
IDE 2
1
2
Note 1:
Refer to the configuration register descriptions for setting the base address
11
FLOPPY DISK CONTROLLER
FDC INTERNAL REGISTERS
The Floppy Disk Controller (FDC) provides the
interface between a host microprocessor and
the floppy disk drives. The FDC integrates the
functions of the Formatter/Controller, Digital
Data Separator, Write Precompensation and
Data Rate Selection logic for an IBM XT/AT
compatible FDC. The true CMOS 765B core
guarantees 100% IBM PC XT/AT compatibility
in addition to providing data overflow and
underflow protection.
The Floppy Disk Controller contains eight
internal registers which facilitate the interfacing
between the host microprocessor and the disk
drive. Table 2 shows the addresses required to
access these registers. Registers other than the
ones shown are not supported. The rest of the
description assumes that the primary addresses
have been selected.
The FDC is compatible to the 82077AA using
SMSC's proprietary floppy disk controller core.
Table 2 - Status, Data and Control Registers
(Shown with base addresses of 3F0 and 370)
SECONDARY
PRIMARY
ADDRESS
ADDRESS
REGISTER
3F0
3F1
3F2
3F3
3F4
3F4
3F5
3F6
3F7
3F7
370
371
372
373
374
374
375
376
377
377
R
R
R/W
R/W
R
Status Register A
Status Register B
SRA
SRB
DOR
TSR
MSR
DSR
FIFO
Digital Output Register
Tape Drive Register
Main Status Register
Data Rate Select Register
Data (FIFO)
Reserved
Digital Input Register
Configuration Control Register
W
R/W
R
W
DIR
CCR
12
interface pins in PS/2 and Model 30 modes.
The SRA can be accessed at any time when in
PS/2 mode. In the PC/AT mode the data bus
pins D0 - D7 are held in a high impedance state
for a read of address 3F0.
STATUS REGISTER A (SRA)
Address 3F0 READ ONLY
This register is read-only and monitors the state
of
the FINTR pin and several disk
PS/2 Mode
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
INT
nDRV2 STEP nTRK0 HDSEL nINDX nWP
DIR
PENDING
RESET
0
N/A N/A N/A N/A
0
0
0
COND.
BIT 0 DIRECTION
BIT 4 nTRACK 0
Active high status indicating the direction of
head movement. A logic "1" indicates inward
direction; a logic "0" indicates outward direction.
Active low status of the TRK0 disk interface
input.
BIT 5 STEP
BIT 1 nWRITE PROTECT
Active high status of the STEP output disk
interface output pin.
Active low status of the WRITE PROTECT disk
interface input. A logic "0" indicates that the disk
is write protected.
BIT 6 nDRV2
Active low status of the DRV2 disk interface
input pin, indicating that a second drive has
been installed.
BIT 2 nINDEX
Active low status of the INDEX disk interface
input.
BIT 7 INTERRUPT PENDING
Active high bit indicating the state of the Floppy
Disk Interrupt output.
BIT 3 HEAD SELECT
Active high status of the HDSEL disk interface
input. A logic "1" selects side 1 and a logic "0"
selects side 0.
13
PS/2 Model 30 Mode
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
INT
PENDING
DRQ STEP TRK0 nHDSEL INDX
F/F
WP
nDIR
RESET
COND.
0
0
0
N/A
1
N/A
N/A
1
BIT 0 nDIRECTION
BIT 4 TRACK 0
Active low status indicating the direction of head
movement. logic "0" indicates inward
Active high status of the TRK0 disk interface
input.
A
direction; a logic "1" indicates outward direction.
BIT 5 STEP
BIT 1 WRITE PROTECT
Active high status of the latched STEP disk
interface output pin. This bit is latched with the
STEP output going active, and is cleared with a
read from the DIR register, or with a hardware
or software reset.
Active high status of the WRITE PROTECT disk
interface input. A logic "1" indicates that the disk
is write protected.
BIT 2 INDEX
Active high status of the INDEX disk interface
input.
BIT 6 DMA REQUEST
Active high status of the DRQ output pin.
BIT 3 nHEAD SELECT
BIT 7 INTERRUPT PENDING
Active high bit indicating the state of the Floppy
Disk Interrupt output.
Active low status of the HDSEL disk interface
input. A logic "0" selects side 1 and a logic "1"
selects side 0.
14
Model 30 modes. The SRB can be accessed at
any time when in PS/2 mode. In the PC/AT
mode the data bus pins D0 - D7 are held in a
high impedance state for a read of address 3F1.
STATUS REGISTER B (SRB)
Address F1 READ ONLY
This register is read-only and monitors the state
of several disk interface pins in PS/2 and
PS/2 Mode
7
1
6
1
5
4
3
2
1
0
DRIVE WDATA RDATA WGATE MOT
SEL0 TOGGLE TOGGLE
MOT
EN0
EN1
RESET
COND.
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
BIT 0 MOTOR ENABLE 0
BIT 4 WRITE DATA TOGGLE
Active high status of the MTR0 disk interface
output pin. This bit is low after a hardware reset
and unaffected by a software reset.
Every inactive edge of the WDATA input causes
this bit to change state.
BIT 5 DRIVE SELECT 0
BIT 1 MOTOR ENABLE 1
Reflects the status of the Drive Select 0 bit of
the DOR (address 3F2 bit 0). This bit is cleared
after a hardware reset and it is unaffected by a
software reset.
Active high status of the MTR1 disk interface
output pin. This bit is low after a hardware reset
and unaffected by a software reset.
BIT 2 WRITE GATE
BIT 6 RESERVED
Active high status of the WGATE disk interface
output.
Always read as a logic "1".
BIT 7 RESERVED
BIT 3 READ DATA TOGGLE
Always read as a logic "1".
Every inactive edge of the RDATA input causes
this bit to change state.
15
PS/2 Model 30 Mode
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
nDRV2 nDS1 nDS0 WDATA RDATA WGATE nDS3 nDS2
F/F
F/F
F/F
RESET
COND.
N/A
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
BIT 0 nDRIVE SELECT 2
BIT 4 WRITE DATA
Active low status of the DS2 disk interface
output.
Active high status of the latched WDATA output
signal. This bit is latched by the inactive going
edge of WDATA and is cleared by the read of
the DIR register. This bit is not gated with
WGATE.
BIT 1 nDRIVE SELECT 3
Active low status of the DS3 disk interface
output.
BIT 5 nDRIVE SELECT 0
Active low status of the DS0 disk interface
output.
BIT 2 WRITE GATE
Active high status of the latched WGATE output
signal. This bit is latched by the active going
edge of WGATE and is cleared by the read of
the DIR register.
BIT 6 nDRIVE SELECT 1
Active low status of the DS1 disk interface
output.
BIT 3 READ DATA
Active high status of the latched RDATA output
signal. This bit is latched by the inactive going
edge of RDATA and is cleared by the read of the
DIR register.
BIT 7 nDRV2
Active low status of the DRV2 disk interface
input.
16
also contains the enable for the DMA logic and a
software reset bit. The contents of the DOR are
unaffected by a software reset. The DOR can
be written to at any time.
DIGITAL OUTPUT REGISTER (DOR)
Address 3F2 READ/WRITE
The DOR controls the drive select and motor
enables of the disk interface outputs. It
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MOT
EN3
MOT
EN2
MOT
EN1
MOT DMAEN nRESE DRIVE DRIVE
EN0
T
SEL1
SEL0
RESET
COND.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BIT 0 and 1 DRIVE SELECT
BIT 4 MOTOR ENABLE 0
These two bits are binary encoded for the four
drive selects DS0 -DS3, thereby allowing only
one drive to be selected at one time.
This bit controls the MTR0 disk interface output.
A logic "1" in this bit will cause the output pin to
go active.
BIT 2 nRESET
BIT 5 MOTOR ENABLE 1
A logic "0" written to this bit resets the Floppy
disk controller. This reset will remain active
until a logic "1" is written to this bit. This
software reset does not affect the DSR and CCR
registers, nor does it affect the other bits of the
DOR register. The minimum reset duration
required is 100ns, therefore toggling this bit by
consecutive writes to this register is a valid
method of issuing a software reset.
This bit controls the MTR1 disk interface output.
A logic "1" in this bit will cause the output pin to
go active.
BIT 6 MOTOR ENABLE 2
This bit controls the MTR2 disk interface output.
A logic "1" in this bit will cause the output pin to
go active.
BIT 7 MOTOR ENABLE 3
BIT 3 DMAEN
PC/AT and Model 30 Mode:
This bit controls the MTR3 disk interface output.
A logic "1" in this bit causes the output to go
active.
Writing this bit to logic "1" will enable the DRQ,
nDACK, TC and FINTR outputs. This bit being
a logic "0" will disable the nDACK and TC
inputs, and hold the DRQ and FINTR outputs in
a high impedance state. This bit is a logic "0"
after a reset and in these modes.
Table 3 - Drive Activation Values
DRIVE
DOR VALUE
0
1
2
3
1CH
2DH
4EH
8FH
PS/2 Mode: In this mode the DRQ, nDACK, TC
and FINTR pins are always enabled. During a
reset, the DRQ, nDACK, TC, and FINTR pins
will remain enabled, but this bit will be cleared to
a logic "0".
17
TAPE DRIVE REGISTER (TDR)
Address 3F3 READ/WRITE
Table 4- Tape Select Bits
DRIVE
SELECTED
This register is included for 82077 software
compatability. The robust digital data separator
used in the FDC does not require its
characteristics modified for tape support. The
contents of this register are not used internal to
TAPE SEL1
TAPE SEL2
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
None
1
2
3
the device.
The TDR is unaffected by a
Bits 2-7 are tri-stated when
software reset.
read in this mode.
Table 5 - Internal 2 Drive Decode - Normal
DIGITAL OUTPUT REGISTER
DRIVE SELECT OUTPUTS
(ACTIVE LOW)
MOTOR ON OUTPUTS
(ACTIVE LOW)
Bit 7
X
Bit 6
X
Bit 5
X
Bit 4
1
Bit1
0
Bit 0
nDS1
nDS0
nMTR1
nMTR0
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
0
1
0
1
X
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
X
X
1
X
0
X
1
X
X
1
1
X
X
X
1
0
0
0
0
X
Table 6 - Internal 2 Drive Decode - Drives 0 and 1 Swapped
DIGITAL OUTPUT REGISTER
DRIVE SELECT OUTPUTS
(ACTIVE LOW)
MOTOR ON OUTPUTS
(ACTIVE LOW)
Bit 7
X
Bit 6
X
Bit 5
X
Bit 4
1
Bit1
0
Bit 0
nDS1
nDS0
nMTR1
nMTR0
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
nBIT 5
0
1
0
1
X
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
nBIT 4
X
X
1
X
0
X
1
X
X
1
1
X
X
X
1
0
0
0
0
X
18
Normal Floppy Mode
Normal mode. Register 3F3 contains only bits 0 and 1. When this register is read, bits 2 - 7 are a
high impedance.
DB7
DB6
DB5
DB4
DB3
DB2
DB1
DB0
REG 3F3 Tri-state Tri-state Tri-state Tri-state Tri-state Tri-state tape sel1 tape sel0
Enhanced Floppy Mode 2 (OS2)
Register 3F3 for Enhanced Floppy Mode 2 operation.
DB7
DB6
DB5
DB4
DB3
DB2
DB1
DB0
REG 3F3
Media
ID1
Media
ID0
Drive Type ID
Floppy Boot Drive
tape sel1 tape sel0
For this mode, MEDIA_ID[1:0] pins are gated
into bits 6 and 7 of the 3F3 register. These two
bits are not affected by a hard or soft reset.
two bits these are depends on the last drive
selected in the Digital Output Register (3F2).
(See Table 9)
BIT 7 MEDIA ID 1 READ ONLY (Pin 19) (See
Table 7)
Note: L0-CRF1-B5
=
Logical Device 0,
Configuration Register F1, Bit 5
BIT 6 MEDIA ID 0 READ ONLY (Pin 20) (See
Table 8)
BITS 3 and 2 Floppy Boot Drive - These bits
reflect the value of L0-CRF1. Bit 3 = L0-CRF1-
B7. Bit 2 = L0-CRF1-B6.
BITS 5 and 4 Drive Type ID - These bits reflect
two of the bits of L0-CRF1. Which
Bits
(READ/WRITE).
Enhanced Floppy Mode. 1.
1
and
0
-
Tape Drive Select
Same as in Normal and
Table 9 - Drive Type ID
Table 8 - Media ID0
Table 7 - Media ID1
MEDIA ID1
Input
MEDIA ID0
Input
BIT 6
BIT 7
Pin 20
CRF1-B4
CRF1-B4
= 1
Pin 19
L0-CRF1-B5 L0-CRF1-B5
= 0
= 0
= 1
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
19
Digital Output Register
Register 3F3 - Drive Type ID
Bit 1
Bit 0
Bit 5
Bit 4
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
L0-CRF2 - B1
L0-CRF2 - B3
L0-CRF2 - B5
L0-CRF2 - B7
L0-CRF2 - B0
L0-CRF2 - B2
L0-CRF2 - B4
L0-CRF2 - B6
Note: L0-CRF2-Bx = Logical Device 0, Configuration Register F2, Bit x.
20
and Microchannel applications.
Other
DATA RATE SELECT REGISTER (DSR)
applications can set the data rate in the DSR.
The data rate of the floppy controller is the most
recent write of either the DSR or CCR. The DSR
is unaffected by a software reset. A hardware
reset will set the DSR to 02H, which
corresponds to the default precompensation
setting and 250 Kbps.
Address 3F4 WRITE ONLY
This register is write only. It is used to program
the data rate, amount of write precompensation,
power down status, and software reset. The
data
rate
is
programmed
using
the
Configuration Control Register (CCR) not the
DSR, for PC/AT and PS/2 Model 30
7
6
5
0
4
3
2
1
0
S/W POWER
RESET DOWN
PRE-
PRE-
PRE- DRATE DRATE
COMP2 COMP1 COMP0 SEL1
SEL0
RESET
COND.
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
come out of manual low power mode after a
software reset or access to the Data Register or
Main Status Register.
BIT 0 and 1 DATA RATE SELECT
These bits control the data rate of the floppy
controller. See Table 11 for the settings
corresponding to the individual data rates. The
data rate select bits are unaffected by a
software reset, and are set to 250 Kbps after a
hardware reset.
BIT 7 SOFTWARE RESET
This active high bit has the same function as the
DOR RESET (DOR bit 2) except that this bit is
self clearing.
BIT
2
through
4
PRECOMPENSATION
Table 10 - Precompensation Delays
SELECT
These three bits select the value of write
precompensation that will be applied to the
WDATA output signal. Table 10 shows the
precompensation values for the combination of
these bits settings. Track 0 is the default
starting track number to start precompensation.
this starting track number can be changed by
the configure command.
PRECOMP
432
PRECOMPENSATION
DELAY (nsec)
<2Mbps
2Mbps
111
001
010
011
100
101
110
000
0.00
0
41.67
83.34
20.8
41.7
62.5
83.3
104.2
125
125.00
166.67
208.33
250.00
Default
BIT 5 UNDEFINED
Should be written as a logic "0".
Default
BIT 6 LOW POWER
Default: See Table 12
A logic "1" written to this bit will put the floppy
controller into manual low power mode. The
floppy controller clock and data separator
circuits will be turned off. The controller will
21
Table 11 - Data Rates
DATA RATE DATA RATE
DRIVE RATE
DRATE(1)
DENSEL
DRT1
DRT0
SEL1 SEL0
MFM
FM
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1Meg
500
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
250
150
125
300
250
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1Meg
500
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
250
250
125
500
250
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1Meg
500
---
250
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
2Meg
250
125
Drive Rate Table (Recommended) 00 = 360K, 1.2M, 720K, 1.44M and 2.88M Vertical Format
01 = 3-Mode Drive
10 = 2 Meg Tape
Note 1:
The DRATE and DENSEL values are mapped onto the DRIVEDEN pins.
Table 12 - DRVDEN Mapping
DRVDEN1
(1)
DRVDEN0
(1)
DT1
DT0
DRIVE TYPE
4/2/1 MB 3.5"
0
0
DRATE0
DENSEL
2/1 MB 5.25" FDDS
2/1.6/1 MB 3.5" (3-MODE)
1
0
1
0
1
1
DRATE0
DRATE0
DRATE1
DRATE1
nDENSEL
DRATE0
PS/2
22
Table 13 - Default Precompensation Delays
PRECOMPENSATION
DATA RATE
DELAYS
2 Mbps
1 Mbps
500 Kbps
300 Kbps
250 Kbps
20.8 ns
41.67 ns
125 ns
125 ns
125 ns
*The 2 Mbps data rate is only available if VCC = 5V.
23
time.
The MSR indicates when the disk
MAIN STATUS REGISTER
controller is ready to receive data via the Data
Register. It should be read before each byte
transferring to or from the data register except in
DMA mode. No delay is required when reading
the MSR after a data transfer.
Address 3F4 READ ONLY
The Main Status Register is a read-only register
and indicates the status of the disk controller.
The Main Status Register can be read at any
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RQM
DIO
NON
DMA
CMD
BUSY
DRV3
BUSY
DRV2
BUSY
DRV1
BUSY
DRV0
BUSY
BIT 0 - 3 DRV x BUSY
BIT 5 NON-DMA
These bits are set to 1s when a drive is in the
seek portion of a command, including implied
and overlapped seeks and recalibrates.
This mode is selected in the SPECIFY
command and will be set to a 1 during the
execution phase of a command. This is for
polled data transfers and helps differentiate
between the data transfer phase and the reading
of result bytes.
BIT 4 COMMAND BUSY
This bit is set to a 1 when a command is in
progress. This bit will go active after the
command byte has been accepted and goes
inactive at the end of the results phase. If there
is no result phase (Seek, Recalibrate
commands), this bit is returned to a 0 after the
last command byte.
BIT 6 DIO
Indicates the direction of a data transfer once a
RQM is set. A 1 indicates a read and a 0
indicates a write is required.
BIT 7 RQM
Indicates that the host can transfer data if set to
a 1. No access is permitted if set to a 0.
24
FIFO. The data is based upon the following
formula:
DATA REGISTER (FIFO)
Address 3F5 READ/WRITE
All command parameter information, disk data
and result status are transferred between the
host processor and the floppy disk controller
through the Data Register. Data transfers are
governed by the RQM and DIO bits in the Main
Status Register.
u
-1.5 s = DELAY
Threshold # x
1 x 8
DATA RATE
At the start of a command, the FIFO action is
always disabled and command parameters
must be sent based upon the RQM and DIO bit
settings. As the command execution phase is
entered, the FIFO is cleared of any data to
ensure that invalid data is not transferred.
The Data Register defaults to FIFO disabled
mode after any form of reset. This maintains
PC/AT hardware compatibility.
The default
An overrun or underrun will terminate the
current command and the transfer of data. Disk
writes will complete the current sector by
generating a 00 pattern and valid CRC. Reads
require the host to remove the remaining data
so that the result phase may be entered.
values can be changed through the Configure
command (enable full FIFO operation with
threshold control). The advantage of the FIFO
is that it allows the system a larger DMA
latency without causing a disk error. Table 14
gives several examples of the delays with a
Table 14 - FIFO Service Delay
FIFO THRESHOLD
EXAMPLES
MAXIMUM DELAY TO SERVICING
AT 2 Mbps* DATA RATE
1 byte
2 bytes
8 bytes
15 bytes
1 x 4 ms - 1.5 ms = 2.5 ms
2 x 4 ms - 1.5 ms = 6.5 ms
8 x 4 ms - 1.5 ms = 30.5 ms
15 x 4 ms - 1.5 ms = 58.5 ms
FIFO THRESHOLD
EXAMPLES
MAXIMUM DELAY TO SERVICING
AT 1 Mbps DATA RATE
1 byte
2 bytes
8 bytes
15 bytes
1 x 8 ms - 1.5 ms = 6.5 ms
2 x 8 ms - 1.5 ms = 14.5 ms
8 x 8 ms - 1.5 ms = 62.5 ms
15 x 8 ms - 1.5 ms = 118.5 ms
FIFO THRESHOLD
EXAMPLES
MAXIMUM DELAY TO SERVICING
AT 500 Kbps DATA RATE
1 byte
2 bytes
8 bytes
15 bytes
1 x 16 ms - 1.5 ms = 14.5 ms
2 x 16 ms - 1.5 ms = 30.5 ms
8 x 16 ms - 1.5 ms = 126.5 ms
15 x 16 ms - 1.5 ms = 238.5 ms
*The 2 Mbps data rate is only available if VCC = 5V.
25
DIGITAL INPUT REGISTER (DIR)
Address 3F7 READ ONLY
This register is read-only in all modes.
PC-AT Mode
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
DSK
CHG
RESET
COND.
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
BIT 0 - 6 UNDEFINED
BIT 7 DSKCHG
The data bus outputs D0 - 6 will remain in a
high impedance state during a read of this
register.
This bit monitors the pin of the same name and
reflects the opposite value seen on the disk
cable.
PS/2 Mode
7
6
1
5
1
4
1
3
1
2
1
0
DSK
CHG
DRATE DRATE nHIGH
SEL1
SEL0 nDENS
RESET
COND.
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
1
software reset, and are set to 250 Kbps after a
hardware reset.
BIT 0 nHIGH DENS
This bit is low whenever the 500 Kbps or 1 Mbps
data rates are selected, and high when 250
Kbps and 300 Kbps are selected.
BITS 3 - 6 UNDEFINED
Always read as a logic "1"
BITS 1 - 2 DATA RATE SELECT
These bits control the data rate of the floppy
BIT 7 DSKCHG
controller.
See Table 11 for the settings
This bit monitors the pin of the same name and
reflects the opposite value seen on the disk
cable.
corresponding to the individual data rates. The
data rate select bits are unaffected by a
26
Model 30 Mode
7
DSK
CHG
6
0
5
0
4
0
3
2
1
0
DMAEN NOPREC DRATE DRATE
SEL1
SEL0
RESET
COND.
N/A
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
BITS 0 - 1 DATA RATE SELECT
These bits control the data rate of the floppy
controller. See Table 11 for the settings
BIT 3 DMAEN
This bit reflects the value of DMAEN bit set in
the DOR register bit 3.
corresponding to the individual data rates. The
data rate select bits are unaffected by a
software reset, and are set to 250 Kbps after a
hardware reset.
BITS 4 - 6 UNDEFINED
Always read as a logic "0"
BIT 7 DSKCHG
This bit monitors the pin of the same name and
reflects the opposite value seen on the pin.
BIT 2 NOPREC
This bit reflects the value of NOPREC bit set in
the CCR register.
27
CONFIGURATION CONTROL REGISTER (CCR)
Address 3F7 WRITE ONLY
PC/AT and PS/2 Modes
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
DRATE DRATE
SEL1
SEL0
RESET
COND.
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
1
0
BIT 0 and 1 DATA RATE SELECT 0 and 1
These bits determine the data rate of the floppy
controller. See Table 11 for the appropriate
values.
BIT 2 - 7 RESERVED
Should be set to a logical "0"
PS/2 Model 30 Mode
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
NOPREC DRATE DRATE
SEL1
SEL0
RESET
COND.
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
1
0
BIT 0 and 1 DATA RATE SELECT 0 and 1
These bits determine the data rate of the floppy
controller. See Table 11 for the appropriate
values.
BIT 3 - 7 RESERVED
Should be set to a logical "0"
Table 12 shows the state of the DENSEL pin.
The DENSEL pin is set high after a hardware
reset and is unaffected by the DOR and the
DSR resets.
BIT 2 NO PRECOMPENSATION
This bit can be set by software, but it has no
functionality. It can be read by bit 2 of the DSR
when in Model 30 register mode. Unaffected by
software reset.
28
STATUS REGISTER ENCODING
During the Result Phase of certain commands, the Data Register contains data bytes that give the
status of the command just executed.
Table 15 - Status Register 0
BIT NO.
SYMBOL
IC
NAME
DESCRIPTION
7,6
Interrupt
Code
00 - Normal termination of command. The specified
command was properly executed and completed
without error.
01 - Abnormal termination of command. Command
execution was started, but was not successfully
completed.
10 - Invalid command. The requested command
could not be executed.
11 - Abnormal termination caused by Polling.
5
4
SE
EC
Seek End
The FDC completed a Seek, Relative Seek or
Recalibrate command (used during a Sense Interrupt
Command).
Equipment
Check
The TRK0 pin failed to become a "1" after:
1. 80 step pulses in the Recalibrate command.
2. The Relative Seek command caused the FDC to
step outward beyond Track 0.
3
2
Unused. This bit is always "0".
The current head address.
H
Head
Address
1,0
DS1,0
Drive Select
The current selected drive.
29
Table 16 - Status Register 1
NAME
End of
BIT NO.
SYMBOL
EN
DESCRIPTION
7
The FDC tried to access a sector beyond the final
sector of the track (255D). Will be set if TC is not
issued after Read or Write Data command.
Cylinder
6
5
Unused. This bit is always "0".
DE
OR
Data Error
The FDC detected a CRC error in either the ID field or
the data field of a sector.
4
Overrun/
Underrun
Becomes set if the FDC does not receive CPU or DMA
service within the required time interval, resulting in
data overrun or underrun.
3
2
Unused. This bit is always "0".
ND
No Data
Any one of the following:
1. Read Data, Read Deleted Data command - the
FDC did not find the specified sector.
2. Read ID command - the FDC cannot read the ID
field without an error.
3. Read A Track command - the FDC cannot find the
proper sector sequence.
1
0
NW
MA
Not Writable WP pin became a "1" while the FDC is executing a
Write Data, Write Deleted Data, or Format A Track
command.
Missing
Any one of the following:
Address Mark 1. The FDC did not detect an ID address mark at the
specified track after encountering the index pulse
from the IDX pin twice.
2. The FDC cannot detect a data address mark or a
deleted data address mark on the specified track.
30
Table 17 - Status Register 2
NAME
BIT NO.
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
Unused. This bit is always "0".
Control Mark Any one of the following:
1. Read Data command - the FDC encountered a
7
6
CM
deleted data address mark.
2. Read Deleted Data command
encountered a data address mark.
-
the FDC
5
4
DD
Data Error in The FDC detected a CRC error in the data field.
Data Field
WC
Wrong
The track address from the sector ID field is different
from the track address maintained inside the FDC.
Cylinder
3
2
1
Unused. This bit is always "0".
Unused. This bit is always "0".
BC
Bad Cylinder The track address from the sector ID field is different
from the track address maintained inside the FDC and
is equal to FF hex, which indicates a bad track with a
hard error according to the IBM soft-sectored format.
0
MD
Missing Data The FDC cannot detect a data address mark or a
Address Mark deleted data address mark.
31
Table 18- Status Register 3
NAME
BIT NO.
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
Unused. This bit is always "0".
7
6
WP
Write
Indicates the status of the WP pin.
Protected
5
4
3
2
Unused. This bit is always "1".
T0
Track 0
Indicates the status of the TRK0 pin.
Unused. This bit is always "1".
HD
Head
Indicates the status of the HDSEL pin.
Address
1,0
DS1,0
Drive Select
Indicates the status of the DS1, DS0 pins.
RESET
DOR Reset vs. DSR Reset (Software Reset)
There are three sources of system reset on the
FDC: the RESET pin of the FDC, a reset
generated via a bit in the DOR, and a reset
generated via a bit in the DSR. At power on, a
Power On Reset initializes the FDC. All resets
take the FDC out of the power down state.
These two resets are functionally the same.
Both will reset the FDC core, which affects drive
status information and the FIFO circuits. The
DSR reset clears itself automatically while the
DOR reset requires the host to manually clear it.
DOR reset has precedence over the DSR reset.
The DOR reset is set automatically upon a pin
reset. The user must manually clear this reset
bit in the DOR to exit the reset state.
All operations are terminated upon a RESET,
and the FDC enters an idle state. A reset while
a disk write is in progress will corrupt the data
and CRC.
MODES OF OPERATION
On exiting the reset state, various internal
registers are cleared, including the Configure
command information, and the FDC waits for a
new command. Drive polling will start unless
disabled by a new Configure command.
The FDC has three modes of operation, PC/AT
mode, PS/2 mode and Model 30 mode. These
are determined by the state of the IDENT and
MFM bits 6 and 5 respectively of CRxx.
PC/AT mode - (IDENT high, MFM a "don't
care")
RESET Pin (Hardware Reset)
The PC/AT register set is enabled, the DMA
enable bit of the DOR becomes valid (FINTR
and DRQ can be hi Z), and TC and DENSEL
The RESET pin is a global reset and clears all
registers except those programmed by the
Specify command.
The DOR reset bit is
become active high signals.
enabled and must be cleared by the host to exit
the reset state.
32
command phase is complete. (Please refer to
Table 19 for the command set descriptions.)
These bytes of data must be transferred in the
order prescribed.
PS/2 mode - (IDENT low, MFM high)
This mode supports the PS/2 models 50/60/80
configuration and register set. The DMA bit of
the DOR becomes a "don't care", (FINTR and
DRQ are always valid), TC and DENSEL
become active low.
Before writing to the FDC, the host must
examine the RQM and DIO bits of the Main
Status Register. RQM and DIO must be equal
to "1" and "0" respectively before command
bytes may be written. RQM is set false by the
FDC after each write cycle until the received
byte is processed. The FDC asserts RQM again
to request each parameter byte of the command
unless an illegal command condition is
Model 30 mode - (IDENT low, MFM low)
This mode supports PS/2 Model 30
configuration and register set. The DMA enable
bit of ther DOR becomes valid (FINTR and DRQ
can be hi Z), TC is active high and DENSEL is
active low.
detected.
After the last parameter byte is
DMA TRANSFERS
received, RQM remains "0" and the FDC
automatically enters the next phase as defined
by the command definition.
DMA transfers are enabled with the Specify
command and are initiated by the FDC by
activating the FDRQ pin during a data transfer
command. The FIFO is enabled directly by
asserting nDACK and addresses need not be
valid.
The FIFO is disabled during the command
phase to provide for the proper handling of the
"Invalid Command" condition.
Execution Phase
Note that if the DMA controller (i.e. 8237A) is
programmed to function in verify mode, a
pseudo read is performed by the FDC based
only on nDACK. This mode is only available
when the FDC has been configured into byte
mode (FIFO disabled) and is programmed to do
a read. With the FIFO enabled, the FDC can
perform the above operation by using the new
Verify command; no DMA operation is needed.
All data transfers to or from the FDC occur
during the execution phase, which can proceed
in DMA or non-DMA mode as indicated in the
Specify command.
After a reset, the FIFO is disabled. Each data
byte is transferred by an FINT or FDRQ
depending on the DMA mode. The Configure
command can enable the FIFO and set the
FIFO threshold value.
CONTROLLER PHASES
For simplicity, command handling in the FDC
can be divided into three phases: Command,
Execution, and Result. Each phase is described
in the following sections.
The following paragraphs detail the operation of
the FIFO flow control. In these descriptions,
<threshold> is defined as the number of bytes
available to the FDC when service is requested
from the host and ranges from 1 to 16. The
parameter FIFOTHR, which the user programs,
is one less and ranges from 0 to 15.
Command Phase
After a reset, the FDC enters the command
phase and is ready to accept a command from
the host. For each of the commands, a defined
set of command code bytes and parameter
bytes has to be written to the FDC before the
33
A low threshold value (i.e. 2) results in longer
periods of time between service requests, but
requires faster servicing of the request for both
read and write cases. The host reads (writes)
from (to) the FIFO until empty (full), then the
transfer request goes inactive. The host must
be very responsive to the service request. This
is the desired case for use with a "fast" system.
DMA Mode - Transfers from the FIFO to the
Host
The FDC activates the DDRQ pin when the
FIFO contains (16 - <threshold>) bytes, or the
last byte of a full sector transfer has been
placed in the FIFO. The DMA controller must
respond to the request by reading data from the
FIFO. The FDC will deactivate the DDRQ pin
when the FIFO becomes empty. FDRQ goes
inactive after nDACK goes active for the last
byte of a data transfer (or on the active edge of
nIOR, on the last byte, if no edge is present on
nDACK). A data underrun may occur if FDRQ
is not removed in time to prevent an unwanted
cycle.
A high value of threshold (i.e. 12) is used with a
"sluggish" system by affording a long latency
period after a service request, but results in
more frequent service requests.
Non-DMA Mode - Transfers from the FIFO to
the Host
The FINT pin and RQM bits in the Main Status
Register are activated when the FIFO contains
(16-<threshold>) bytes or the last bytes of a full
sector have been placed in the FIFO. The FINT
pin can be used for interrupt-driven systems,
and RQM can be used for polled systems. The
host must respond to the request by reading
data from the FIFO. This process is repeated
until the last byte is transferred out of the FIFO.
The FDC will deactivate the FINT pin and RQM
bit when the FIFO becomes empty.
DMA Mode - Transfers from the Host to the
FIFO
The FDC activates the FDRQ pin when entering
the execution phase of the data transfer
commands. The DMA controller must respond
by activating the nDACK and nIOW pins and
placing data in the FIFO. FDRQ remains active
until the FIFO becomes full. FDRQ is again set
true when the FIFO has <threshold> bytes
remaining in the FIFO. The FDC will also
deactivate the FDRQ pin when TC becomes true
(qualified by nDACK), indicating that no more
data is required. FDRQ goes inactive after
nDACK goes active for the last byte of a data
transfer (or on the active edge of nIOW of the
last byte, if no edge is present on nDACK). A
data overrun may occur if FDRQ is not removed
in time to prevent an unwanted cycle.
Non-DMA Mode - Transfers from the Host to the
FIFO
The FINT pin and RQM bit in the Main Status
Register are activated upon entering the
execution phase of data transfer commands.
The host must respond to the request by writing
data into the FIFO. The FINT pin and RQM bit
remain true until the FIFO becomes full. They
are set true again when the FIFO has
<threshold> bytes remaining in the FIFO. The
FINT pin will also be deactivated if TC and
nDACK both go inactive. The FDC enters the
result phase after the last byte is taken by the
FDC from the FIFO (i.e. FIFO empty condition).
Data Transfer Termination
The FDC supports terminal count explicitly
through the TC pin and implicitly through the
underrun/overrun and end-of-track (EOT)
functions. For full sector transfers, the EOT
parameter can define the last sector to be
transferred in a single or multi-sector transfer.
34
If the last sector to be transferred is a partial
sector, the host can stop transferring the data in
mid-sector, and the FDC will continue to
complete the sector as if a hardware TC was
received. The only difference between these
implicit functions and TC is that they return
Result Phase
The generation of FINT determines the
beginning of the result phase. For each of the
commands, a defined set of result bytes has to
be read from the FDC before the result phase is
complete. These bytes of data must be read out
for another command to start.
"abnormal termination" result status.
Such
status indications can be ignored if they were
expected.
RQM and DIO must both equal "1" before the
result bytes may be read. After all the result
bytes have been read, the RQM and DIO bits
switch to "1" and "0" respectively, and the CB bit
is cleared, indicating that the FDC is ready to
accept the next command.
Note that when the host is sending data to the
FIFO of the FDC, the internal sector count will
be complete when the FDC reads the last byte
from its side of the FIFO. There may be a delay
in the removal of the transfer request signal of
up to the time taken for the FDC to read the last
16 bytes from the FIFO. The host must tolerate
this delay.
35
interrupt is issued. The user sends a Sense
Interrupt Status command which returns an
invalid command error. Refer to Table 19 for
explanations of the various symbols used. Table
20 lists the required parameters and the results
associated with each command that the FDC is
capable of performing.
COMMAND SET/DESCRIPTIONS
Commands can be written whenever the FDC is
in the command phase. Each command has a
unique set of needed parameters and status
results. The FDC checks to see that the first
byte is a valid command and, if valid, proceeds
with
the
command.
If it is invalid, an
Table 19 - Description of Command Symbols
NAME DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
C
Cylinder Address The currently selected address; 0 to 255.
Data Pattern The pattern to be written in each sector data field during
D
formatting.
D0, D1, D2, Drive Select 0-3
D3
Designates which drives are perpendicular drives on the
Perpendicular Mode Command. A "1" indicates a perpendicular
drive.
DIR
Direction Control If this bit is 0, then the head will step out from the spindle during a
relative seek. If set to a 1, the head will step in toward the spindle.
DS0, DS1
Disk Drive Select
DS1
DS0
DRIVE
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
drive 0
drive 1
drive 2
drive 3
DTL
Special Sector
Size
By setting N to zero (00), DTL may be used to control the number
of bytes transferred in disk read/write commands. The sector size
(N = 0) is set to 128. If the actual sector (on the diskette) is larger
than DTL, the remainder of the actual sector is read but is not
passed to the host during read commands; during write
commands, the remainder of the actual sector is written with all
zero bytes. The CRC check code is calculated with the actual
sector. When N is not zero, DTL has no meaning and should be
set to FF HEX.
EC
Enable Count
Enable FIFO
When this bit is "1" the "DTL" parameter of the Verify command
becomes SC (number of sectors per track).
EFIFO
EIS
This active low bit when a 0, enables the FIFO. A "1" disables the
FIFO (default).
Enable Implied
Seek
When set, a seek operation will be performed before executing any
read or write command that requires the C parameter in the
command phase. A "0" disables the implied seek.
EOT
End of Track
The final sector number of the current track.
36
Table 19 - Description of Command Symbols
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
GAP
NAME
Alters Gap 2 length when using Perpendicular Mode.
GPL
Gap Length
The Gap 3 size. (Gap 3 is the space between sectors excluding
the VCO synchronization field).
H/HDS
HLT
Head Address
Selected head: 0 or 1 (disk side 0 or 1) as encoded in the sector
ID field.
Head Load Time The time interval that FDC waits after loading the head and before
initializing a read or write operation. Refer to the Specify
command for actual delays.
HUT
Head Unload
Time
The time interval from the end of the execution phase (of a read or
write command) until the head is unloaded. Refer to the Specify
command for actual delays.
LOCK
Lock defines whether EFIFO, FIFOTHR,
and PRETRK
parameters of the CONFIGURE COMMAND can be reset to their
default values by a "software Reset". (A reset caused by writing to
the appropriate bits of either tha DSR or DOR)
MFM
MT
MFM/FM Mode
Selector
A one selects the double density (MFM) mode. A zero selects
single density (FM) mode.
Multi-Track
Selector
When set, this flag selects the multi-track operating mode. In this
mode, the FDC treats a complete cylinder under head 0 and 1 as
a single track. The FDC operates as this expanded track started
at the first sector under head 0 and ended at the last sector under
head 1. With this flag set, a multitrack read or write operation will
automatically continue to the first sector under head 1 when the
FDC finishes operating on the last sector under head 0.
37
Table 19 - Description of Command Symbols
NAME DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
N
Sector Size Code This specifies the number of bytes in a sector. If this parameter is
"00", then the sector size is 128 bytes. The number of bytes
transferred is determined by the DTL parameter. Otherwise the
sector size is (2 raised to the "N'th" power) times 128. All values
up to "07" hex are allowable. "07"h would equal a sector size of
16k. It is the user's responsibility to not select combinations that
are not possible with the drive.
N
SECTOR SIZE
128 bytes
256 bytes
512 bytes
1024 bytes
...
00
01
02
03
..
07
16 Kbytes
NCN
ND
New Cylinder
Number
The desired cylinder number.
Non-DMA Mode
Flag
When set to 1, indicates that the FDC is to operate in the non-
DMA mode. In this mode, the host is interrupted for each data
transfer. When set to 0, the FDC operates in DMA mode,
interfacing to a DMA controller by means of the DRQ and nDACK
signals.
OW
Overwrite
The bits D0-D3 of the Perpendicular Mode Command can only be
modified if OW is set to 1. OW id defined in the Lock command.
PCN
Present Cylinder The current position of the head at the completion of Sense
Number
Interrupt Status command.
POLL
PRETRK
Polling Disable
When set, the internal polling routine is disabled. When clear,
polling is enabled.
Precompensation Programmable from track 00 to FFH.
Start Track
Number
R
Sector Address
The sector number to be read or written. In multi-sector transfers,
this parameter specifies the sector number of the first sector to be
read or written.
RCN
SC
Relative Cylinder Relative cylinder offset from present cylinder as used by the
Number
Relative Seek command.
Number of
The number of sectors per track to be initialized by the Format
Sectors Per Track command. The number of sectors per track to be verified during a
38
Table 19 - Description of Command Symbols
SYMBOL
NAME
DESCRIPTION
Verify command when EC is set.
SK
Skip Flag
When set to 1, sectors containing a deleted data address mark will
automatically be skipped during the execution of Read Data. If
Read Deleted is executed, only sectors with a deleted address
mark will be accessed. When set to "0", the sector is read or
written the same as the read and write commands.
SRT
Step Rate Interval The time interval between step pulses issued by the FDC.
Programmable from 0.5 to 8 milliseconds in increments of 0.5 ms
at the 1 Mbit data rate. Refer to the SPECIFY command for actual
delays.
ST0
ST1
ST2
ST3
Status 0
Status 1
Status 2
Status 3
Registers within the FDC which store status information after a
command has been executed. This status information is available
to the host during the result phase after command execution.
WGATE
Write Gate
Alters timing of WE to allow for pre-erase loads in perpendicular
drives.
39
INSTRUCTION SET
Table 20 - Instruction Set
READ DATA
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
W
W
W
MT MFM SK
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
Command Codes
0
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information prior to
Command execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------- DTL -------
Execution
Result
Data transfer between the
FDD and system.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
40
READ DELETED DATA
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
W
W
W
MT MFM SK
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
Command Codes
0
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information prior to
Command execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------- DTL -------
Execution
Result
Data transfer between the
FDD and system.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
41
WRITE DATA
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
W
W
W
MT MFM
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
Command Codes
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information prior to
Command execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------- DTL -------
Execution
Result
Data transfer between the
FDD and system.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
42
WRITE DELETED DATA
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
MT MFM
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
Command Codes
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
prior to Command
execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------- DTL -------
Execution
Result
Data transfer between
the FDD and system.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
after Command
execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
43
READ A TRACK
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
0
D6
MFM
0
D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
Command Codes
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
prior to Command
execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------- DTL -------
Execution
Result
Data transfer between
the FDD and system.
FDC reads all of
cylinders' contents from
index hole to EOT.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
after Command
execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
44
VERIFY
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
MT MFM SK
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
Command Codes
EC
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
prior to Command
execution.
W
W
W
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
------- EOT -------
------- GPL -------
------ DTL/SC ------
Execution
Result
No data transfer takes
place.
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution.
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
-------- C --------
Sector ID information
after Command
execution.
R
R
R
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
VERSION
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
0
D6
0
D5 D4 D3
D2
0
D1
0
D0
0
Command
Result
W
R
0
0
1
1
0
0
Command Code
1
0
0
0
0
Enhanced Controller
45
FORMAT A TRACK
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
0
D6
MFM
0
D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
Command Codes
0
HDS DS1 DS0
-------- N --------
-------- SC --------
------- GPL -------
-------- D --------
Bytes/Sector
Sectors/Cylinder
Gap 3
Filler Byte
Execution for
Each Sector
Repeat:
W
-------- C --------
Input Sector
Parameters
W
W
W
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
FDC formats an entire
cylinder
Result
R
------- ST0 -------
Status information after
Command execution
R
R
R
R
R
R
------- ST1 -------
------- ST2 -------
------ Undefined ------
------ Undefined ------
------ Undefined ------
------ Undefined ------
46
RECALIBRATE
DATA BUS
PHASE
Command
Execution
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2
D1
D0
W
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
Command Codes
DS1 DS0
Head retracted to Track 0
Interrupt.
SENSE INTERRUPT STATUS
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
Result
W
R
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
Command Codes
------- ST0 -------
Status information at the end
of each seek operation.
R
------- PCN -------
SPECIFY
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Command Codes
--- SRT ---
--- HUT ---
------ HLT ------
ND
47
SENSE DRIVE STATUS
DATA BUS
PHASE
Command
Result
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
W
W
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
Command Codes
HDS DS1 DS0
------- ST3 -------
Status information about
FDD
SEEK
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
Command Codes
HDS DS1 DS0
------- NCN -------
Execution
Head positioned over
proper cylinder on
diskette.
CONFIGURE
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D0
D7 D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
Command
W
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
Configure
Information
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
EIS EFIFO POLL
--- FIFOTHR ---
Execution
--------- PRETRK ---------
48
RELATIVE SEEK
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
Command
W
W
W
1
0
DIR
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
HDS DS1 DS0
------- RCN -------
DUMPREG
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3 D2
D1
D0
Command
W
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
*Note:
Registers
placed in
FIFO
Execution
Result
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
------ PCN-Drive 0 -------
------ PCN-Drive 1 -------
------ PCN-Drive 2 -------
------ PCN-Drive 3 -------
---- SRT ----
------- HLT -------
------- SC/EOT -------
D3 D2 D1 D0
EIS EFIFO POLL
--- HUT ---
ND
LOCK
0
0
GAP WGATE
-- FIFOTHR --
-------- PRETRK --------
49
READ ID
DATA BUS
PHASE
Command
Execution
R/W
REMARKS
Commands
D7
0
D6
MFM
0
D5 D4 D3
D2
D1
D0
W
W
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
HDS DS1 DS0
The first correct ID
information on the
Cylinder is stored in
Data Register
Result
R
-------- ST0 --------
Status information after
Command execution.
Disk status after the
Command has
completed
R
R
R
R
R
R
-------- ST1 --------
-------- ST2 --------
-------- C --------
-------- H --------
-------- R --------
-------- N --------
50
PERPENDICULAR MODE
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
0
D6 D5 D4 D3 D2
D1
D0
Command
W
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
Command Codes
OW
D3 D2 D1 D0
GAP WGATE
INVALID CODES
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
W
----- Invalid Codes -----
Invalid Command Codes
(NoOp - FDC goes into
Standby State)
Result
R
------- ST0 -------
ST0 = 80H
LOCK
DATA BUS
PHASE
R/W
REMARKS
D7
LOCK
0
D6 D5
D4
1
D3 D2 D1 D0
Command
Result
W
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
Command Codes
LOCK
SC is returned if the last command that was issued was the Format command. EOT is returned if the
last command was a Read or Write.
NOTE: These bits are used internally only. They are not reflected in the Drive Select pins. It is the
user's responsibility to maintain correspondence between these bits and the Drive Select pins (DOR).
51
N determines the number of bytes per sector
(see Table 21 below). If N is set to zero, the
sector size is set to 128. The DTL value
determines the number of bytes to be
transferred. If DTL is less than 128, the FDC
transfers the specified number of bytes to the
host. For reads, it continues to read the entire
128-byte sector and checks for CRC errors. For
writes, it completes the 128-byte sector by filling
in zeros. If N is not set to 00 Hex, DTL should
be set to FF Hex and has no impact on the
number of bytes transferred.
DATA TRANSFER COMMANDS
All of the Read Data, Write Data and Verify type
commands use the same parameter bytes and
return the same results information, the only
difference being the coding of bits 0-4 in the first
byte.
An implied seek will be executed if the feature
was enabled by the Configure command. This
seek is completely transparent to the user. The
Drive Busy bit for the drive will go active in the
Main Status Register during the seek portion of
the command. If the seek portion fails, it will be
reflected in the results status normally returned
Table 21 - Sector Sizes
N
SECTOR SIZE
for
a
Read/Write Data command. Status
Register 0 (ST0) would contain the error code
and C would contain the cylinder on which the
seek failed.
00
01
02
03
..
128 bytes
256 bytes
512 bytes
1024 bytes
...
Read Data
07
16 Kbytes
A set of nine (9) bytes is required to place the
FDC in the Read Data Mode. After the Read
Data command has been issued, the FDC loads
the head (if it is in the unloaded state), waits the
specified head settling time (defined in the
Specify command), and begins reading ID
Address Marks and ID fields. When the sector
address read off the diskette matches with the
sector address specified in the command, the
FDC reads the sector's data field and transfers
the data to the FIFO.
The amount of data which can be handled with
a single command to the FDC depends upon
MT (multi-track) and N (number of bytes/sector).
The Multi-Track function (MT) allows the FDC to
read data from both sides of the diskette. For a
particular cylinder, data will be transferred
starting at Sector 1, Side 0 and completing the
last sector of the same track at Side 1.
After completion of the read operation from the
current sector, the sector address is
incremented by one and the data from the next
logical sector is read and output via the FIFO.
This continuous read function is called "Multi-
Sector Read Operation". Upon receipt of TC, or
an implied TC (FIFO overrun/underrun), the
FDC stops sending data but will continue to
read data from the current sector, check the
CRC bytes, and at the end of the sector,
terminate the Read Data Command.
If the host terminates a read or write operation
in the FDC, the ID information in the result
phase is dependent upon the state of the MT bit
and EOT byte. Refer to Table 22.
At the completion of the Read Data command,
the head is not unloaded until after the Head
Unload Time Interval (specified in the Specify
command) has elapsed. If the host issues
another command before the head unloads,
52
then the head settling time may be saved
between subsequent reads.
After reading the ID and Data Fields in each
sector, the FDC checks the CRC bytes. If a
CRC error occurs in the ID or data field, the
FDC sets the IC code in Status Register 0 to
"01" indicating abnormal termination, sets the
DE bit flag in Status Register 1 to "1", sets the
DD bit in Status Register 2 to "1" if CRC is
incorrect in the ID field, and terminates the Read
Data Command. Table 23 describes the effect
of the SK bit on the Read Data command
execution and results. Except where noted in
Table 23, the C or R value of the sector address
is automatically incremented (see Table 25).
If the FDC detects a pulse on the nINDEX pin
twice without finding the specified sector
(meaning that the diskette's index hole passes
through index detect logic in the drive twice), the
FDC sets the IC code in Status Register 0 to
"01" indicating abnormal termination, sets the
ND bit in Status Register 1 to "1" indicating a
sector not found, and terminates the Read Data
Command.
Table 22 - Effects of MT and N Bits
MT
N
MAXIMUM TRANSFER
CAPACITY
FINAL SECTOR READ
FROM DISK
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
1
2
2
3
3
256 x 26 = 6,656
256 x 52 = 13,312
512 x 15 = 7,680
512 x 30 = 15,360
1024 x 8 = 8,192
1024 x 16 = 16,384
26 at side 0 or 1
26 at side 1
15 at side 0 or 1
15 at side 1
8 at side 0 or 1
16 at side 1
Table 23 - Skip Bit vs Read Data Command
DATA ADDRESS
MARK TYPE
RESULTS
SK BIT
VALUE
ENCOUNTERED
SECTOR CM BIT OF
DESCRIPTION
OF RESULTS
READ?
ST2 SET?
0
0
Normal Data
Deleted Data
Yes
No
Normal
termination.
Address not
incremented.
Next sector not
searched for.
Normal
Yes
Yes
1
1
Normal Data
Deleted Data
Yes
No
No
termination.
Normal
Yes
termination.
Sector not read
("skipped").
53
Table 24 describes the effect of the SK bit on
the Read Deleted Data command execution and
results.
Read Deleted Data
This command is the same as the Read Data
command, only it operates on sectors that
contain a Deleted Data Address Mark at the
beginning of a Data Field.
Except where noted in Table 24, the C or R
value of the sector address is automatically
incremented (see Table 25).
Table 24 - Skip Bit vs. Read Deleted Data Command
DATA ADDRESS
RESULTS
SK BIT
VALUE
MARK TYPE
ENCOUNTERED
SECTOR CM BIT OF
DESCRIPTION
OF RESULTS
READ?
ST2 SET?
0
Normal Data
Yes
Yes
Address not
incremented.
Next sector not
searched for.
Normal
0
1
Deleted Data
Normal Data
Yes
No
No
termination.
Normal
Yes
termination.
Sector not read
("skipped").
Normal
1
Deleted Data
Yes
No
termination.
no comparison. Multi-track or skip operations
are not allowed with this command. The MT
and SK bits (bits D7 and D5 of the first
command byte respectively) should always be
set to "0".
Read A Track
This command is similar to the Read Data
command except that the entire data field is
read continuously from each of the sectors of a
track. Immediately after encountering a pulse
on the nINDEX pin, the FDC starts to read all
data fields on the track as continuous blocks of
data without regard to logical sector numbers. If
the FDC finds an error in the ID or DATA CRC
check bytes, it continues to read data from the
track and sets the appropriate error bits at the
end of the command. The FDC compares the
ID information read from each sector with the
specified value in the command and sets the
ND flag of Status Register 1 to a "1" if there is
This command terminates when the EOT
specified number of sectors has not been read.
If the FDC does not find an ID Address Mark on
the diskette after the second occurrence of a
pulse on the IDX pin, then it sets the IC code in
Status Register
0
to "01" (abnormal
termination), sets the MA bit in Status Register
1 to "1", and terminates the command.
54
Table 25 - Result Phase Table
FINAL SECTOR
ID INFORMATION AT RESULT PHASE
TRANSFERRED TO
HOST
MT
HEAD
C
H
R
N
Less than EOT
Equal to EOT
Less than EOT
Equal to EOT
Less than EOT
Equal to EOT
Less than EOT
Equal to EOT
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
LSB
NC
LSB
R + 1
01
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
0
0
1
0
1
C + 1
NC
R + 1
01
C + 1
NC
R + 1
01
1
NC
NC
R + 1
01
C + 1
NC: No Change, the same value as the one at the beginning of command execution.
LSB: Least Significant Bit, the LSB of H is complemented.
Status Register
0
to "01" (abnormal
Write Data
termination), sets the DE bit of Status Register 1
to "1", and terminates the Write Data command.
After the Write Data command has been issued,
the FDC loads the head (if it is in the unloaded
state), waits the specified head load time if
unloaded (defined in the Specify command),
and begins reading ID fields. When the sector
address read from the diskette matches the
sector address specified in the command, the
FDC reads the data from the host via the FIFO
and writes it to the sector's data field.
The Write Data command operates in much the
same manner as the Read Data command. The
following items are the same. Please refer to
the Read Data Command for details:
Ÿ
Ÿ
Ÿ
Ÿ
Ÿ
Transfer Capacity
EN (End of Cylinder) bit
ND (No Data) bit
Head Load, Unload Time Interval
ID information when the host terminates the
command
After writing data into the current sector, the
FDC computes the CRC value and writes it into
the CRC field at the end of the sector transfer.
The Sector Number stored in "R" is incremented
by one, and the FDC continues writing to the
next data field. The FDC continues this "Multi-
Sector Write Operation". Upon receipt of a
terminal count signal or if a FIFO over/under run
occurs while a data field is being written, then
the remainder of the data field is filled with
zeros.
Ÿ
Definition of DTL when N = 0 and when N
does not = 0
Write Deleted Data
This command is almost the same as the Write
Data command except that a Deleted Data
Address Mark is written at the beginning of the
Data Field instead of the normal Data Address
Mark. This command is typically used to mark
a bad sector containing an error on the floppy
disk.
The FDC reads the ID field of each sector and
checks the CRC bytes. If it detects a CRC error
in one of the ID fields, it sets the IC code in
55
has decremented to 0 (an SC value of 0 will
verify 256 sectors). This command can also be
terminated by setting the EC bit to "0" and the
EOT value equal to the final sector to be
checked. If EC is set to "0", DTL/SC should be
programmed to 0FFH. Refer to Table 25 and
Table 26 for information concerning the values
of MT and EC versus SC and EOT value.
Verify
The Verify command is used to verify the data
stored on a disk. This command acts exactly
like a Read Data command except that no data
is transferred to the host. Data is read from the
disk and CRC is computed and checked against
the previously-stored value.
Definitions:
Because data is not transferred to the host, TC
(pin 89) cannot be used to terminate this
command. By setting the EC bit to "1", an
implicit TC will be issued to the FDC. This
implicit TC will occur when the SC value
# Sectors Per Side = Number of formatted
sectors per each side of the disk.
# Sectors Remaining = Number of formatted
sectors left which can be read, including side 1
of the disk if MT is set to "1".
Table 26 - Verify Command Result Phase Table
MT
EC
SC/EOT VALUE
TERMINATION RESULT
0
0
SC = DTL
EOT £ # Sectors Per Side
Success Termination
Result Phase Valid
0
0
0
1
SC = DTL
EOT > # Sectors Per Side
Unsuccessful Termination
Result Phase Invalid
Successful Termination
Result Phase Valid
SC £ # Sectors Remaining AND
EOT £ # Sectors Per Side
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
SC > # Sectors Remaining OR
EOT > # Sectors Per Side
Unsuccessful Termination
Result Phase Invalid
SC = DTL
EOT £ # Sectors Per Side
Successful Termination
Result Phase Valid
SC = DTL
EOT > # Sectors Per Side
Unsuccessful Termination
Result Phase Invalid
Successful Termination
Result Phase Valid
SC £ # Sectors Remaining AND
EOT £ # Sectors Per Side
1
1
SC > # Sectors Remaining OR
EOT > # Sectors Per Side
Unsuccessful Termination
Result Phase Invalid
NOTE: If MT is set to "1" and the SC value is greater than the number of remaining formatted sectors
on Side 0, verifying will continue on Side 1 of the disk.
56
After formatting each sector, the host must send
new values for C, H, R and N to the FDC for the
next sector on the track. The R value (sector
number) is the only value that must be changed
by the host after each sector is formatted. This
allows the disk to be formatted with
nonsequential sector addresses (interleaving).
This incrementing and formatting continues for
the whole track until the FDC encounters a pulse
on the IDX pin again and it terminates the
command.
Format A Track
The Format command allows an entire track to
be formatted. After a pulse from the IDX pin is
detected, the FDC starts writing data on the disk
including gaps, address marks, ID fields, and
data fields per the IBM System 34 or 3740
format (MFM or FM respectively). The particular
values that will be written to the gap and data
field are controlled by the values programmed
into N, SC, GPL, and D which are specified by
the host during the command phase. The data
field of the sector is filled with the data byte
specified by D. The ID field for each sector is
supplied by the host; that is, four data bytes per
sector are needed by the FDC for C, H, R, and
N (cylinder, head, sector number and sector size
respectively).
Table 27 contains typical values for gap fields
which are dependent upon the size of the sector
and the number of sectors on each track.
Actual values can vary due to drive electronics.
FORMAT FIELDS
SYSTEM 34 (DOUBLE DENSITY) FORMAT
DATA
GAP4a SYNC
IAM
GAP1 SYNC IDAM
C
Y
L
H
D
S
E
C
N
O
C
R
C
GAP2 SYNC
AM
C
R
C
80x
4E
12x
00
50x
4E
12x
00
22x
4E
12x
00
DATA
DATA
DATA
GAP3 GAP 4b
GAP3 GAP 4b
GAP3 GAP 4b
3x FC
C2
3x FE
A1
3x FB
A1 F8
SYSTEM 3740 (SINGLE DENSITY) FORMAT
DATA
AM
GAP4a SYNC
IAM
FC
GAP1 SYNC IDAM
C
Y
L
H
D
S
E
C
N
O
C
R
C
GAP2 SYNC
C
R
C
40x
FF
6x
00
26x
FF
6x
00
11x
FF
6x
00
FE
FB or
F8
PERPENDICULAR FORMAT
DATA
AM
GAP4a SYNC
IAM
GAP1 SYNC IDAM
C
Y
L
H
D
S
E
C
N
O
C
R
C
GAP2 SYNC
C
R
C
80x
4E
12x
00
50x
4E
12x
00
41x
4E
12x
00
3x FC
C2
3x FE
A1
3x FB
A1 F8
57
Table 27 - Typical Values for Formatting
FORMAT SECTOR SIZE
N
SC
GPL1
GPL2
128
128
512
1024
2048
4096
...
00
00
02
03
04
05
...
12
10
08
04
02
01
07
10
18
46
C8
C8
09
19
30
87
FF
FF
FM
5.25"
Drives
256
256
01
01
02
03
04
05
...
12
10
09
04
02
01
0A
20
2A
80
C8
C8
0C
32
50
F0
FF
FF
512*
1024
2048
4096
...
MFM
128
256
512
0
1
2
0F
09
05
07
0F
1B
1B
2A
3A
FM
3.5"
Drives
256
512**
1024
1
2
3
0F
09
05
0E
1B
35
36
54
74
MFM
GPL1 = suggested GPL values in Read and Write commands to avoid splice point
between data field and ID field of contiguous sections.
GPL2 = suggested GPL value in Format A Track command.
*PC/AT values (typical)
**PS/2 values (typical). Applies with 1.0 MB and 2.0 MB drives.
NOTE: All values except sector size are in hex.
58
The Recalibrate command does not have a
result phase. The Sense Interrupt Status
CONTROL COMMANDS
command must be issued after the Recalibrate
command to effectively terminate it and to
provide verification of the head position (PCN).
During the command phase of the recalibrate
operation, the FDC is in the BUSY state, but
during the execution phase it is in a NON-BUSY
Control commands differ from the other
commands in that no data transfer takes place.
Three commands generate an interrupt when
complete: Read ID, Recalibrate, and Seek. The
other control commands do not generate an
interrupt.
state.
At this time, another Recalibrate
command may be issued, and in this manner
parallel Recalibrate operations may be done on
up to four drives at once.
Read ID
The Read ID command is used to find the
present position of the recording heads. The
FDC stores the values from the first ID field it is
able to read into its registers. If the FDC does
not find an ID address mark on the diskette after
the second occurrence of a pulse on the
nINDEX pin, it then sets the IC code in Status
Register 0 to "01" (abnormal termination), sets
the MA bit in Status Register 1 to "1", and
terminates the command.
Upon power up, the software must issue a
Recalibrate command to properly initialize all
drives and the controller.
Seek
The read/write head within the drive is moved
from track to track under the control of the Seek
command. The FDC compares the PCN, which
is the current head position, with the NCN and
performs the following operation if there is a
difference:
The following commands will generate an
interrupt upon completion. They do not return
any result bytes. It is highly recommended that
control commands be followed by the Sense
Interrupt Status command. Otherwise, valuable
interrupt status information will be lost.
PCN < NCN: Direction signal to drive set to
"1" (step in) and issues step pulses.
PCN > NCN: Direction signal to drive set to
"0" (step out) and issues step pulses.
Recalibrate
The rate at which step pulses are issued is
controlled by SRT (Stepping Rate Time) in the
Specify command. After each step pulse is
issued, NCN is compared against PCN, and
when NCN = PCN the SE bit in Status Register
0 is set to "1" and the command is terminated.
This command causes the read/write head
within the FDC to retract to the track 0 position.
The FDC clears the contents of the PCN
counter and checks the status of the nTR0 pin
from the FDD. As long as the nTR0 pin is low,
the DIR pin remains 0 and step pulses are
issued. When the nTR0 pin goes high, the SE
bit in Status Register 0 is set to "1" and the
command is terminated. If the nTR0 pin is still
low after 79 step pulses have been issued, the
FDC sets the SE and the EC bits of Status
Register 0 to "1" and terminates the command.
Disks capable of handling more than 80 tracks
per side may require more than one Recalibrate
command to return the head back to physical
Track 0.
During the command phase of the seek or
recalibrate operation, the FDC is in the BUSY
state, but during the execution phase it is in the
NON-BUSY state. At this time, another Seek or
Recalibrate command may be issued, and in
this manner, parallel seek operations may be
done on up to four drives at once.
59
Note that if implied seek is not enabled, the read
and write commands should be preceded by:
Table 28 - Interrupt Identification
SE
IC
INTERRUPT DUE TO
0
1
11
00
Polling
1) Seek command - Step to the proper track
2) Sense Interrupt Status command
Terminate the Seek command
3) Read ID - Verify head is on proper track
4) Issue Read/Write command.
Normal termination of Seek
or Recalibrate command
Abnormal termination of
Seek or Recalibrate
command
-
1
01
The Seek command does not have a result
phase. Therefore, it is highly recommended that
the Sense Interrupt Status command be issued
after the Seek command to terminate it and to
provide verification of the head position (PCN).
The H bit (Head Address) in ST0 will always
return to a "0". When exiting POWERDOWN
mode, the FDC clears the PCN value and the
status information to zero. Prior to issuing the
POWERDOWN command, it is highly
recommended that the user service all pending
interrupts through the Sense Interrupt Status
command.
The Seek, Relative Seek, and Recalibrate
commands have no result phase. The Sense
Interrupt Status command must be issued
immediately after these commands to terminate
them and to provide verification of the head
position (PCN). The H (Head Address) bit in
ST0 will always return a "0". If a Sense Interrupt
Status is not issued, the drive will continue to be
BUSY and may affect the operation of the next
command.
Sense Interrupt Status
Sense Drive Status
An interrupt signal on FINT pin is generated by
the FDC for one of the following reasons:
1. Upon entering the Result Phase of:
a. Read Data command
Sense Drive Status obtains drive status
information. It has not execution phase and
goes directly to the result phase from the
command phase. Status Register 3 contains
the drive status information.
b. Read A Track command
c. Read ID command
d. Read Deleted Data command
e. Write Data command
Specify
f. Format A Track command
g. Write Deleted Data command
h. Verify command
The Specify command sets the initial values for
each of the three internal times. The HUT
(Head Unload Time) defines the time from the
end of the execution phase of one of the
read/write commands to the head unload state.
The SRT (Step Rate Time) defines the time
interval between adjacent step pulses. Note that
the spacing between the first and second step
2. End of Seek, Relative Seek, or Recalibrate
command
3. FDC requires a data transfer during the
execution phase in the non-DMA mode
pulses
may
be
shorter
than
the
The Sense Interrupt Status command resets the
interrupt signal and, via the IC code and SE bit
of Status Register 0, identifies the cause of the
interrupt.
60
remaining step pulses. The HLT (Head Load
Time) defines the time between when the Head
Load signal goes high and the read/write
operation starts. The values change with the
data rate speed selection and are documented
in Table 29. The values are the same for MFM
and FM.
Table 29 - Drive Control Delays (ms)
HUT
SRT
2M
1M
500K 300K 250K
2M
1M
500K 300K 250K
0
1
..
E
F
64
4
..
56
60
128
8
..
112
120
256
16
..
224
240
426
26.7
..
373
400
512
32
..
448
480
4
3.75
..
0.5
0.25
8
7.5
..
1
0.5
16
15
..
2
1
26.7
25
..
3.33
1.67
32
30
..
4
2
HLT
2M
1M
500K
300K
250K
00
01
02
..
64
0.5
1
128
1
2
256
2
4
426
3.3
6.7
..
512
4
8
..
..
..
.
7F
7F
63
63.5
126
127
252
254
420
423
504
508
The choice of DMA or non-DMA operations is
made by the ND bit. When this bit is "1", the
non-DMA mode is selected, and when ND is "0",
the DMA mode is selected. In DMA mode, data
transfers are signalled by the FDRQ pin. Non-
DMA mode uses the RQM bit and the FINT pin
to signal data transfers.
PRETRK - Pre-Compensation Set to Track 0
EIS - Enable Implied Seek. When set to "1", the
FDC will perform a Seek operation before
executing a read or write command. Defaults to
no implied seek.
EFIFO - A "1" disables the FIFO (default). This
means data transfers are asked for on a byte-
by-byte basis. Defaults to "1", FIFO disabled.
The threshold defaults to "1".
Configure
The Configure command is issued to select the
special features of the FDC.
A Configure
POLL - Disable polling of the drives. Defaults to
"0", polling enabled. When enabled, a single
interrupt is generated after a reset. No polling is
performed while the drive head is loaded and
the head unload delay has not expired.
command need not be issued if the default
values of the FDC meet the system
requirements.
Configure Default Values:
EIS - No Implied Seeks
FIFOTHR - The FIFO threshold in the execution
phase of read or write commands. This is
programmable from 1 to 16 bytes. Defaults to
EFIFO - FIFO Disabled
POLL - Polling Enabled
FIFOTHR - FIFO Threshold Set to 1 Byte
61
one byte. A "00" selects one byte; "0F" selects
16 bytes.
As an example, assume that a floppy drive has
300 useable tracks. The host needs to read
track 300 and the head is on any track (0-255).
If a Seek command is issued, the head will stop
at track 255. If a Relative Seek command is
issued, the FDC will move the head the
specified number of tracks, regardless of the
internal cylinder position register (but will
increment the register). If the head was on track
40 (d), the maximum track that the FDC could
position the head on using Relative Seek will be
295 (D), the initial track + 255 (D). The
maximum count that the head can be moved
with a single Relative Seek command is 255
(D).
PRETRK
-
Pre-Compensation Start Track
Number. Programmable from track 0 to 255.
Defaults to track 0. A "00" selects track 0; "FF"
selects track 255.
Version
The Version command checks to see if the
controller is an enhanced type or the older type
(765A). A value of 90 H is returned as the result
byte.
Relative Seek
The internal register, PCN, will overflow as the
cylinder number crosses track 255 and will
contain 39 (D). The resulting PCN value is thus
(RCN + PCN) mod 256. Functionally, the FDC
starts counting from 0 again as the track
number goes above 255 (D). It is the user's
responsibility to compensate FDC functions
The command is coded the same as for Seek,
except for the MSB of the first byte and the DIR
bit.
DIR
Head Step Direction Control
(precompensation
track
number)
when
DIR
ACTION
accessing tracks greater than 255. The FDC
does not keep track that it is working in an
"extended track area" (greater than 255). Any
command issued will use the current PCN value
except for the Recalibrate command, which only
looks for the TRACK0 signal. Recalibrate will
return an error if the head is farther than 79 due
to its limitation of issuing a maximum of 80 step
pulses. The user simply needs to issue a
0
1
Step Head Out
Step Head In
RCN Relative
Cylinder
Number
that
determines how many tracks to step the
head in or out from the current track
number.
second Recalibrate command.
The Seek
command and implied seeks will function
correctly within the 44 (D) track (299-255) area
of the "extended track area". It is the user's
responsibility not to issue a new track position
that will exceed the maximum track that is
present in the extended area.
The Relative Seek command differs from the
Seek command in that it steps the head the
absolute number of tracks specified in the
command instead of making a comparison
against an internal register.
The Seek
command is good for drives that support a
maximum of 256 tracks. Relative Seeks cannot
be overlapped with other Relative Seeks. Only
one Relative Seek can be active at a time.
Relative Seeks may be overlapped with Seeks
and Recalibrates. Bit 4 of Status Register 0
(EC) will be set if Relative Seek attempts to step
outward beyond Track 0.
To return to the standard floppy range (0-255) of
tracks, a Relative Seek should be issued to
cross the track 255 boundary.
62
A Relative Seek can be used instead of the
normal Seek, but the host is required to
calculate the difference between the current
head location and the new (target) head
location. This may require the host to issue a
Read ID command to ensure that the head is
physically on the track that software assumes it
to be. Different FDC commands will return
different cylinder results which may be difficult
to keep track of with software without the Read
ID command.
expanded to a length of 41 bytes. The format
field shown on Page 57 illustrates the change in
the Gap2 field size for the perpendicular format.
On the read back by the FDC, the controller
must begin synchronization at the beginning of
the sync field. For the conventional mode, the
internal PLL VCO is enabled (VCOEN)
approximately 24 bytes from the start of the
Gap2 field. But, when the controller operates in
the 1 Mbps perpendicular mode (WGATE = 1,
GAP = 1), VCOEN goes active after 43 bytes to
accommodate the increased Gap2 field size.
For both cases, and approximate two-byte
cushion is maintained from the beginning of the
sync field for the purposes of avoiding write
splices in the presence of motor speed variation.
Perpendicular Mode
The Perpendicular Mode command should be
issued prior to executing Read/Write/Format
commands that access
a disk drive with
perpendicular recording capability. With this
command, the length of the Gap2 field and VCO
enable timing can be altered to accommodate
the unique requirements of these drives. Table
30 describes the effects of the WGATE and
GAP bits for the Perpendicular Mode command.
Upon a reset, the FDC will default to the
conventional mode (WGATE = 0, GAP = 0).
For the Write Data case, the FDC activates
Write Gate at the beginning of the sync field
under the conventional mode. The controller
then writes a new sync field, data address mark,
data field, and CRC as shown on page 57. With
the pre-erase head of the perpendicular drive,
the write head must be activated in the Gap2
field to insure a proper write of the new sync
field. For the 1 Mbps perpendicular mode
(WGATE = 1, GAP = 1), 38 bytes will be written
in the Gap2 space. Since the bit density is
proportional to the data rate, 19 bytes will be
written in the Gap2 field for the 500 Kbps
perpendicular mode (WGATE = 1, GAP =0).
Selection of the 500 Kbps and
1 Mbps
perpendicular modes is independent of the
actual data rate selected in the Data Rate Select
Register. The user must ensure that these two
data rates remain consistent.
The Gap2 and VCO timing requirements for
perpendicular recording type drives are dictated
by the design of the read/write head. In the
design of this head, a pre-erase head precedes
the normal read/write head by a distance of 200
micrometers. This works out to about 38 bytes
at a 1 Mbps recording density. Whenever the
write head is enabled by the Write Gate signal,
the pre-erase head is also activated at the same
time. Thus, when the write head is initially
turned on, flux transitions recorded on the media
for the first 38 bytes will not be preconditioned
with the pre-erase head since it has not yet been
activated. To accommodate this head activation
and deactivation time, the Gap2 field is
It should be noted that none of the alterations in
Gap2 size, VCO timing, or Write Gate timing
affect normal program flow. The information
provided here is just for background purposes
and is not needed for normal operation. Once
the Perpendicular Mode command is invoked,
FDC software behavior from the user standpoint
is unchanged.
The perpendicular mode command is enhanced
to allow specific drives to be designated
Perpendicular
recording
drives. This
enhancement allows data transfers between
Conventional and Perpendicular drives without
63
having to issue Perpendicular mode commnds
between the accesses of the different drive
types, nor having to change write pre-
compensation values.
3. For D0-D3 programmed to "0" for
conventional mode drives any data written
will be at the currently programmed write
pre-compensation.
When both GAP and WGATE bits of the
PERPENDICULAR MODE COMMAND are both
programmed to "0" (Conventional mode), then
D0, D1, D2, D3, and D4 can be programmed
independently to "1" for that drive to be set
automatically to Perpendicular mode. In this
mode the following set of conditions also apply:
1. The GAP2 written to a perpendicular drive
during a write operation will depend upon the
programmed data rate.
Note: Bits D0-D3 can only be overwritten when
OW is programmed as a "1".If either
GAP or WGATE is a "1" then D0-D3 are
ignored.
Software and hardware resets have the
following effect on the PERPENDICULAR
MODE COMMAND:
1. "Software" resets (via the DOR or DSR
registers) will only clear GAP and WGATE
bits to "0". D0-D3 are unaffected and retain
their previous value.
2. The write pre-compensation given to a
perpendicular mode drive will be 0ns.
2. "Hardware" resets will clear all bits ( GAP,
WGATE and D0-D3) to "0", i.e all
conventional mode.
64
Table 30 - Effects of WGATE and GAP Bits
PORTION OF GAP 2
LENGTH OF
GAP2 FORMAT
FIELD
WRITTEN BY WRITE
DATA OPERATION
WGATE GAP
MODE
0
0
0
1
Conventional
Perpendicular
(500 Kbps)
Reserved
(Conventional)
Perpendicular
(1 Mbps)
22 Bytes
22 Bytes
0 Bytes
19 Bytes
1
1
0
1
22 Bytes
41 Bytes
0 Bytes
38 Bytes
LOCK
ENHANCED DUMPREG
In order to protect systems with long DMA
latencies against older application software that
can disable the FIFO the LOCK Command has
been added. This command should only be
used by the FDC routines, and application
software should refrain from using it. If an
application calls for the FIFO to be disabled
then the CONFIGURE command should be
used.
The DUMPREG command is designed to
support system run-time diagnostics and
application software development and debug.
To accommodate the LOCK command and the
enhanced PERPENDICULAR MODE command
the eighth byte of the DUMPREG command has
been modified to contain the additional data
from these two commands.
COMPATIBILITY
The LOCK command defines whether the
EFIFO, FIFOTHR, and PRETRK parameters of
the CONFIGURE command can be RESET by
the DOR and DSR registers. When the LOCK
bit is set to logic "1" all subsequent "software
RESETS by the DOR and DSR registers will not
change the previously set parameters to their
default values. All "hardware" RESET from the
RESET pin will set the LOCK bit to logic "0" and
return the EFIFO, FIFOTHR, and PRETRK to
their default values. A status byte is returned
immediately after issuing a a LOCK command.
This byte reflects the value of the LOCK bit set
by the command byte.
The FDC37C93x was designed with software
compatibility in mind. It is a fully backwards-
compatible solution with the older generation
765A/B disk controllers.
implements on-board registers for compatibility
with the PS/2, as well as PC/AT and PC/XT,
The FDC also
floppy disk controller subsystems. After
a
hardware reset of the FDC, all registers,
functions and enhancements default to a PC/AT,
PS/2 or PS/2 Model 30 compatible operating
mode, depending on how the IDENT and MFM
bits are configured by the system BIOS.
65
SERIAL PORT (UART)
down and changing the base address of the
The FDC37C93x incorporates two full function
UARTs. They are compatible with the
NS16450, the 16450 ACE registers and the
NS16550A. The UARTS perform serial-to-
parallel conversion on received characters and
parallel-to-serial conversion on transmit
characters. The data rates are independently
programmable from 460.8K baud down to 50
baud. The character options are programmable
for 1 start; 1, 1.5 or 2 stop bits; even, odd, sticky
or no parity; and prioritized interrupts. The
UARTs each contain a programmable baud rate
generator that is capable of dividing the input
clock or crystal by a number from 1 to 65535.
The UARTs are also capable of supporting the
MIDI data rate. Refer to the Configuration
Registers for information on disabling, power
UARTs. The interrupt from a UART is enabled
by programming OUT2 of that UART to a logic
"1". OUT2 being a logic "0" disables that
UART's interrupt.
The second UART also
supports IrDA, HP-SIR and ASK-IR infrared
modes of operation.
REGISTER DESCRIPTION
Addressing of the accessible registers of the
Serial Port is shown below.
The base
addresses of the serial ports are defined by the
configuration registers (see Configuration
section). The Serial Port registers are located at
sequentially increasing addresses above these
base addresses. The FDC37C93x contains two
serial ports, each of which contain a register set
as described below.
Table 31 - Addressing the Serial Port
DLAB*
A2
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
A1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
A0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
REGISTER NAME
Receive Buffer (read)
0
0
Transmit Buffer (write)
Interrupt Enable (read/write)
Interrupt Identification (read)
FIFO Control (write)
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
1
Line Control (read/write)
Modem Control (read/write)
Line Status (read/write)
Modem Status (read/write)
Scratchpad (read/write)
Divisor LSB (read/write)
Divisor MSB (read/write
1
*NOTE: DLAB is Bit 7 of the Line Control Register
66
The following section describes the operation of
the registers.
Bit 0
This bit enables the Received Data Available
Interrupt (and timeout interrupts in the FIFO
mode) when set to logic "1".
RECEIVE BUFFER REGISTER (RB)
Address Offset = 0H, DLAB = 0, READ ONLY
Bit 1
This register holds the received incoming data
byte. Bit 0 is the least significant bit, which is
transmitted and received first. Received data is
double buffered; this uses an additional shift
register to receive the serial data stream and
convert it to a parallel 8 bit word which is
transferred to the Receive Buffer register. The
shift register is not accessible.
This bit enables the Transmitter Holding
Register Empty Interrupt when set to logic "1".
Bit 2
This bit enables the Received Line Status
Interrupt when set to logic "1". The error
sources causing the interrupt are Overrun,
Parity, Framing and Break. The Line Status
Register must be read to determine the source.
TRANSMIT BUFFER REGISTER (TB)
Address Offset = 0H, DLAB = 0, WRITE ONLY
Bit 3
This bit enables the MODEM Status Interrupt
when set to logic "1". This is caused when one
of the Modem Status Register bits changes
state.
This register contains the data byte to be
transmitted.
The transmit buffer is double
buffered, utilizing an additional shift register (not
accessible) to convert the 8 bit data word to a
serial format. This shift register is loaded from
the Transmit Buffer when the transmission of
the previous byte is complete.
Bits 4 through 7
These bits are always logic "0".
FIFO CONTROL REGISTER (FCR)
INTERRUPT ENABLE REGISTER (IER)
Address Offset = 2H, DLAB = X, WRITE
Address Offset = 1H, DLAB = 0, READ/WRITE
This is a write only register at the same location
as the IIR. This register is used to enable and
clear the FIFOs, set the RCVR FIFO trigger
level. Note: DMA is not supported.
The lower four bits of this register control the
enables of the five interrupt sources of the Serial
Port interrupt. It is possible to totally disable the
interrupt system by resetting bits 0 through 3 of
this register. Similarly, setting the appropriate
bits of this register to a high, selected interrupts
can be enabled. Disabling the interrupt system
inhibits the Interrupt Identification Register and
disables any Serial Port interrupt out of the
FDC37C93x. All other system functions operate
in their normal manner, including the Line
Status and MODEM Status Registers. The
contents of the Interrupt Enable Register are
described below.
Bit 0
Setting this bit to a logic "1" enables both the
XMIT and RCVR FIFOs. Clearing this bit to a
logic "0" disables both the XMIT and RCVR
FIFOs and clears all bytes from both FIFOs.
When changing from FIFO Mode to non-FIFO
(16450) mode, data is automatically cleared
from the FIFOs. This bit must be a 1 when
other bits in this register are written to or they
will not be properly programmed.
Bit 1
Setting this bit to a logic "1" clears all bytes in
the RCVR FIFO and resets its counter logic to 0.
67
The shift register is not cleared. This bit is self-
clearing.
Information indicating that a prioritized interrupt
is pending and the source of that interrupt is
stored in the Interrupt Identification Register
(refer to Interrupt Control Table). When the CPU
accesses the IIR, the Serial Port freezes all
interrupts and indicates the highest priority
pending interrupt to the CPU. During this CPU
access, even if the Serial Port records new
interrupts, the current indication does not
change until access is completed. The contents
of the IIR are described below.
Bit 2
Setting this bit to a logic "1" clears all bytes in
the XMIT FIFO and resets its counter logic to 0.
The shift register is not cleared. This bit is self-
clearing.
Bit 3
Writting to this bit has no effect on the operation
of the UART. The RXRDY and TXRDY pins are
not available on this chip.
Bit 0
This bit can be used in either a hardwired
prioritized or polled environment to indicate
whether an interrupt is pending. When bit 0 is a
logic "0", an interrupt is pending and the
contents of the IIR may be used as a pointer to
the appropriate internal service routine. When
bit 0 is a logic "1", no interrupt is pending.
Bit 7
Bit 6
RCVR FIFO Trigger
Level (BYTES)
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
1
4
8
14
Bits 1 and 2
Bit 4,5
These two bits of the IIR are used to identify the
highest priority interrupt pending as indicated by
the Interrupt Control Table.
Reserved
Bit 6,7
These bits are used to set the trigger level for
the RCVR FIFO interrupt.
Bit 3
INTERRUPT IDENTIFICATION REGISTER
(IIR)
Address Offset = 2H, DLAB = X, READ
In non-FIFO mode, this bit is a logic "0". In
FIFO mode this bit is set along with bit 2 when a
timeout interrupt is pending.
By accessing this register, the host CPU can
determine the highest priority interrupt and its
source. Four levels of priority interrupt exist.
They are in descending order of priority:
Bits 4 and 5
These bits of the IIR are always logic "0".
Bits 6 and 7
These two bits are set when the FIFO
CONTROL Register bit 0 equals 1.
1. Receiver Line Status (highest priority)
2. Received Data Ready
3. Transmitter Holding Register Empty
4. MODEM Status (lowest priority)
68
Table 32 - Interrupt Control Table
FIFO
INTERRUPT
MODE IDENTIFICATION
ONLY
REGISTER
INTERRUPT SET AND RESET FUNCTIONS
BIT
3
BIT
BIT
1
BIT PRIORITY
INTERRUPT
TYPE
INTERRUPT
SOURCE
INTERRUPT
RESET CONTROL
2
0
1
0
1
0
LEVEL
0
0
0
1
-
None
None
-
Highest
Receiver Line
Status
Overrun Error,
Parity Error,
Reading the Line
Status Register
Framing Error or
Break Interrupt
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
Second
Second
Received Data
Available
Receiver Data
Available
Read Receiver
Buffer or the FIFO
drops below the
trigger level.
Character
Timeout
Indication
No Characters
Have Been
Removed From
or Input to the
RCVR FIFO
Reading the
Receiver Buffer
Register
during the last 4
Char times and
there is at least 1
char in it during
this time
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
Third
Transmitter
Transmitter
Reading the IIR
Holding Register Holding Register Register (if Source
Empty
Empty
of Interrupt) or
Writing the
Transmitter Holding
Register
Fourth
MODEM Status
Clear to Send or Reading the
Data Set Ready MODEM Status
or Ring Indicator Register
or Data Carrier
Detect
69
LINE CONTROL REGISTER (LCR)
Address Offset = 3H, DLAB = 0, READ/WRITE
Bit 4
Even Parity Select bit. When bit 3 is a logic "1"
and bit 4 is a logic "0", an odd number of logic
"1"'s is transmitted or checked in the data word
bits and the parity bit. When bit 3 is a logic "1"
and bit 4 is a logic "1" an even number of bits is
transmitted and checked.
This register contains the format information of
the serial line. The bit definitions are:
Bits 0 and 1
These two bits specify the number of bits in
each transmitted or received serial character.
The encoding of bits 0 and 1 is as follows:
Bit 5
Stick Parity bit. When bit 3 is a logic "1" and bit
5 is a logic "1", the parity bit is transmitted and
then detected by the receiver in the opposite
state indicated by bit 4.
BIT 1 BIT 0
WORD LENGTH
5 Bits
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
6 Bits
7 Bits
8 Bits
Bit 6
Set Break Control bit. When bit 6 is a logic "1",
the transmit data output (TXD) is forced to the
Spacing or logic "0" state and remains there
(until reset by a low level bit 6) regardless of
other transmitter activity. This feature enables
The Start, Stop and Parity bits are not included
in the word length.
the Serial Port to alert
communications system.
a terminal in a
Bit 2
This bit specifies the number of stop bits in each
transmitted or received serial character. The
following table summarizes the information.
Bit 7
Divisor Latch Access bit (DLAB). It must be set
high (logic "1") to access the Divisor Latches of
the Baud Rate Generator during read or write
operations. It must be set low (logic "0") to
access the Receiver Buffer Register, the
Transmitter Holding Register, or the Interrupt
Enable Register.
Bit 2 WORD LENGTH NUMBER OF
STOP BITS
0
1
1
1
1
--
1
1.5
2
2
2
5 Bits
6 Bits
7 Bits
8 BIts
MODEM CONTROL REGISTER (MCR)
Address Offset
READ/WRITE
=
4H, DLAB
=
X,
Note: The receiver will ignore all stop bits
beyond the first, regardless of the number used
in transmitting.
This 8 bit register controls the interface with the
MODEM or data set (or device emulating a
MODEM). The contents of the MODEM control
register are described on the following page.
Bit 3
Parity Enable bit. When bit 3 is a logic "1", a
parity bit is generated (transmit data) or
checked (receive data) between the last data
word bit and the first stop bit of the serial data.
(The parity bit is used to generate an even or
odd number of 1s when the data word bits and
the parity bit are summed).
70
This feature allows the processor to verify the
transmit and receive data paths of the Serial
Port. In the diagnostic mode, the receiver and
the transmitter interrupts are fully operational.
The MODEM Control Interrupts are also
operational but the interrupts' sources are now
the lower four bits of the MODEM Control
Register instead of the MODEM Control inputs.
The interrupts are still controlled by the Interrupt
Enable Register.
Bit 0
This bit controls the Data Terminal Ready
(nDTR) output. When bit 0 is set to a logic "1",
the nDTR output is forced to a logic "0". When
bit 0 is a logic "0", the nDTR output is forced to
a logic "1".
Bit 1
This bit controls the Request To Send (nRTS)
output. Bit 1 affects the nRTS output in a
manner identical to that described above for bit
0.
Bits 5 through 7
These bits are permanently set to logic zero.
Bit 2
LINE STATUS REGISTER (LSR)
This bit controls the Output 1 (OUT1) bit. This
bit does not have an output pin and can only be
read or written by the CPU.
Address Offset
READ/WRITE
=
5H, DLAB
=
X,
Bit 3
Bit 0
Output 2 (OUT2). This bit is used to enable an
UART interrupt. When OUT2 is a logic "0", the
serial port interrupt output is forced to a high
impedance state - disabled. When OUT2 is a
logic "1", the serial port interrupt outputs are
enabled.
Data Ready (DR). It is set to a logic "1"
whenever a complete incoming character has
been received and transferred into the Receiver
Buffer Register or the FIFO. Bit 0 is reset to a
logic "0" by reading all of the data in the Receive
Buffer Register or the FIFO.
Bit 4
Bit 1
This bit provides the loopback feature for
diagnostic testing of the Serial Port. When bit 4
is set to logic "1", the following occur:
1. The TXD is set to the Marking State (logic
"1").
2. The receiver Serial Input (RXD) is
disconnected.
3. The output of the Transmitter Shift
Register is "looped back" into the Receiver
Shift Register input.
4. All MODEM Control inputs (nCTS, nDSR,
nRI and nDCD) are disconnected.
5. The four MODEM Control outputs (nDTR,
nRTS, OUT1 and OUT2) are internally
connected to the four MODEM Control
inputs (nDSR, nCTS, RI, DCD).
6. The Modem Control output pins are forced
inactive high.
Overrun Error (OE). Bit 1 indicates that data in
the Receiver Buffer Register was not read before
the next character was transferred into the
register, thereby destroying the previous
character. In FIFO mode, an overrunn error will
occur only when the FIFO is full and the next
character has been completely received in the
shift register, the character in the shift register is
overwritten but not transferred to the FIFO. The
OE indicator is set to a logic "1" immediately
upon detection of an overrun condition, and
reset whenever the Line Status Register is read.
Bit 2
Parity Error (PE). Bit 2 indicates that the
received data character does not have the
correct even or odd parity, as selected by the
even parity select bit. The PE is set to a logic
"1" upon detection of a parity error and is reset
to a logic "0" whenever the Line Status Register
7. Data that is transmitted is immediately
received.
71
is read.
In the FIFO mode this error is
Bit 5
associated with the particular character in the
FIFO it applies to. This error is indicated when
the associated character is at the top of the
FIFO.
Transmitter Holding Register Empty (THRE). Bit
5 indicates that the Serial Port is ready to accept
a new character for transmission. In addition,
this bit causes the Serial Port to issue an
interrupt when the Transmitter Holding Register
interrupt enable is set high. The THRE bit is set
to a logic "1" when a character is transferred
from the Transmitter Holding Register into the
Transmitter Shift Register. The bit is reset to
logic "0" whenever the CPU loads the
Transmitter Holding Register. In the FIFO mode
this bit is set when the XMIT FIFO is empty, it is
cleared when at least 1 byte is written to the
XMIT FIFO. Bit 5 is a read only bit.
Bit 3
Framing Error (FE). Bit 3 indicates that the
received character did not have a valid stop bit.
Bit 3 is set to a logic "1" whenever the stop bit
following the last data bit or parity bit is detected
as a zero bit (Spacing level). The FE is reset to
a logic "0" whenever the Line Status Register is
read. In the FIFO mode this error is associated
with the particular character in the FIFO it
applies to. This error is indicated when the
associated character is at the top of the FIFO.
The Serial Port will try to resynchronize after a
framing error. To do this, it assumes that the
framing error was due to the next start bit, so it
samples this 'start' bit twice and then takes in
the 'data'.
Bit 6
Transmitter Empty (TEMT). Bit 6 is set to a
logic "1" whenever the Transmitter Holding
Register (THR) and Transmitter Shift Register
(TSR) are both empty. It is reset to logic "0"
whenever either the THR or TSR contains a data
character. Bit 6 is a read only bit. In the FIFO
mode this bit is set whenever the THR and TSR
are both empty,
Bit 4
Break Interrupt (BI). Bit 4 is set to a logic "1"
whenever the received data input is held in the
Spacing state (logic "0") for longer than a full
word transmission time (that is, the total time of
the start bit + data bits + parity bits + stop bits).
The BI is reset after the CPU reads the contents
of the Line Status Register. In the FIFO mode
this error is associated with the particular
character in the FIFO it applies to. This error is
indicated when the associated character is at
the top of the FIFO. When break occurs only
one zero character is loaded into the FIFO.
Restarting after a break is received, requires the
serial data (RXD) to be logic "1" for at least 1/2
bit time.
Bit 7
This bit is permanently set to logic "0" in the 450
mode. In the FIFO mode, this bit is set to a
logic "1" when there is at least one parity error,
framing error or break indication in the FIFO.
This bit is cleared when the LSR is read if there
are no subsequent errors in the FIFO.
MODEM STATUS REGISTER (MSR)
Address Offset
READ/WRITE
=
6H, DLAB
=
X,
This 8 bit register provides the current state of
the control lines from the MODEM (or peripheral
Note: Bits 1 through 4 are the error conditions
that produce a Receiver Line Status Interrupt
whenever any of the corresponding conditions
are detected and the interrupt is enabled.
device).
In addition to this current state
information, four bits of the MODEM Status
Register (MSR) provide change information.
These bits are set to logic "1" whenever a
control input from the MODEM changes state.
They are reset to logic "0" whenever the
MODEM Status Register is read.
72
Bit 0
SCRATCHPAD REGISTER (SCR)
Delta Clear To Send (DCTS). Bit 0 indicates
that the nCTS input to the chip has changed
state since the last time the MSR was read.
Address Offset =7H, DLAB =X, READ/WRITE
This 8 bit read/write register has no effect on the
operation of the Serial Port. It is intended as a
scratchpad register to be used by the
programmer to hold data temporarily.
Bit 1
Delta Data Set Ready (DDSR). Bit 1 indicates
that the nDSR input has changed state since the
last time the MSR was read.
PROGRAMMABLE BAUD RATE GENERATOR
(AND DIVISOR LATCHES DLH, DLL)
Bit 2
Trailing Edge of Ring Indicator (TERI). Bit 2
indicates that the nRI input has changed from
logic "0" to logic "1".
The Serial Port contains a programmable Baud
Rate Generator that is capable of taking any
clock input (DC to 3 MHz) and dividing it by any
divisor from 1 to 65535. This output frequency
of the Baud Rate Generator is 16x the Baud
rate. Two 8 bit latches store the divisor in 16 bit
binary format. These Divisor Latches must be
loaded during initialization in order to insure
desired operation of the Baud Rate Generator.
Upon loading either of the Divisor Latches, a 16
bit Baud counter is immediately loaded. This
prevents long counts on initial load. If a 0 is
loaded into the BRG registers the output divides
the clock by the number 3. If a 1 is loaded the
output is the inverse of the input oscillator. If a
two is loaded the output is a divide by 2 signal
with a 50% duty cycle. If a 3 or greater is
loaded the output is low for 2 bits and high for
the remainder of the count. The input clock to
the BRG is the 24 MHz crystal divided by 13,
giving a 1.8462 MHz clock.
Bit 3
Delta Data Carrier Detect (DDCD).
Bit 3
indicates that the nDCD input to the chip has
changed state.
NOTE: Whenever bit 0, 1, 2, or 3 is set to a
logic "1",
generated.
a
MODEM Status Interrupt is
Bit 4
This bit is the complement of the Clear To Send
(nCTS) input. If bit 4 of the MCR is set to logic
"1", this bit is equivalent to nRTS in the MCR.
Bit 5
This bit is the complement of the Data Set
Ready (nDSR) input. If bit 4 of the MCR is set
to logic "1", this bit is equivalent to DTR in the
MCR.
Table 33 shows the baud rates possible with a
1.8462 MHz crystal.
Effect Of The Reset on Register File
Bit 6
This bit is the complement of the Ring Indicator
(nRI) input. If bit 4 of the MCR is set to logic
"1", this bit is equivalent to OUT1 in the MCR.
The Reset Function Table (Table 34) details the
effect of the Reset input on each of the registers
of the Serial Port.
Bit 7
FIFO INTERRUPT MODE OPERATION
This bit is the complement of the Data Carrier
Detect (nDCD) input. If bit 4 of the MCR is set
to logic "1", this bit is equivalent to OUT2 in the
MCR.
When the RCVR FIFO and receiver interrupts
are enabled (FCR bit 0 = "1", IER bit 0 = "1"),
RCVR interrupts occur as follows:
73
A. The receive data available interrupt will be
issued when the FIFO has reached its
programmed trigger level; it is cleared as
soon as the FIFO drops below its
programmed trigger level.
B. The IIR receive data available indication
also occurs when the FIFO trigger level is
reached. It is cleared when the FIFO drops
below the trigger level.
C. The receiver line status interrupt
(IIR=06H), has higher priority than the
received data available (IIR=04H)
interrupt.
D. The data ready bit (LSR bit 0)is set as
soon as a character is transferred from the
shift register to the RCVR FIFO. It is reset
when the FIFO is empty.
the timeout timer is reset after a new
character is received or after the CPU
reads the RCVR FIFO.
When the XMIT FIFO and transmitter interrupts
are enabled (FCR bit 0 = "1", IER bit 1 = "1"),
XMIT interrupts occur as follows:
A. The transmitter holding register interrupt
(02H) occurs when the XMIT FIFO is
empty; it is cleared as soon as the
transmitter holding register is written to (1
of 16 characters may be written to the
XMIT FIFO while servicing this interrupt)
or the IIR is read.
B. The transmitter FIFO empty indications will
be delayed 1 character time minus the last
stop bit time whenever the following
occurs: THRE=1 and there have not been
at least two bytes at the same time in the
transmitter FIFO since the last THRE=1.
The transmitter
When RCVR FIFO and receiver interrupts are
enabled, RCVR FIFO timeout interrupts occur
as follows:
A. A FIFO timeout interrupt occurs if all the
following conditions exist:
interrupt after changing FCR0 will be
immediate, if it is enabled.
-
-
at least one character is in the FIFO
The most recent serial character received
was longer than 4 continuous character
times ago. (If 2 stop bits are programmed,
the second one is included in this time
delay.)
Character timeout and RCVR FIFO trigger level
interrupts have the same priority as the current
received data available interrupt; XMIT FIFO
empty has the same priority as the current
transmitter holding register empty interrupt.
-
The most recent CPU read of the FIFO was
longer than 4 continuous character times
ago.
FIFO POLLED MODE OPERATION
This will cause a maximum character received
to interrupt issued delay of 160 msec at 300
BAUD with a 12 bit character.
With FCR bit 0 = "1" resetting IER bits 0, 1, 2 or
3 or all to zero puts the UART in the FIFO
Polled Mode of operation. Since the RCVR and
XMITTER are controlled separately, either one
or both can be in the polled mode of operation.
B. Character times are calculated by using
the RCLK input for a clock signal (this
makes the delay proportional to the
baudrate).
In this mode, the user's program will check
RCVR and XMITTER status via the LSR. LSR
C. When a timeout interrupt has occurred it is
cleared and the timer reset when the CPU
reads one character from the RCVR FIFO.
D. When a timeout interrupt has not occurred
74
definitions for the FIFO Polled Mode are as
follows:
-
-
-
Bit 5 indicates when the XMIT FIFO is
empty.
Bit 6 indicates that both the XMIT FIFO and
shift register are empty.
Bit 7 indicates whether there are any
errors in the RCVR FIFO.
-
Bit 0=1 as long as there is one byte in the
RCVR FIFO.
-
Bits 1 to 4 specify which error(s) have
occurred. Character error status is
handled the same way as when in the
interrupt mode, the IIR is not affected
since EIR bit 2=0.
There is no trigger level reached or timeout
condition indicated in the FIFO Polled Mode,
however, the RCVR and XMIT FIFOs are still
fully capable of holding characters.
Table 33 - Baud Rates Using 1.8462 MHz Clock for <= 38.4K; Using 1.8432MHz Clock
for 115.2k ; Using 3.6864MHz Clock for 230.4k; Using 7.3728 MHz Clock for 460.8k
DESIRED
DIVISOR USED TO
PERCENT ERROR DIFFERENCE
CRxx:
BAUD RATE
GENERATE 16X CLOCK
BETWEEN DESIRED AND ACTUAL*
BIT 7 OR 6
50
75
2304
1536
1047
857
768
384
192
96
0.001
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
1
-
110
-
134.5
150
0.004
-
300
-
600
-
1200
1800
2000
2400
3600
4800
7200
9600
19200
38400
57600
115200
230400
460800
-
64
-
58
0.005
48
-
32
-
-
24
16
-
12
-
6
-
3
0.030
0.16
0.16
0.16
0.16
2
1
32770
32769
1
*Note: The percentage error for all baud rates, except where indicated otherwise, is 0.2%.
75
Table 34 - Reset Function Table
RESET CONTROL
REGISTER/SIGNAL
Interrupt Enable Register
Interrupt Identification Reg.
FIFO Control
RESET STATE
RESET
All bits low
RESET
Bit 0 is high; Bits 1 - 7 low
RESET
All bits low
Line Control Reg.
RESET
All bits low
MODEM Control Reg.
Line Status Reg.
RESET
All bits low
RESET
All bits low except 5, 6 high
MODEM Status Reg.
TXD1, TXD2
RESET
Bits 0 - 3 low; Bits 4 - 7 input
RESET
High
INTRPT (RCVR errs)
RESET/Read LSR
Low
INTRPT (RCVR Data Ready) RESET/Read RBR
Low
INTRPT (THRE)
OUT2B
RESET/ReadIIR/Write THR
Low
RESET
RESET
RESET
RESET
High
RTSB
High
DTRB
High
OUT1B
High
RCVR FIFO
RESET/
All Bits Low
FCR1*FCR0/_FCR0
XMIT FIFO
RESET/
All Bits Low
FCR1*FCR0/_FCR0
76
Table 35 - Register Summary for an Individual UART Channel
REGISTER
REGISTER
ADDRESS*
REGISTER NAME
SYMBOL
BIT 0
BIT 1
ADDR = 0
DLAB = 0
Receive Buffer Register (Read Only)
RBR
Data Bit 0
(Note 1)
Data Bit 1
ADDR = 0
DLAB = 0
Transmitter Holding Register (Write
Only)
THR
IER
Data Bit 0
Data Bit 1
ADDR = 1
DLAB = 0
Interrupt Enable Register
Enable
Received
Data
Enable
Transmitter
Holding
Available
Interrupt
(ERDAI)
Register
Empty
Interrupt
(ETHREI)
ADDR = 2
ADDR = 2
ADDR = 3
Interrupt Ident. Register (Read Only)
FIFO Control Register (Write Only)
Line Control Register
IIR
"0" if Interrupt Interrupt ID
Pending Bit
FCR
LCR
FIFO Enable RCVR FIFO
Reset
Word Length Word Length
Select Bit 0
(WLS0)
Select Bit 1
(WLS1)
ADDR = 4
MODEM Control Register
MCR
Data
Request to
Terminal
Ready (DTR)
Send (RTS)
Data Ready
(DR)
ADDR = 5
ADDR = 6
Line Status Register
LSR
Overrun
Error (OE)
Delta Clear to
Send (DCTS)
MODEM Status Register
MSR
Delta Data
Set Ready
(DDSR)
ADDR = 7
Scratch Register (Note 4)
Divisor Latch (LS)
SCR
DDL
DLM
Bit 0
Bit 0
Bit 8
Bit 1
Bit 1
Bit 9
ADDR = 0
DLAB = 1
ADDR = 1
DLAB = 1
Divisor Latch (MS)
*DLAB is Bit 7 of the Line Control Register (ADDR = 3).
Note 1: Bit 0 is the least significant bit. It is the first bit serially transmitted or received.
Note 2: When operating in the XT mode, this bit will be set any time that the transmitter shift register is empty.
77
Table 35 - Register Summary for an Individual UART Channel (continued)
BIT 2
Data Bit 2
Data Bit 2
BIT 3
Data Bit 3
Data Bit 3
BIT 4
Data Bit 4
Data Bit 4
0
BIT 5
Data Bit 5
Data Bit 5
0
BIT 6
Data Bit 6
Data Bit 6
0
BIT 7
Data Bit 7
Data Bit 7
0
Enable
Receiver Line
Status
Enable
MODEM
Status
Interrupt
(ELSI)
Interrupt
(EMSI)
FIFOs
Enabled
(Note 5)
Interrupt ID
Bit
Interrupt ID
Bit (Note 5)
0
0
FIFOs
Enabled
(Note 5)
XMIT FIFO
Reset
DMA Mode
Select (Note
6)
Reserved
Reserved
Stick Parity
RCVR Trigger RCVR Trigger
LSB
MSB
Divisor Latch
Access Bit
(DLAB)
Number of
Stop Bits
(STB)
Parity Enable Even Parity
(PEN)
Set Break
Select (EPS)
OUT1
OUT2
Loop
0
0
0
(Note 3)
(Note 3)
Parity Error
(PE)
Framing Error Break
(FE)
Transmitter
Interrupt (BI) Holding
Transmitter
Empty
Error in
RCVR FIFO
Register
(THRE)
(TEMT) (Note (Note 5)
2)
Data Carrier
Ring Indicator
Ready (DSR) (RI)
Trailing Edge Delta Data
Ring Indicator Carrier Detect (CTS)
Clear to Send Data Set
Detect (DCD)
(TERI)
(DDCD)
Bit 2
Bit 3
Bit 4
Bit 4
Bit 12
Bit 5
Bit 5
Bit 13
Bit 6
Bit 6
Bit 14
Bit 7
Bit 7
Bit 15
Bit 2
Bit 3
Bit 10
Bit 11
Note 3: This bit no longer has a pin associated with it.
Note 4: When operating in the XT mode, this register is not available.
Note 5: These bits are always zero in the non-FIFO mode.
Note 6: Writing a one to this bit has no effect. DMA modes are not supported in this chip.
78
NOTES ON SERIAL PORT OPERATION
FIFO MODE OPERATION:
This one character Tx interrupt delay will
remain active until at least two bytes have
been loaded into the FIFO, concurrently.
When the Tx FIFO empties after this
condition, the Tx interrupt will be activated
without a one character delay.
GENERAL
The RCVR FIFO will hold up to 16 bytes
regardless of which trigger level is selected.
Rx support functions and operation are quite
different from those described for the
transmitter. The Rx FIFO receives data until the
number of bytes in the FIFO equals the selected
TX AND RX FIFO OPERATION
The Tx portion of the UART transmits data
through TXD as soon as the CPU loads a byte
into the Tx FIFO. The UART will prevent
loads to the Tx FIFO if it currently holds 16
characters. Loading to the Tx FIFO will again
be enabled as soon as the next character is
transferred to the Tx shift register. These
capabilities account for the largely autonomous
operation of the Tx.
interrupt trigger level.
At that time if Rx
interrupts are enabled, the UART will issue an
interrupt to the CPU. The Rx FIFO will continue
to store bytes until it holds 16 of them. It will
not accept any more data when it is full. Any
more data entering the Rx shift register will set
the Overrun Error flag. Normally, the FIFO
depth and the programmable trigger levels will
give the CPU ample time to empty the Rx FIFO
before an overrun occurs.
The UART starts the above operations typically
with a Tx interrupt. The chip issues a Tx
interrupt whenever the Tx FIFO is empty and the
Tx interrupt is enabled, except in the following
instance. Assume that the Tx FIFO is empty
and the CPU starts to load it. When the first
byte enters the FIFO the Tx FIFO empty
interrupt will transition from active to inactive.
Depending on the execution speed of the service
routine software, the UART may be able to
transfer this byte from the FIFO to the shift
register before the CPU loads another byte. If
this happens, the Tx FIFO will be empty again
and typically the UART's interrupt line would
transition to the active state. This could cause a
system with an interrupt control unit to record a
Tx FIFO empty condition, even though the CPU
is currently servicing that interrupt. Therefore,
after the first byte has been loaded into the
FIFO the UART will wait one serial character
transmission time before issuing a new Tx
FIFO empty interrupt.
One side-effect of having a Rx FIFO is that the
selected interrupt trigger level may be above the
data level in the FIFO. This could occur when
data at the end of the block contains fewer bytes
than the trigger level. No interrupt would be
issued to the CPU and the data would remain in
the UART. To prevent the software from
having to check for this situation the chip
incorporates a timeout interrupt.
The timeout interrupt is activated when there is
a least one byte in the Rx FIFO, and neither the
CPU nor the Rx shift register has accessed the
Rx FIFO within 4 character times of the last
byte. The timeout interrupt is cleared or reset
when the CPU reads the Rx FIFO or another
character enters it. These FIFO related features
allow optimization of CPU/UART transactions
and are especially useful given the higer baud
rate capability (256 kbaud).
79
INFRARED INTERFACE
The infrared interface provides
wireless communications port using infrared as
transmission medium. Two IR
implementations have been provided for the
second UART in this chip (logical device 5),
IrDA and Amplitude Shift Keyed IR. The IR
transmission can use the standard UART2 TX
and RX pins or optional IRTX2 and IRRX2 pins.
These can be selected through the configuration
registers.
a
two-way
by sending a 500KHz waveform for the duration
of the serial bit time. A one is signaled by
sending no transmission the bit time. Please
refer to the AC timing for the parameters of the
ASK-IR waveform.
a
If the Half Duplex option is chosen, there is a
time-out when the direction of the transmission
is changed. This time-out starts at the last bit
transfered during a transmission and blocks the
receiver input until the time-out expires. If the
transmit buffer is loaded with more data before
the time-out expires, the timer is restarted after
the new byte is transmitted. If data is loaded
into the transmit buffer while a character is
being received, the transmission will not start
until the time-out expires after the last receive
bit has been received. If the start bit of another
character is received during this time-out, the
timer is restarted after the new character is
received. The time-out is four character times.
A character time is defined as 10 bit times
regardless of the actual word length being used.
IrDA allows serial communication at baud rates
up to 115K Baud. Each word is sent serially
beginning with a zero value start bit. A zero is
signaled by sending a single IR pulse at the
beginning of the serial bit time. A one is
signaled by sending no IR pulse during the bit
time. Please refer to the AC timing for the
parameters of these pulses and the IrDA
waveform.
The Amplitude Shift Keyed IR allows serial
communication at baud rates up to 19.2K Baud.
Each word is sent serially beginning with a zero
value start bit.
A
zero is signaled
80
PARALLEL PORT
The FDC37C93x incorporates an IBM XT/AT
possible damage to the parallel port due to
printer power-up.
compatible parallel port. This supports the
optional PS/2 type bi-directional parallel port
(SPP), the Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP) and
the Extended Capabilities Port (ECP) parallel
The functionality of the Parallel Port is achieved
through the use of eight addressable ports,
with their associated registers and control
gating. The control and data port are read/write
by the CPU, the status port is read/write in the
EPP mode. The address map of the Parallel
Port is shown below:
port modes.
Refer to the Configuration
Registers for information on disabling, power
down, changing the base address of the parallel
port, and selecting the mode of operation.
The parallel port also incorporates SMSC's
ChiProtect
circuitry,
which
prevents
DATA PORT
STATUS PORT
CONTROL PORT
EPP ADDR PORT
BASE ADDRESS + 00H
BASE ADDRESS + 01H
BASE ADDRESS + 02H
BASE ADDRESS + 03H
EPP DATA PORT 0
EPP DATA PORT 1
EPP DATA PORT 2
EPP DATA PORT 3
BASE ADDRESS + 04H
BASE ADDRESS + 05H
BASE ADDRESS + 06H
BASE ADDRESS + 07H
The bit map of these registers is:
D0
PD0
D1
PD1
0
D2
PD2
0
D3
D4
D5
PD5
PE
D6
D7
Note
DATA PORT
PD3
PD4
SLCT
PD6
PD7
1
1
STATUS
PORT
TMOUT
nERR
nACK nBUSY
CONTROL
PORT
STROBE AUTOFD nINIT
SLC
PD3
PD3
PD3
PD3
PD3
IRQE
PD4
PD4
PD4
PD4
PD4
PCD
PD5
PD5
PD5
PD5
PD5
0
0
1
EPP ADDR
PORT
PD0
PD0
PD0
PD0
PD0
PD1
PD1
PD1
PD1
PD1
PD2
PD2
PD2
PD2
PD2
PD6
PD6
PD6
PD6
PD6
AD7
PD7
PD7
PD7
PD7
2,3
2,3
2,3
2,3
2,3
EPP DATA
PORT 0
EPP DATA
PORT 1
EPP DATA
PORT 2
EPP DATA
PORT 3
Note 1: These registers are available in all modes.
Note 2: These registers are only available in EPP mode.
Note 3 : For EPP mode, IOCHRDY must be connected to the ISA bus.
81
Table 36 - Parallel Port Connector
HOST
CONNECTOR
PIN NUMBER
STANDARD
nStrobe
EPP
ECP
1
nWrite
PData<0:7>
Intr
nStrobe
2-9
10
11
12
PData<0:7>
nAck
PData<0:7>
nAck
Busy
nWait
Busy, PeriphAck(3)
PE
(NU)
PError,
nAckReverse(3)
13
14
Select
(NU)
Select
nAutofd
nDatastb
nAutoFd,
HostAck(3)
15
16
17
nError
nInit
(NU)
nFault(1)
nPeriphRequest(3)
(NU)
nInit(1)
nReverseRqst(3)
nSelectin
nAddrstrb
nSelectIn(1,3)
(1) = Compatible Mode
(3) = High Speed Mode
Note:
For the cable interconnection required for ECP support and the Slave Connector pin
numbers, refer to the IEEE 1284 Extended Capabilities Port Protocol and ISA Standard,
Rev. 1.09, Jan. 7, 1993. This document is available from Microsoft.
82
IBM XT/AT COMPATIBLE, BI-DIRECTIONAL
AND EPP MODES
BIT 3 nERR - nERROR
The level on the nERROR input is read by the
CPU as bit 3 of the Printer Status Register. A
logic 0 means an error has been detected; a
logic 1 means no error has been detected.
DATA PORT
ADDRESS OFFSET = 00H
BIT 4 SLCT - PRINTER SELECTED STATUS
The level on the SLCT input is read by the CPU
as bit 4 of the Printer Status Register. A logic 1
means the printer is on line; a logic 0 means it is
not selected.
The Data Port is located at an offset of '00H'
from the base address. The data register is
cleared at initialization by RESET. During a
WRITE operation, the Data Register latches the
contents of the data bus with the rising edge of
the nIOW input. The contents of this register
are buffered (non inverting) and output onto the
PD0 - PD7 ports. During a READ operation in
SPP mode, PD0 - PD7 ports are buffered (not
latched) and output to the host CPU.
BIT 5 PE - PAPER END
The level on the PE input is read by the CPU as
bit 5 of the Printer Status Register. A logic 1
indicates a paper end; a logic 0 indicates the
presence of paper.
STATUS PORT
ADDRESS OFFSET = 01H
BIT 6 nACK - nACKNOWLEDGE
The level on the nACK input is read by the CPU
as bit 6 of the Printer Status Register. A logic 0
means that the printer has received a character
and can now accept another. A logic 1 means
that it is still processing the last character or has
not received the data.
The Status Port is located at an offset of '01H'
from the base address. The contents of this
register are latched for the duration of an nIOR
read cycle. The bits of the Status Port are
defined as follows:
BIT 7 nBUSY - nBUSY
BIT 0 TMOUT - TIME OUT
The complement of the level on the BUSY input
is read by the CPU as bit 7 of the Printer Status
Register. A logic 0 in this bit means that the
printer is busy and cannot accept a new
character. A logic 1 means that it is ready to
accept the next character.
This bit is valid in EPP mode only and indicates
that a 10 usec time out has occured on the EPP
bus. A logic O means that no time out error has
occured; a logic 1 means that a time out error
has been detected. This bit is cleared by a
RESET. Writing a one to this bit clears the time
out status bit. On a write, this bit is self clearing
and does not require a write of a zero. Writing a
zero to this bit has no effect.
CONTROL PORT
ADDRESS OFFSET = 02H
The Control Port is located at an offset of '02H'
from the base address. The Control Register is
initialized by the RESET input, bits 0 to 5 only
being affected; bits 6 and 7 are hard wired low.
BITS 1, 2 - are not implemented as register bits,
during a read of the Printer Status Register
these bits are a low level.
83
register is cleared at initialization by RESET.
During a WRITE operation, the contents of DB0-
DB7 are buffered (non inverting) and output onto
the PD0 - PD7 ports, the leading edge of nIOW
causes an EPP ADDRESS WRITE cycle to be
performed, the trailing edge of IOW latches the
data for the duration of the EPP write cycle.
During a READ operation, PD0 - PD7 ports are
read, the leading edge of IOR causes an EPP
ADDRESS READ cycle to be performed and the
data output to the host CPU, the deassertion of
ADDRSTB latches the PData for the duration of
the IOR cycle. This register is only available in
EPP mode.
BIT 0 STROBE - STROBE
This bit is inverted and output onto the
nSTROBE output.
BIT 1 AUTOFD - AUTOFEED
This bit is inverted and output onto the
nAUTOFD output. A logic 1 causes the printer
to generate a line feed after each line is printed.
A logic 0 means no autofeed.
BIT 2 nINIT - nINITIATE OUTPUT
This bit is output onto the nINIT output without
inversion.
BIT 3 SLCTIN - PRINTER SELECT INPUT
This bit is inverted and output onto the nSLCTIN
output. A logic 1 on this bit selects the printer; a
logic 0 means the printer is not selected.
EPP DATA PORT 0
ADDRESS OFFSET = 04H
The EPP Data Port 0 is located at an offset of
'04H' from the base address. The data register
is cleared at initialization by RESET. During a
WRITE operation, the contents of DB0-DB7 are
buffered (non inverting) and output onto the PD0
- PD7 ports, the leading edge of nIOW causes
an EPP DATA WRITE cycle to be performed,
the trailing edge of IOW latches the data for the
duration of the EPP write cycle. During a READ
operation, PD0 - PD7 ports are read, the leading
edge of IOR causes an EPP READ cycle to be
performed and the data output to the host CPU,
the deassertion of DATASTB latches the PData
for the duration of the IOR cycle. This register
is only available in EPP mode.
BIT 4 IRQE - INTERRUPT REQUEST ENABLE
The interrupt request enable bit when set to a
high level may be used to enable interrupt
requests from the Parallel Port to the CPU. An
interrupt request is generated on the IRQ port by
a positive going nACK input. When the IRQE
bit is programmed low the IRQ is disabled.
BIT
5
PCD
-
PARALLEL CONTROL
DIRECTION
Parallel Control Direction is not valid in printer
mode. In printer mode, the direction is always
out regardless of the state of this bit. In bi-
directional, EPP or ECP mode, a logic 0 means
that the printer port is in output mode (write); a
logic 1 means that the printer port is in input
mode (read). Bits 6 and 7 during a read are a
low level, and cannot be written.
EPP DATA PORT 1
ADDRESS OFFSET = 05H
The EPP Data Port 1 is located at an offset of
'05H' from the base address. Refer to EPP
DATA PORT 0 for a description of operation.
This register is only available in EPP mode.
EPP ADDRESS PORT
ADDRESS OFFSET = 03H
The EPP Address Port is located at an offset of
'03H' from the base address. The address
84
EPP DATA PORT 2
Software Constraints
ADDRESS OFFSET = 06H
Before an EPP cycle is executed, the software
must ensure that the control register bit PCD is
a logic "0" (ie a 04H or 05H should be written to
the Control port). If the user leaves PCD as a
logic "1", and attempts to perform an EPP write,
the chip is unable to perform the write (because
PCD is a logic "1") and will appear to perform an
EPP read on the parallel bus, no error is
indicated.
The EPP Data Port 2 is located at an offset of
'06H' from the base address. Refer to EPP
DATA PORT 0 for a description of operation.
This register is only available in EPP mode.
EPP DATA PORT 3
ADDRESS OFFSET = 07H
The EPP Data Port 3 is located at an offset of
'07H' from the base address. Refer to EPP
DATA PORT 0 for a description of operation.
This register is only available in EPP mode.
EPP 1.9 Write
The timing for a write operation (address or
data) is shown in timing diagram EPP Write
Data or Address cycle. IOCHRDY is driven
active low at the start of each EPP write and is
released when it has been determined that the
write cycle can complete. The write cycle can
complete under the following circumstances:
EPP 1.9 OPERATION
When the EPP mode is selected in the
configuration register, the standard and bi-
directional modes are also available. If no EPP
Read, Write or Address cycle is currently
executing, then the PDx bus is in the standard or
bi-directional mode, and all output signals
(STROBE, AUTOFD, INIT) are as set by the
SPP Control Port and direction is controlled by
PCD of the Control port.
1. If the EPP bus is not ready (nWAIT is active
low) when nDATASTB or nADDRSTB goes
active then the write can complete when
nWAIT goes inactive high.
2. If the EPP bus is ready (nWAIT is inactive
high) then the chip must wait for it to go
active low before changing the state of
nDATASTB, nWRITE or nADDRSTB. The
write can complete once nWAIT is
determined inactive.
In EPP mode, the system timing is closely
coupled to the EPP timing. For this reason, a
watchdog timer is required to prevent system
lockup. The timer indicates if more than 10usec
have elapsed from the start of the EPP cycle
(nIOR or nIOW asserted) to nWAIT being
deasserted (after command). If a time-out
occurs, the current EPP cycle is aborted and the
time-out condition is indicated in Status bit 0.
Write Sequence of operation
1. The host selects an EPP register, places
data on the SData bus and drives nIOW
active.
2. The chip drives IOCHRDY inactive (low).
3. If WAIT is not asserted, the chip must wait
until WAIT is asserted.
During an EPP cycle, if STROBE is active, it
overrides the EPP write signal forcing the PDx
bus to always be in a write mode and the
nWRITE signal to always be asserted.
4. The chip places address or data on PData
bus, clears PDIR, and asserts nWRITE.
85
5. Chip asserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB
indicating that PData bus contains valid
information, and the WRITE signal is valid.
6. Peripheral deasserts nWAIT, indicating that
any setup requirements have been satisfied
and the chip may begin the termination
phase of the cycle.
Read Sequence of Operation
1. The host selects an EPP register and drives
nIOR active.
2. The chip drives IOCHRDY inactive (low).
3. If WAIT is not asserted, the chip must wait
until WAIT is asserted.
7. a) The chip deasserts nDATASTB or
nADDRSTRB, this marks the beginning
of the termination phase. If it has not
already done so, the peripheral should
latch the information byte now.
4. The chip tri-states the PData bus and
deasserts nWRITE.
5. Chip asserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB
indicating that PData bus is tri-stated, PDIR
is set and the nWRITE signal is valid.
6. Peripheral drives PData bus valid.
7. Peripheral deasserts nWAIT, indicating that
PData is valid and the chip may begin the
termination phase of the cycle.
b) The chip latches the data from the
SData bus for the PData bus and
asserts (releases) IOCHRDY allowing
the host to complete the write cycle.
8. Peripheral asserts nWAIT, indicating to the
host that any hold time requirements have
been satisfied and acknowledging the
termination of the cycle.
9. Chip may modify nWRITE and nPDATA in
preparation for the next cycle.
8. a) The chip latches the data from the
PData bus for the SData bus and
deasserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB.
This marks the beginning of the
termination phase.
b) The chip drives the valid data onto the
SData bus and asserts (releases)
IOCHRDY allowing the host to
complete the read cycle.
EPP 1.9 Read
9. Peripheral tri-states the PData bus and
asserts nWAIT, indicating to the host that
the PData bus is tri-stated.
10. Chip may modify nWRITE, PDIR and
nPDATA in preparation for the next cycle.
The timing for a read operation (data) is shown
in timing diagram EPP Read Data cycle.
IOCHRDY is driven active low at the start of
each EPP read and is released when it has been
determined that the read cycle can complete.
The read cycle can complete under the following
circumstances:
EPP 1.7 OPERATION
1. If the EPP bus is not ready (nWAIT is active
low) when nDATASTB goes active then the
read can complete when nWAIT goes
inactive high.
When the EPP 1.7 mode is selected in the
configuration register, the standard and bi-
directional modes are also available. If no EPP
Read, Write or Address cycle is currently
executing, then the PDx bus is in the standard or
bi-directional mode, and all output signals
(STROBE, AUTOFD, INIT) are as set by the
SPP Control Port and direction is controlled by
PCD of the Control port.
2. If the EPP bus is ready (nWAIT is inactive
high) then the chip must wait for it to go
active low before changing the state of
WRITE or before nDATASTB goes active.
The read can complete once nWAIT is
determined inactive.
In EPP mode, the system timing is closely
coupled to the EPP timing. For this reason, a
86
watchdog timer is required to prevent system
lockup. The timer indicates if more than 10usec
have elapsed from the start of the EPP cycle
(nIOR or nIOW asserted) to the end of the cycle
5. If nWAIT is asserted, IOCHRDY is
deasserted until the peripheral deasserts
nWAIT or a time-out occurs.
6. When the host deasserts nIOW the chip
deasserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB and
latches the data from the SData bus for the
PData bus.
nIOR or nIOW deasserted).
If a time-out
occurs, the current EPP cycle is aborted and the
time-out condition is indicated in Status bit 0.
7. Chip may modify nWRITE, PDIR and
nPDATA in preparation of the next cycle.
Software Constraints
Before an EPP cycle is executed, the software
must ensure that the control register bits D0, D1
and D3 are set to zero. Also, bit D5 (PCD) is a
logic "0" for an EPP write or a logic "1" for and
EPP read.
EPP 1.7 Read
The timing for a read operation (data) is shown
in timing diagram EPP 1.7 Read Data cycle.
IOCHRDY is driven active low when nWAIT is
active low during the EPP cycle. This can be
used to extend the cycle time. The read cycle
can complete when nWAIT is inactive high.
EPP 1.7 Write
The timing for a write operation (address or
data) is shown in timing diagram EPP 1.7 Write
Data or Address cycle. IOCHRDY is driven
active low when nWAIT is active low during the
EPP cycle. This can be used to extend the cycle
Read Sequence of Operation
1. The host sets PDIR bit in the control
register to a logic "1". This deasserts
nWRITE and tri-states the PData bus.
2. The host selects an EPP register and drives
nIOR active.
time.
The write cycle can complete when
nWAIT is inactive high.
3. Chip asserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB
indicating that PData bus is tri-stated, PDIR
is set and the nWRITE signal is valid.
Write Sequence of Operation
1. The host sets PDIR bit in the control
4. If nWAIT is asserted, IOCHRDY is
deasserted until the peripheral deasserts
nWAIT or a time-out occurs.
5. The Peripheral drives PData bus valid.
6. The Peripheral deasserts nWAIT, indicating
that PData is valid and the chip may begin
the termination phase of the cycle.
register to a logic "0".
nWRITE.
2. The host selects an EPP register, places
data on the SData bus and drives nIOW
active.
This asserts
3. The chip places address or data on PData
bus.
7. When the host deasserts nIOR the chip
deasserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB.
8. Peripheral tri-states the PData bus.
9. Chip may modify nWRITE, PDIR and
nPDATA in preparation of the next cycle.
4. Chip asserts nDATASTB or nADDRSTRB
indicating that PData bus contains valid
information, and the WRITE signal is valid.
87
Table 37 - EPP Pin Descriptions
EPP
SIGNAL
EPP NAME
nWrite
TYPE
EPP DESCRIPTION
This signal is active low. It denotes a write operation.
nWRITE
PD<0:7>
INTR
O
Address/Data
Interrupt
I/O
I
Bi-directional EPP byte wide address and data bus.
This signal is active high and positive edge triggered. (Pass
through with no inversion, Same as SPP.)
WAIT
nWait
I
This signal is active low. It is driven inactive as a positive
acknowledgement from the device that the transfer of data
is completed. It is driven active as an indication that the
device is ready for the next transfer.
DATASTB nData Strobe
RESET nReset
O
O
O
This signal is active low. It is used to denote data read or
write operation.
This signal is active low.
When driven active, the EPP
device is reset to its initial operational mode.
ADDRSTB nAddress
Strobe
This signal is active low. It is used to denote address read
or write operation.
PE
Paper End
I
I
Same as SPP mode.
Same as SPP mode.
SLCT
Printer
Selected
Status
nERR
PDIR
Error
I
Same as SPP mode.
Parallel Port
Direction
O
This output shows the direction of the data transfer on the
parallel port bus. A low means an output/write condition and
a high means an input/read condition. This signal is
normally a low (output/write) unless PCD of the control
register is set or if an EPP read cycle is in progress.
Note 1: SPP and EPP can use 1 common register.
Note 2: nWrite is the only EPP output that can be over-ridden by SPP control port during an EPP
cycle. For correct EPP read cycles, PCD is required to be a low.
88
forward Host to Peripheral communication.
reverse Peripheral to Host communication.
PWord A port word; equal in size to the width
EXTENDED CAPABILITIES PARALLEL PORT
ECP provides a number of advantages, some of
which are listed below. The individual features
are explained in greater detail in the remainder
of this section.
of the ISA interface.
For this
implementation, PWord is always 8
bits.
1
0
A high level.
A low level.
·
·
·
High performance half-duplex forward and
reverse channel
Interlocked handshake, for fast reliable
transfer
Optional single byte RLE compression for
improved throughput (64:1)
Channel addressing for low-cost peripherals
Maintains link and data layer separation
Permits the use of active output drivers
Permits the use of adaptive signal timing
Peer-to-peer capability
These terms may be considered synonymous:
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
PeriphClk, nAck
HostAck, nAutoFd
PeriphAck, Busy
nPeriphRequest, nFault
nReverseRequest, nInit
nAckReverse, PError
Xflag, Select
ECPMode, nSelectln
HostClk, nStrobe
·
·
·
·
·
Vocabulary
Reference Document
IEEE 1284 Extended Capabilities Port Protocol
and ISA Interface Standard, Rev 1.09, Jan 7,
The following terms are used in this document:
1993.
Microsoft.
This document is available from
assert When a signal asserts it transitions to a
"true" state, when a signal deasserts it
transitions to a "false" state.
The bit map of the Extended Parallel Port
registers is:
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Note
data
PD7
Addr/RLE
nBusy
0
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
ecpAFifo
dsr
Address or RLE field
2
1
1
2
2
2
nAck
0
PError
Select
ackIntEn
nFault
0
0
0
dcr
Direction
SelectIn
nInit
autofd
strobe
cFifo
ecpDFifo
tFifo
Parallel Port Data FIFO
ECP Data FIFO
Test FIFO
cnfgA
cnfgB
ecr
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
compress
intrValue
MODE
Parallel Port IRQ
nErrIntrEn
Parallel Port DMA
serviceIntr full
dmaEn
empty
Note 1: These registers are available in all modes.
Note 2: All FIFOs use one common 16 byte FIFO.
Note 3: The ECP Parallel Port Config Reg B reflects the IRQ and DRQ selected by the Configuration Registers.
89
negotiation, rather it provides an automatic high
burst-bandwidth channel that supports DMA for
ECP in both the forward and reverse directions.
ISA IMPLEMENTATION STANDARD
This specification describes the standard ISA
interface to the Extended Capabilities Port
(ECP). All ISA devices supporting ECP must
meet the requirements contained in this section
or the port will not be supported by Microsoft.
For a description of the ECP Protocol, please
refer to the IEEE 1284 Extended Capabilities
Port Protocol and ISA Interface Standard, Rev.
1.09, Jan.7, 1993. This document is available
from Microsoft.
Small FIFOs are employed in both forward and
reverse directions to smooth data flow and
improve the maximum bandwidth requirement.
The size of the FIFO is 16 bytes deep. The port
supports an automatic handshake for the
standard parallel port to improve compatibility
mode transfer speed.
The port also supports run length encoded
(RLE) decompression (required) in hardware.
compression is accomplished by counting
identical bytes and transmitting an RLE byte
that indicates how many times the next byte is
to be repeated. Decompression simply
intercepts the RLE byte and repeats the
following byte the specified number of times.
Hardware support for compression is optional.
Description
The port is software and hardware compatible
with existing parallel ports so that it may be
used as a standard LPT port if ECP is not
required. The port is designed to be simple and
requires a small number of gates to implement.
It
does
not
do
any
"protocol"
90
Table 38 - ECP Pin Descriptions
DESCRIPTION
NAME
nStrobe
TYPE
O
During write operations nStrobe registers data or address into the slave
on the asserting edge (handshakes with Busy).
PData 7:0
nAck
I/O
I
Contains address or data or RLE data.
Indicates valid data driven by the peripheral when asserted. This signal
handshakes with nAutoFd in reverse.
PeriphAck (Busy)
I
I
This signal deasserts to indicate that the peripheral can accept data.
This signal handshakes with nStrobe in the forward direction. In the
reverse direction this signal indicates whether the data lines contain
ECP command information or data. The peripheral uses this signal to
flow control in the forward direction. It is an "interlocked" handshake
with nStrobe. PeriphAck also provides command information in the
reverse direction.
PError
Used to acknowledge a change in the direction the transfer (asserted =
(nAckReverse)
forward).
nReverseRequest.
The peripheral drives this signal low to acknowledge
It is an "interlocked" handshake with
nReverseRequest. The host relies upon nAckReverse to determine
when it is permitted to drive the data bus.
Select
I
Indicates printer on line.
nAutoFd
O
Requests a byte of data from the peripheral when asserted,
(HostAck)
handshaking with nAck in the reverse direction. In the forward direction
this signal indicates whether the data lines contain ECP address or
data. The host drives this signal to flow control in the reverse direction.
It is an "interlocked" handshake with nAck. HostAck also provides
command information in the forward phase.
nFault
(nPeriphRequest)
I
Generates an error interrupt when asserted. This signal provides a
mechanism for peer-to-peer communication. This signal is valid only in
the forward direction. During ECP Mode the peripheral is permitted
(but not required) to drive this pin low to request a reverse transfer. The
request is merely a "hint" to the host; the host has ultimate control over
the transfer direction. This signal would be typically used to generate
an interrupt to the host CPU.
nInit
O
O
Sets the transfer direction (asserted = reverse, deasserted = forward).
This pin is driven low to place the channel in the reverse direction. The
peripheral is only allowed to drive the bi-directional data bus while in
ECP Mode and HostAck is low and nSelectIn is high.
nSelectIn
Always deasserted in ECP mode.
91
to avoid conflict with standard ISA devices. The
port is equivalent to a generic parallel port
interface and may be operated in that mode.
The port registers vary depending on the mode
field in the ecr. The table below lists these
dependencies. Operation of the devices in
modes other that those specified is undefined.
Register Definitions
The register definitions are based on the
standard IBM addresses for LPT. All of the
standard printer ports are supported.
additional registers attach to an upper bit
decode of the standard LPT port definition
The
Table 39 - ECP Register Definitions
ADDRESS (Note 1) ECP MODES
NAME
FUNCTION
Data Register
data
+000h R/W
+000h R/W
+001h R/W
+002h R/W
+400h R/W
+400h R/W
+400h R/W
+400h R
000-001
011
All
ecpAFifo
dsr
ECP FIFO (Address)
Status Register
dcr
All
Control Register
cFifo
ecpDFifo
tFifo
010
011
110
111
111
All
Parallel Port Data FIFO
ECP FIFO (DATA)
Test FIFO
cnfgA
cnfgB
ecr
Configuration Register A
Configuration Register B
Extended Control Register
+401h R/W
+402h R/W
Note 1: These addresses are added to the parallel port base address as selected by configuration
register or jumpers.
Note 2: All addresses are qualified with AEN. Refer to the AEN pin definition.
Table 40 - Mode Descriptions
MODE
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
DESCRIPTION*
SPP mode
PS/2 Parallel Port mde
Parallel Port Data FIFO mode
ECP Parallel Port mode
EPP mode (If this option is enabled in the configuration registers)
(Reserved)
Test mode
Configuration mode
*Refer to ECR Register Description
92
DATA and ecpAFifo PORT
ADDRESS OFFSET = 00H
BIT 5 PError
The level on the PError input is read by the CPU
as bit 5 of the Device Status Register. Printer
Status Register.
Modes 000 and 001 (Data Port)
The Data Port is located at an offset of '00H'
from the base address. The data register is
cleared at initialization by RESET. During a
WRITE operation, the Data Register latches the
contents of the data bus on the rising edge of
the nIOW input. The contents of this register
are buffered (non inverting) and output onto the
PD0 - PD7 ports. During a READ operation,
PD0 - PD7 ports are read and output to the host
CPU.
BIT 6 nAck
The level on the nAck input is read by the CPU
as bit 6 of the Device Status Register.
BIT 7 nBusy
The complement of the level on the BUSY input
is read by the CPU as bit 7 of the Device Status
Register.
DEVICE CONTROL REGISTER (dcr)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 02H
Mode 011 (ECP FIFO - Address/RLE)
The Control Register is located at an offset of
'02H' from the base address. The Control
Register is initialized to zero by the RESET
input, bits 0 to 5 only being affected; bits 6 and
7 are hard wired low.
A data byte written to this address is placed in
the FIFO and tagged as an ECP Address/RLE.
The hardware at the ECP port transmitts this
byte to the peripheral automatically.
The
operation of this register is ony defined for the
forward direction (direction is 0). Refer to the
ECP Parallel Port Forward Timing Diagram,
located in the Timing Diagrams section of this
data sheet .
BIT 0 STROBE - STROBE
This bit is inverted and output onto the
nSTROBE output.
BIT 1 AUTOFD - AUTOFEED
DEVICE STATUS REGISTER (dsr)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 01H
This bit is inverted and output onto the
nAUTOFD output. A logic 1 causes the printer
to generate a line feed after each line is printed.
A logic 0 means no autofeed.
The Status Port is located at an offset of '01H'
from the base address. Bits 0 - 2 are not
implemented as register bits, during a read of
the Printer Status Register these bits are a low
level. The bits of the Status Port are defined as
follows:
BIT 2 nINIT - nINITIATE OUTPUT
This bit is output onto the nINIT output without
inversion.
BIT 3 SELECTIN
BIT 3 nFault
The level on the nFault input is read by the CPU
as bit 3 of the Device Status Register.
This bit is inverted and output onto the nSLCTIN
output. A logic 1 on this bit selects the printer; a
logic 0 means the printer is not selected.
BIT 4 Select
The level on the Select input is read by the CPU
as bit 4 of the Device Status Register.
BIT 4 ackIntEn - INTERRUPT REQUEST
ENABLE
The interrupt request enable bit when set to a
high level may be used to enable interrupt
requests from the Parallel Port to the CPU due
93
to a low to high transition on the nACK input.
Refer to the description of the interrupt under
Operation, Interrupts.
tFifo (Test FIFO Mode)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 400H
Mode = 110
Data bytes may be read, written or DMAed to or
from the system to this FIFO in any direction.
BIT 5 DIRECTION
If mode=000 or mode=010, this bit has no effect
and the direction is always out regardless of the
state of this bit. In all other modes, Direction is
valid and a logic 0 means that the printer port is
in output mode (write); a logic 1 means that the
printer port is in input mode (read).
Data in the tFIFO will not be transmitted to the
to the parallel port lines using a hardware
protocol handshake.
However, data in the
tFIFO may be displayed on the parallel port data
lines.
BITS 6 and 7 during a read are a low level, and
cannot be written.
The tFIFO will not stall when overwritten or
underrun. If an attempt is made to write data to
a full tFIFO, the new data is not accepted into
the tFIFO. If an attempt is made to read data
from an empty tFIFO, the last data byte is re-
read again. The full and empty bits must
always keep track of the correct FIFO state. The
tFIFO will transfer data at the maximum ISA
rate so that software may generate performance
metrics.
cFifo (Parallel Port Data FIFO)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 400h
Mode = 010
Bytes written or DMAed from the system to this
FIFO are transmitted by a hardware handshake
to the peripheral using the standard parallel port
protocol.
Transfers to the FIFO are byte
The FIFO size and interrupt threshold can be
determined by writing bytes to the FIFO and
checking the full and serviceIntr bits.
aligned. This mode is only defined for the
forward direction.
ecpDFifo (ECP Data FIFO)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 400H
Mode = 011
The writeIntrThreshold can be derermined by
starting with a full tFIFO, setting the direction bit
to 0 and emptying it a byte at a time until
serviceIntr is set. This may generate a spurious
interrupt, but will indicate that the threshold has
been reached.
Bytes written or DMAed from the system to this
FIFO, when the direction bit is 0, are transmitted
by a hardware handshake to the peripheral
using the ECP parallel port protocol. Transfers
to the FIFO are byte aligned.
The readIntrThreshold can be derermined by
setting the direction bit to 1 and filling the empty
tFIFO a byte at a time until serviceIntr is set.
This may generate a spurious interrupt, but will
indicate that the threshold has been reached.
Data bytes from the peripheral are read under
automatic hardware handshake from ECP into
this FIFO when the direction bit is 1. Reads or
DMAs from the FIFO will return bytes of ECP
data to the system.
94
Data bytes are always read from the head of
tFIFO regardless of the value of the direction bit.
For example if 44h, 33h, 22h is written to the
FIFO, then reading the tFIFO will return 44h,
33h, 22h in the same order as was written.
BITS 7,6,5
These bits are Read/Write and select the Mode.
BIT 4 nErrIntrEn
Read/Write (Valid only in ECP Mode)
1: Disables the interrupt generated on the
asserting edge of nFault.
0: Enables an interrupt pulse on the high to
low edge of nFault. Note that an interrupt
will be generated if nFault is asserted
(interrupting) and this bit is written from a 1
to a 0. This prevents interrupts from being
lost in the time between the read of the ecr
and the write of the ecr.
cnfgA (Configuration Register A)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 400H
Mode = 111
This register is a read only register. When read,
10H is returned. This indicates to the system
that this is an 8-bit implementation. (PWord = 1
byte)
cnfgB (Configuration Register B)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 401H
Mode = 111
BIT 3 dmaEn
Read/Write
1: Enables DMA (DMA starts when serviceIntr
is 0).
0: Disables DMA unconditionally.
BIT 7 compress
This bit is read only. During a read it is a low
level. This means that this chip does not
support hardware RLE compression. It does
support hardware de-compression!
BIT 2 serviceIntr
Read/Write
1: Disables DMA and all of the service
interrupts.
0: Enables one of the following 3 cases of
interrupts. Once one of the 3 service
interrupts has occurred serviceIntr bit shall
be set to a 1 by hardware. It must be reset
to 0 to re-enable the interrupts. Writing this
bit to a 1 will not cause an interrupt.
case dmaEn=1:
BIT 6 intrValue
Returns the value on the ISA iRq line to
determine possible conflicts.
BITS [3:0] Parallel Port IRQ
Refer to Table "A" on page 169.
During DMA (this bit is set to a 1 when
terminal count is reached).
case dmaEn=0 direction=0:
BITS [2:0] Parallel Port DMA
Refer to Table "B" on page 169.
This bit shall be set to 1 whenever there are
writeIntrThreshold or more bytes free in the
FIFO.
ecr (Extended Control Register)
ADDRESS OFFSET = 402H
Mode = all
This register controls the extended ECP parallel
port functions.
case dmaEn=0 direction=1:
This bit shall be set to 1 whenever there are
readIntrThreshold or more valid bytes to be
read from the FIFO.
95
BIT 1 full
BIT 0 empty
Read only
Read only
1: The FIFO cannot accept another byte or the
FIFO is completely full.
1: The FIFO is completely empty.
0: The FIFO contains at least 1 byte of data.
0: The FIFO has at least 1 free byte.
Table 41 - Extended Control Register
R/W
MODE
000: Standard Parallel Port Mode . In this mode the FIFO is reset and common collector drivers
are used on the control lines (nStrobe, nAutoFd, nInit and nSelectIn). Setting the direction
bit will not tri-state the output drivers in this mode.
001: PS/2 Parallel Port Mode. Same as above except that direction may be used to tri-state the
data lines and reading the data register returns the value on the data lines and not the
value in the data register. All drivers have active pull-ups (push-pull).
010: Parallel Port FIFO Mode. This is the same as 000 except that bytes are written or DMAed to
the FIFO. FIFO data is automatically transmitted using the standard parallel port protocol.
Note that this mode is only useful when direction is 0. All drivers have active pull-ups
(push-pull).
011: ECP Parallel Port Mode. In the forward direction (direction is 0) bytes placed into the
ecpDFifo and bytes written to the ecpAFifo are placed in a single FIFO and transmitted
automatically to the peripheral using ECP Protocol. In the reverse direction (direction is 1)
bytes are moved from the ECP parallel port and packed into bytes in the ecpDFifo. All
drivers have active pull-ups (push-pull).
100: Selects EPP Mode: In this mode, EPP is selected if the EPP supported option is selected in
configuration register L3-CRF0. All drivers have active pull-ups (push-pull).
101: Reserved
110: Test Mode. In this mode the FIFO may be written and read, but the data will not be
transmitted on the parallel port. All drivers have active pull-ups (push-pull).
111: Configuration Mode. In this mode the confgA, confgB registers are accessible at 0x400 and
0x401. All drivers have active pull-ups (push-pull).
96
OPERATION
After negotiation, it is necessary to initialize
some of the port bits. The following are required:
Mode Switching/Software Control
·
·
Set Direction = 0, enabling the drivers.
Set strobe = 0, causing the nStrobe signal
to default to the deasserted state.
Set autoFd = 0, causing the nAutoFd signal
to default to the deasserted state.
Software will execute P1284 negotiation and all
operation prior to a data transfer phase under
programmed I/O control (mode 000 or 001).
Hardware provides an automatic control line
handshake, moving data between the FIFO and
the ECP port only in the data transfer phase
(modes 011 or 010).
·
·
Set mode = 011 (ECP Mode)
ECP address/RLE bytes or data bytes may be
sent automatically by writing the ecpAFifo or
ecpDFifo respectively.
Setting the mode to 011 or 010 will cause the
hardware to initiate data transfer.
Note that all FIFO data transfers are byte wide
and byte aligned. Address/RLE transfers are
byte-wide and only allowed in the forward
direction.
If the port is in mode 000 or 001 it may switch to
any other mode. If the port is not in mode 000
or 001 it can only be switched into mode 000 or
001. The direction can only be changed in
mode 001.
The host may switch directions by first switching
to mode = 001, negotiating for the forward or
Once in an extended forward mode the software
should wait for the FIFO to be empty before
switching back to mode 000 or 001. In this case
all control signals will be deasserted before the
mode switch. In an ecp reverse mode the
software waits for all the data to be read from
the FIFO before changing back to mode 000 or
001. Since the automatic hardware ecp
reverse handshake only cares about the state of
the FIFO it may have acquired extra data which
will be discarded. It may in fact be in the middle
of a transfer when the mode is changed back to
000 or 001. In this case the port will deassert
nAutoFd independent of the state of the transfer.
The design shall not cause glitches on the
handshake signals if the software meets the
constraints above.
reverse channel, setting
direction to 1 or 0,
then setting mode = 011. When direction is 1
the hardware shall handshake for each ECP
read data byte and attempt to fill the FIFO.
Bytes may then be read from the ecpDFifo as
long as it is not empty.
ECP transfers may also be accomplished (albeit
slowly) by handshaking individual bytes under
program control in mode = 001, or 000.
Termination from ECP Mode
Termination from ECP Mode is similar to the
termination from Nibble/Byte Modes. The host is
permitted to terminate from ECP Mode only in
specific well-defined states. The termination can
only be executed while the bus is in the forward
direction. To terminate while the channel is in
the reverse direction, it must first be transitioned
into the forward direction.
ECP Operation
Prior to ECP operation the Host must negotiate
on the parallel port to determine if the peripheral
supports the ECP protocol. This is a somewhat
complex negotiation carried out under program
control in mode 000.
97
The most significant bit of the command
indicates whether it is a run-length count (for
compression) or a channel address.
Command/Data
ECP Mode supports two advanced features to
improve the effectiveness of the protocol for
When in the reverse direction, normal data is
transferred when PeriphAck is high and an 8-bit
command is transferred when PeriphAck is low.
The most significant bit of the command is
always zero. Reverse channel addresses are
seldom used and may not be supported in
hardware.
some
applications.
The
features
are
implemented by allowing the transfer of normal
8-bit data or 8-bit commands.
When in the forward direction, normal data is
transferred when HostAck is high and an 8-bit
command is transferred when HostAck is low.
Table 42
Forward Channel Commands (HostAck Low)
Reverse Channel Commands (PeripAck Low)
D7
D[6:0]
0
Run-Length Count (0-127)
(mode 0011 0X00 only)
1
Channel Address (0-127)
Data Compression
The ECP port supports run length encoded
(RLE) decompression in hardware and can
transfer compressed data to a peripheral. Run
length encoded (RLE) compression in hardware
is not supported. To transfer compressed data
in ECP mode, the compression count is written
to the ecpAFifo and the data byte is written to
the ecpDFifo.
however, run-length counts of zero should be
avoided.
Pin Definition
The drivers for nStrobe, nAutoFd, nInit and
nSelectIn are open-collector in mode 000 and
are push-pull in all other modes.
Compression is accomplished by counting
identical bytes and transmitting an RLE byte
that indicates how many times the next byte is
ISA Connections
The interface can never stall causing the host to
hang. The width of data transfers is strictly
controlled on an I/O address basis per this
specification. All FIFO-DMA transfers are byte
wide, byte aligned and end on a byte boundary.
(The PWord value can be obtained by reading
Configuration Register A, cnfgA, described in
the next section.) Single byte wide transfers
are always possible with standard or PS/2
mode using program control of the control
signals.
to be repeated.
Decompression simply
intercepts the RLE byte and repeats the
following byte the specified number of times.
When a run-length count is received from a
peripheral, the subsequent data byte is
replicated the specified number of times. A
run-length count of zero specifies that only one
byte of data is represented by the next data
byte, whereas a run-length count of 127
indicates that the next byte should be expanded
to 128 bytes. To prevent data expansion,
98
b.
(1)
When serviceIntr is 0, dmaEn
is 0, direction is 1 and there
are readIntrThreshold or more
bytes in the FIFO. Also, an
interrupt is generated when
Interrupts
The interrupts are enabled by serviceIntr in the
ecr register.
serviceIntr is cleared to
whenever there
0
are
serviceIntr = 1 Disables the DMA and all of the
service interrupts.
readIntrThreshold or more
bytes in the FIFO.
serviceIntr = 0
Enables the selected interrupt
condition. If the interrupting
condition is valid, then the
3. When nErrIntrEn is 0 and nFault transitions
from high to low or when nErrIntrEn is set
from 1 to 0 and nFault is asserted.
interrupt
is
generated
immediately when this bit is
changed from a 1 to a 0. This
can occur during Programmed
I/O if the number of bytes
removed or added from/to the
FIFO does not cross the
threshold.
4. When ackIntEn is 1 and the nAck signal
transitions from a low to a high.
FIFO Operation
The FIFO threshold is set in the chip
configuration registers. All data transfers to or
from the parallel port can proceed in DMA or
Programmed I/O (non-DMA) mode as indicated
by the selected mode. The FIFO is used by
selecting the Parallel Port FIFO mode or ECP
Parallel Port Mode. (FIFO test mode will be
addressed separately.) After a reset, the FIFO
is disabled. Each data byte is transferred by a
Programmed I/O cycle or PDRQ depending on
the selection of DMA or Programmed I/O mode.
The interrupt generated is ISA friendly in that it
must pulse the interrupt line low, allowing for
interrupt sharing.
After a brief pulse low
following the interrupt event, the interrupt line is
tri-stated so that other interrupts may assert.
An interrupt is generated when:
1. For DMA transfers: When serviceIntr is 0,
dmaEn is 1 and the DMA TC is received.
2. For Programmed I/O:
The following paragraphs detail the operation of
the FIFO flow control. In these descriptions,
a.
When serviceIntr is 0, dmaEn is 0,
direction is and there are
writeIntrThreshold or more free bytes in
the FIFO. Also, an interrupt is
generated when serviceIntr is cleared
to whenever there are
0
<threshold> ranges from
1
to 16.
The
parameter FIFOTHR, which the user programs,
is one less and ranges from 0 to 15.
0
A low threshold value (i.e. 2) results in longer
periods of time between service requests, but
requires faster servicing of the request for both
read and write cases. The host must be very
responsive to the service request. This is the
desired case for use with a "fast" system.
writeIntrThreshold or more free bytes in
the FIFO.
99
A high value of threshold (i.e. 12) is used with a
"sluggish" system by affording a long latency
period after a service request, but results in
more frequent service requests.
DMA Mode - Transfers from the FIFO to the
Host
(Note: In the reverse mode, the peripheral may
not continue to fill the FIFO if it runs out of data
to transfer, even if the chip continues to request
more data from the peripheral.)
DMA TRANSFERS
DMA transfers are always to or from the
ecpDFifo, tFifo or CFifo. DMA utilizes the
standard PC DMA services. To use the DMA
transfers, the host first sets up the direction and
state as in the programmed I/O case. Then it
programs the DMA controller in the host with the
desired count and memory address. Lastly it
sets dmaEn to 1 and serviceIntr to 0. The ECP
requests DMA transfers from the host by
activating the PDRQ pin. The DMA will empty
or fill the FIFO using the appropriate direction
and mode. When the terminal count in the DMA
controller is reached, an interrupt is generated
and serviceIntr is asserted, disabling DMA. In
order to prevent possible blocking of refresh
requests dReq shall not be asserted for more
than 32 DMA cycles in a row. The FIFO is
enabled directly by asserting nPDACK and
addresses need not be valid. PINTR is
generated when a TC is received. PDRQ must
not be asserted for more than 32 DMA cycles in
a row. After the 32nd cycle, PDRQ must be
kept unasserted until nPDACK is deasserted for
a minimum of 350nsec. (Note: The only way to
properly terminate DMA transfers is with a TC.)
The ECP activates the PDRQ pin whenever
there is data in the FIFO. The DMA controller
must respond to the request by reading data
from the FIFO. The ECP will deactivate the
PDRQ pin when the FIFO becomes empty or
when the TC becomes true (qualified by
nPDACK), indicating that no more data is
required. PDRQ goes inactive after nPDACK
goes active for the last byte of a data transfer
(or on the active edge of nIOR, on the last byte,
if no edge is present on nPDACK). If PDRQ
goes inactive due to the FIFO going empty, then
PDRQ is active again as soon as there is one
byte in the FIFO. If PDRQ goes inactive due to
the TC, then PDRQ is active again when there
is one byte in the FIFO, and serviceIntr has
been re-enabled. (Note: A data underrun may
occur if PDRQ is not removed in time to prevent
an unwanted cycle.)
Programmed I/O Mode or Non-DMA Mode
The ECP or parallel port FIFOs may also be
operated using interrupt driven programmed I/O.
Software
writeIntrThreshold,
FIFO depth by accessing the FIFO in Test
Mode.
can
determine
readIntrThreshold, and
the
DMA may be disabled in the middle of a transfer
by first disabling the host DMA controller. Then
setting serviceIntr to 1, followed by setting
dmaEn to 0, and waiting for the FIFO to
become empty or full. Restarting the DMA is
accomplished by enabling DMA in the host,
setting dmaEn to 1, followed by setting
serviceIntr to 0.
Programmed I/O transfers are to the ecpDFifo
at 400H and ecpAFifo at 000H or from the
ecpDFifo located at 400H, or to/from the tFifo at
400H. To use the programmed I/O transfers,
the host first sets up the direction and state, sets
dmaEn to 0 and serviceIntr to 0.
100
The ECP requests programmed I/O transfers
from the host by activating the PINTR pin. The
programmed I/O will empty or fill the FIFO using
the appropriate direction and mode.
transferred out of the FIFO. If at this time the
FIFO is full, it can be completely emptied in a
single burst, otherwise a minimum of (16-
<threshold>) bytes may be read from the FIFO
in a single burst.
Note: A threshold of 16 is equivalent to a
threshold of 15. These two cases are treated
the same.
Programmed I/O - Transfers from the Host to
the FIFO
Programmed I/O - Transfers from the FIFO to
the Host
In the forward direction an interrupt occurs when
serviceIntr is 0 and there are writeIntrThreshold
or more bytes free in the FIFO. At this time if
the FIFO is empty it can be filled with a single
burst before the empty bit needs to be re-read.
In the reverse direction an interrupt occurs when
serviceIntr is 0 and readIntrThreshold bytes
are available in the FIFO. If at this time the
FIFO is full it can be emptied completely in a
single burst, otherwise readIntrThreshold bytes
may be read from the FIFO in a single burst.
Otherwise
it
may
be
filled
with
writeIntrThreshold bytes.
writeIntrThreshold =
(16-<threshold>) free
bytes in FIFO
readIntrThreshold =(16-<threshold>) data bytes
in FIFO
An interrupt is generated when serviceIntr is 0
and the number of bytes in the FIFO is less than
or equal to <threshold>. (If the threshold = 12,
then the interrupt is set whenever there are 12 or
less bytes of data in the FIFO.) The PINT pin
can be used for interrupt-driven systems. The
host must respond to the request by writing data
to the FIFO. If at this time the FIFO is empty, it
can be completely filled in a single burst,
otherwise a minimum of (16-<threshold>) bytes
may be written to the FIFO in a single burst.
This process is repeated until the last byte is
transferred into the FIFO.
An interrupt is generated when serviceIntr is 0
and the number of bytes in the FIFO is greater
than or equal to (16-<threshold>). (If the
threshold
= 12, then the interrupt is set
whenever there are 4-16 bytes in the FIFO.) The
PINT pin can be used for interrupt-driven
systems. The host must respond to the request
by reading data from the FIFO. This process is
repeated
until
the
last
byte
is
101
AUTO POWER MANAGEMENT
Power management capabilities are provided for
DSR From Powerdown
the following logical devices: floppy disk, UART
1, UART 2 and the parallel port. For each
logical device, two types of power management
are provided; direct powerdown and auto
powerdown.
If DSR powerdown is used when the part is in
auto powerdown, the DSR powerdown will
override the auto powerdown. However, when
the part is awakened from DSR powerdown, the
auto powerdown will once again become
effective.
FDC Power Management
Direct power management is controlled by
CR22. Refer to CR22 for more information.
Wake Up From Auto Powerdown
If the part enters the powerdown state through
the auto powerdown mode, then the part can be
awakened by reset or by appropriate access to
certain registers.
Auto Power Management is enabled by CR23-
B0. When set, this bit allows FDC to enter
powerdown when all of the following conditions
have been met:
If a hardware or software reset is used then the
part will go through the normal reset sequence.
If the access is through the selected registers,
then the FDC resumes operation as though it
was never in powerdown. Besides activating the
RESET pin or one of the software reset bits in
the DOR or DSR, the following register
accesses will wake up the part:
1. The motor enable pins of register 3F2H are
inactive (zero).
2. The part must be idle; MSR=80H and INT =
0 (INT may be high even if MSR = 80H due
to polling interrupts).
3. The head unload timer must have expired.
1. Enabling any one of the motor enable bits
in the DOR register (reading the DOR does
not awaken the part).
4. The Auto powerdown timer (10msec) must
have timed out.
An internal timer is initiated as soon as the auto
powerdown command is enabled. The part is
then powered down when all the conditions are
met.
2. A read from the MSR register.
3. A read or write to the Data register.
Once awake, the FDC will reinitiate the auto
powerdown timer for 10 ms. The part will
powerdown again when all the powerdown
conditions are satisfied.
Disabling the auto powerdown mode cancels the
timer and holds the FDC block out of auto
powerdown.
102
Register Behavior
Pin Behavior
Table 43 reiterates the AT and PS/2 (including
Model 30) configuration registers available. It
also shows the type of access permitted. In
order to maintain software transparency, access
to all the registers must be maintained. As Table
43 shows, two sets of registers are distinguished
based on whether their access results in the part
remaining in powerdown state or exiting it.
The FDC37C93x is specifically designed for
portable PC systems in which power
conservation is a primary concern. This makes
the behavior of the pins during powerdown very
important.
The pins of the FDC37C93x can be divided into
two major categories: system interface and
floppy disk drive interface. The floppy disk drive
pins are disabled so that no power will be drawn
through the part as a result of any voltage
applied to the pin within the part's power supply
range. Most of the system interface pins are left
active to monitor system accesses that may
wake up the part.
Access to all other registers is possible without
awakening the part. These registers can be
accessed during powerdown without changing
the status of the part. A read from these
registers will reflect the true status as shown in
the register description in the FDC description.
A write to the part will result in the part retaining
the data and subsequently reflecting it when the
System Interface Pins
part awakens.
Accessing the part during
powerdown may cause an increase in the power
consumption by the part. The part will revert
back to its low power mode when the access
has been completed.
Table 44 gives the state of the system interface
pins in the powerdown state. Pins unaffected by
the powerdown are labeled "Unchanged". Input
pins are "Disabled" to prevent them from
causing currents internal to the FDC37C93x
when they have indeterminate input values.
103
Table 43 - PC/AT and PS/2 Available Registers
Base + Address Available Registers Access Permitted
PC-AT PS/2 (Model 30)
Access to these registers DOES NOT wake up the part
00H
01H
02H
03H
04H
06H
07H
07H
----
----
SRA
SRB
R
R
DOR (1)
---
DOR (1)
---
R/W
---
W
DSR (1)
---
DSR (1)
---
---
R
DIR
DIR
CCR
CCR
W
Access to these registers wakes up the part
04H
05H
MSR
Data
MSR
Data
R
R/W
Note 1: Writing to the DOR or DSR does not wake up the part, however, writing any of the motor
enable bits or doing a software reset (via DOR or DSR reset bits) will wake up the part.
Table 44 - State of System Pins in Auto Powerdown
System Pins
State in Auto Powerdown
Input Pins
IOR
IOW
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
Unchanged
A[0:9]
D[0:7]
RESET
IDENT
DACKx
TC
Output Pins
IRQx
DB[0:7]
DRQx
Unchanged (low)
Unchanged
Unchanged (low)
104
FDD Interface Pins
Pins used for local logic control or part
programming are unaffected. Table 45 depicts
the state of the floppy disk drive interface pins in
the powerdown state.
All pins in the FDD interface which can be
connected directly to the floppy disk drive itself
are
either DISABLED or TRISTATED.
Table 45 - State of Floppy Disk Drive Interface Pins in Powerdown
FDD Pins
State in Auto Powerdown
Input Pins
RDATA
WP
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
TRK0
INDX
DRV2
DSKCHG
Output Pins
MOTEN[0:3]
DS[0:3}
DIR
Tristated
Tristated
Active
STEP
Active
WRDATA
WE
Tristated
Tristated
Active
HDSEL
DENSEL
DRATE[0:1]
Active
Active
105
UART Power Management
Parallel Port
Direct power management is controlled by
CR22. Refer to CR22 for more information.
Direct power management is controlled by
CR22. Refer to CR22 for more information.
Auto Power Management is enabled by CR23-
B4 and B5. When set, these bits allow the
following auto power management operations:
Auto Power Management is enabled by CR23-
B3. When set, this bit allows the ECP or EPP
logical parallel port blocks to be placed into
powerdown when not being used.
1. The transmitter enters auto powerdown
when the transmit buffer and shift register
are empty.
The EPP logic is in powerdown under any of the
following conditions:
2. The receiver enters powerdown when the
following conditions are all met:
1. EPP is not enabled in the configuration
registers.
a. Receive FIFO is empty
b. The receiver is waiting for a start bit.
2. EPP is not selected through ecr while in
ECP mode.
Note:
While in powerdown the Ring Indicator
interrupt is still valid and transitions
when the RI input changes.
The ECP logic is in powerdown under any of the
following conditions:
1. ECP is not enabled in the configuration
registers.
Exit Auto Powerdown
2
SPP, PS/2 Parallel port or EPP mode is
selected through ecr while in ECP mode.
The transmitter exits powerdown on a write to
the XMIT buffer.
The receiver exits auto
powerdown when RXDx changes state.
Exit Auto Powerdown
The parallel port logic can change powerdown
modes when the ECP mode is changed through
the ecr register or when the parallel port mode is
changed through the configuration registers.
106
INTEGRATED DRIVE ELECTRONICS INTERFACE
The FDC37C93x contains two IDE interfaces.
This enables hard disks with embedded
the AT Task File, and the Miscellaneous AT
Register.
controllers (AT or IDE) to be interfaced to the
host processor. The IDE interface performs the
address decoding for the IDE interface,
generates the buffer enables for external buffers
and provides internal buffers for the low byte
IDE data transfers. For more information, refer
to the IDE pin descriptions and the ATA
specification. The following example uses IDE1
ADDRESS 1F0H-1F7H; 170H-177H
These AT registers contain the Task File
Registers. These registers communicate data,
command, and status information with the AT
host, and are addressed when nHCS0 or nHCS2
is low.
base1=1F0H,
base2=3F6H
and
IDE2
ADDRESS 3F6H/376H;
base1=170H, base2 =376H.
These AT registers may be used by the BIOS for
drive control. They are accessed by the AT
interface when nHCS1 or nHCS3 is active low.
HOST FILE REGISTERS
Figure 2 shows the AT Host Register Map.
The Host File Registers are accessed by the AT
Host. There are two groups of registers,
FIGURE 2 - HOST PROCESSOR REGISTER ADDRESS MAP (AT MODE)
PRIMARY
1F0H
|
1F7H
3F6H
SECONDARY
170H
|
177H
TASK FILE REGISTERS
MISC. AT REGISTERS
376H
compatible. Please refer to the ATA and EATA
specifications. These are available from:
TASK FILE REGISTERS
Task File Registers may be accessed by the
host AT when pin nHDCS0 is active (low). The
Data Register (1F0H) is 16 bits wide; the
remaining task file registers are 8 bits wide. The
task file registers are ATA and EATA
Global Engineering
2805 McGaw Street
Irvine, CA 92714
(800) 854-7179 or
(714) 261-1455
107
IDE OUTPUT ENABLES
Two IDE output Enables are available. The IDE output enables treat all IDE transfers as 16 bit
transfers.
nIDE1_OE
IDE1 (1)
nIDE2_OE
IDE2 (2)
Option 1
Option 2
IDE1&IDE2 (3)
(Not used)
Note 1: The low and high byte transfer for IDE1 goes through external buffers controlled by IDE1_OE.
(Refer to Option 1)
Note 2: The low and high byte transfer for IDE2 goes through external buffers controlled by IDE2_OE.
(Refer to Option 1)
Note 3: The low and high byte transfers of IDE1 and IDE2 go through one set of external buffers
controlled by IDE1. (Refer to Option 2)
108
BIOS BUFFER
The FDC37C93x contains one 245 type buffer
This function allows data transmission from the
RD bus to the SD bus or from the SD bus to the
that can be used for a BIOS Buffer. If the BIOS
buffer is not used, then nROMCS and nROMDIR
must be tied high so as not to interfere with the
boot ROM.
RD bus.
The direction of the transfer is
controlled by nROMDIR. The enable input,
nROMCS, can be used to disable the transfer
and isolate the buses.
nROMDIR
nROMCS
L
L
L
H
X
RD[0:7] data to SD[0:7] bus
SD[0:7] data to RD[0:7]
Isolation
H
SD[15:8]
IDE Channel 1
FDC37C93x
IDE1_OE
SD[7:0]
B1
BIOS
Option 1
IDE2_OE
IDE Channel 2
II
109
SD[15:8]
IDE Channel 1
FDC37C93x
IDE1_OE
SD[7:0]
B1
BIOS
Option 2
IDE2_OE
NC
IDE Channel 2
110
GENERAL PURPOSE I/O FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The FDC37C93x provides a set of flexible
General Purpose I/O Ports
Input/Output control functions to the system
designer through a set of General Purpose I/O
pins (GPI/O). These GPI/O pins may perform
simple I/O or may be individually configured to
provide a predefined alternate function. Power-
on reset configures all GPI/O pins as simple
non-inverting inputs.
The FDC37C93x has 14 independently
programmable general purpose I/0 ports
(GPI/O). Each GPI/O port is represented as a
bit in one of two GPI/O 8-bit registers, GP1 or
GP2. Only 6 bits of GP2 are implemented.
Each GPI/O port and its alternate function is
listed in Table 46.
Table 46 - General Purpose I/O Port Assignments
GPI/O PORT
GP10
GP11
GP12
GP13
GP14
GP15
GP16
GP17
GP20
GP21
GP22
GP23
GP24
GP25
ALTERNATE FUNCTION
REGISTER ASSIGNMENT
GP1, bit 0
Interrupt Steering *
Interrupt Steering *
GP1, bit 1
WD Timer Output or IRRX Input
Power LED or IRTX Output
GP Address Decoder
GP1, bit 2
GP1, bit 3
GP1, bit 4
GP Write Strobe
GP1, bit 5
Joystick RD Strobe/Joystick Chip Sel
Joystick WR Strobe
GP1, bit 6
GP1, bit 7
IDE2 Buffer Enable/8042 P20
Serial EEPROM Data In *
Serial EEPROM Data Out
Serial EEPROM Clock
Serial EEPROM Enable
8042 P21
GP2, bit 0
GP2, bit 1
GP2, bit 2
GP2, bit 3
GP2, bit 4
GP2, bit 5
Note 1: 8042 P21 is normally used for Gate A20
Note 2: 8042 P20 is normally used for the Keyboard Reset Output
* These are input-type alternate functions; all other GPI/O pins contain output-type alternate
functions.
111
GPI/O registers GP1 and GP2 can be accessed
by the host when the chip is in the normal run
mode, i.e., not in Configuration Mode. The host
uses an Index and Data register to access the
GPI/O registers. The Power on default Index
and Data registers are 0xEA and 0xEB
respectively. When the chip is in configuration
mode these Index and Data registers are used
to access the internal configuration registers. In
configuration mode the Index address may be
programmed to reside on addresses 0xE0,
0xE2, 0xE4 or 0xEA. The Data address is
automatically set to the Index address + 1.
Upon exiting the configuration mode the new
Index and Data registers are used to access
registers GP1 and GP2.
To access the GP1 register the host should first
make sure the chip is in the normal (run) mode.
Then it should perform an IOW of 0x01 to the
Index register (at 0xEX) to select GP1 and then
read or write the Data register (at Index+1) to
access the GP1 register. To access GP2 the
host should perform an IOW of 0x02 to the
Index register and then access GP2 through the
Data register. Additionally the host can access
the WDT_CTRL (Watch Dog Timer Control)
Configuration Register while in the normal (run)
mode by writing an 0x03 to the index register.
Table 47A - Index and Data Register
REGISTER
Index
ADDRESS
NORMAL (RUN) MODE CONFIG MODE
OxE0, E2, E4, EA
Index address + 1
0x01-0x03
0x00-0xFF
Data
Access to GP1, GP2,
Watchdog Timer Control
(see Table 47B)
Access to
Internal
Configuration
Registers
Table 47B - Index and Data Register Normal (Run) Mode
INDEX
0x01
NORMAL (RUN) MODE
Access to GP1
0x02
Access to GP2
0x03
Access to Watchdog Timer Control (L8 - CRF4)
Note 1: Watchdog timer control register L8 - F4 is also available at index 03 when not in
configuration mode.
112
GPI/O ports contain alternate functions which
are either output-type or input-type. The GPI/O
illustrated in the following two figures. Note: the
input pin buffer is always enabled.
port
structure
for each type is
GPI/O
GPI/O
Configuration
Register bit-1
(Polarity)
Configuration
Register bit-0
(Input/Output)
SD-bit
nIOW
D-TYPE
GPI/O
Pin
0
1
Transparent
1
0
nIOR
GPI/O
Register
Bit-n
GPI/O
GPIO
Configuration
Register bit-2
(Int En)
Configuration
Register bit-3
(Alt Function)
Alternate
Input
Function
To GP Interrupt
GPI/O having an input-type alternate function.
[GP10, GP11, GP12, GP21]
113
GPIO
GPI/O
GPI/O
Configuration
Register bit-3
(Alt Function)
Configuration
Register bit-0
(Input/Output)
Configuration
Register bit-1
(Polarity)
Alternate
Output
Function
1
0
SD-bit
nIOW
D-TYPE
GPI/O
Pin
0
1
Transparent
0
1
nIOR
GPI/O
Register
Bit-n
GPI/O
Configuration
Register bit-2
(Int En)
To GP Interrupt
GPI/O having an output-type alternate function.
[GP12--GP17, GP20, GP22--GP25]
114
Combined General Purpose Interrupt request
output pin on the FDC37C93x. The interrupt
channel for the Combined Interrupt is selected
by the GP_INT Configuration Register defined in
the FDC37C93x System Configuration Section.
The Combined Interrupt is the "ORed" function
of the interrupt enabled GPI/O ports and will
represent a standard ISA interrupt (edge high).
General Purpose I/O Configuration Registers
Assigned to each GPI/O port is an 8-bit GPI/O
Configuration Register which is used to
independently program each I/O port. The
GPI/O Configuration Registers are only
accessible when the FDC37C93x is in the
Configuration Mode; more information can be
found in the Configuration section of this
specification.
When programmed as an input steered onto
the General Purpose Combined Interrupt (GP
Each GPI/O port may be programmed as either
a simple inverting or non-inverting input or
output port, or as an alternate function port. The
least-significant four bits of each GPI/O
Configuration Register define the operation of
the respective GPI/O port. The basic GPI/O
operations are outlined in Table 48.
IRQ), the Interrupt Circuitry contains
a
selectable debounce/digital filter circuit in
order that switches or push-buttons may be
directly connected to the chip. This filter shall
reject signals with pulse widths of 1ms or less.
Note: there are three sets of Interrupt circuits
(two dedicated and one general purpose) each
of which contains an individually selectable
debounce filter.
In addition, the GPI/O port may be optionally
programmed
to
steer
its signal to a
Table 48 - GPI/O Configuration Register Bits [3:0]
ALT FUNC
BIT 3
INT EN
BIT 2
POLARITY
BIT 1
I/O
BIT 0
0=DISABLE
1=SELECT
0=DISABLE
1=ENABLE
0=NO INVERT
1=INVERT
1=INPUT
0=OUTPUT
GPI/O PORT
OPERATION
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
simple non-inverting output
simple non-inverting input
simple inverting output
simple inverting input
non-inverting output steered back to GP IRQ
non-inverting input steered to GP IRQ
inverting output steered back to GP IRQ
inverting input steered to GP IRQ
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate non-inverted
output.
Alternate Function Input-type :Alternate function not valid,
GPI/O pin acts as a simple non-inverting output.
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate function not
valid, GPI/O pin acts as a simple non-inverting input.
Alternate Function Input-type : Alternate non-inverting
input.
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
with inverted sense
Alternate Function Input-type : Alternate function not valid,
GPI/O pin acts as a simple inverting output.
115
Table 48 - GPI/O Configuration Register Bits [3:0]
ALT FUNC
BIT 3
INT EN
BIT 2
POLARITY
BIT 1
I/O
BIT 0
0=DISABLE
1=SELECT
0=DISABLE
1=ENABLE
0=NO INVERT
1=INVERT
1=INPUT
0=OUTPUT
GPI/O PORT
OPERATION
1
0
1
1
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
not valid, GPI/O pin acts as a simple inverting input.
Alternate Function Input-type :Inverting input to alternate
input function.
1
1
0
0
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
with non inverted sense steered to GP IRQ
Alternate Function Input-type :Alternate function not valid,
GPI/O pin acts as a simple non-inverting output steered to
GP IRQ
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
not valid, GPI/O pin acts as a simple non-inverting input
steered to GP IRQ.
Alternate Function Input-type :Non-inverting input to
alternate input function also steered to the GP IRQ.
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
with inverted sense steered to GP IRQ
Alternate Function Input-type :Alternate function not valid,
GPI/O pin acts as a simple inverting output steered to GP
IRQ.
Alternate Function Output-type : Alternate output function
not valid, GPI/O pin acts as a simple inverting input steered to
GP IRQ.
Alternate Function Input-type : Inverting input to alternate
input function also steered to the GP IRQ.
The alternate function of GP10 and GP11 allows
these GPI/O port pins to be mapped to their own
configuration registers is used to select the
active interrupt channel for each of these ports
as shown in the Configuration section of this
specification.
independent interrupt channels.
nibble of the GP10 and
The upper
GP11 GPI/O
116
no effect. When a GPI/O port is programmed
as an output, the logic value written into the
GPI/O register is either output to or inverted to
the GPI/O pin; when read the result will reflect
the contents of the GPI/O register bit. This is
sumarized in Table 49.
Reading and Writing GPI/O Ports
When a GPI/O port is programmed as an input,
reading it through the GPI/O register latches
either the inverted or non-inverted logic value
present at the GPI/O pin; writing it has
Table 49 - GPI/O Read/Write Behavior
GPI/O INPUT PORT
HOST OPERATION
GPI/O OUTPUT PORT
bit value in GP register
bit placed in GP register
Read
Write
latched value of GPI/O pin
no effect
WATCH DOG TIMER/POWER LED CONTROL
Basic Functions
Watch Dog Timer
The FDC37C93x's WDT has a programmable
time-out ranging from 1 to 255 minutes with one
minute resolution. The WDT time-out value is
set through the WDT_VAL Configuration
register. Setting the WDT_VAL register to 0x00
disables the WDT function (this is its power on
default). Setting the WDT_VAL to any other
non-zero value will cause the WDT to reload
and begin counting down from the value loaded.
When the WDT count value reaches zero the
counter stops and sets the Watchdog time-out
status bit in the WDT_CTRL Configuration
Register. Note: Regardless of the current state
of the WDT, the WDT time-out status bit can be
directly set or cleared by the Host CPU.
The FDC37C93x contains a Watch Dog Timer
(WDT) and also has the capability to directly
drive the system's Power-on LED.
The Watch Dog Time-out status bit
(WDT_CTRL bit-0) is mapped to GP12 when
the alternate function bit of the GP12
Configuration Register is set "and" bit-6 of the
IR Options Register = 0. In addition, the Watch
Dog Time-out status bit may be mapped to an
interrupt through the WDT_CFG Configuration
Register.
GP13 may be configured as a high current LED
There are three system events which can reset
the WDT, these are a Keyboard Interrupt, a
Mouse Interrupt, or I/O reads/writes to address
0x201 (the internal or an external Joystick Port).
The effect on the WDT for each of these system
events may be individually enabled or disabled
through bits in the WDT_CFG configuration
register. When a system event is enabled
through the WDT_CFG register, the occurence
of that event will cause the WDT to reload the
value stored in WDT_VAL and reset the WDT
time-out status bit if set. If all three system
events are disabled the WDT will inevitably time
out.
driver to drive the Power LED.
This is
accomplished by setting the alternate function
bit of the GP13 Configuration Register "and"
clearing bit-6 of the IR Options Register.
The Infared signals, IRRX and IRTX, are
mapped to GP12 and GP13 when the alternate
function bit of the GP12 and GP13
Configuration Registers is set "and" bit-6 of the
IR Options Register is set.
117
The Watch Dog Timer may be configured to
generate an interrupt on the rising edge of the
Time-out status bit. The WDT interrupt is
mapped to an interrupt channel through the
Power LED Toggle
Setting bit 1 of the WDT_CTRL configuration
register will cause the Power LED output driver
to toggle at 1 Hertz with a 50 percent duty cycle.
When this bit is cleared the Power LED output
will drive continuously unless it has been
configured to toggle on Watch Dog time-out
conditions. Setting bit 3 of the WDT_CFG
configuration register will cause the Power LED
output driver to toggle at 1 Hertz with a 50
percent duty cycle whenever the WDT time-out
status bit is set. The truth table below clarifies
the conditions for which the Power LED will
toggle.
WDT_CFG Configuration Register.
When
mapped to an interrupt the interrupt request pin
reflects the value of the WDT time-out status bit.
When the polarity bit is 0, GP12 reflect the value
of the Watch Dog Time-out status bit, however
when the polarity bit is 1, GP12 reflects the
inverted value of the Watch Dog Time-out status
bit.
The host may force a Watch Dog time-out to
occur by writting a "1" to bit 2 of the WDT_CTRL
(Force WD Time-out) Configuration Register.
Writting a "1" to this bit forces the WDT count
value to zero and sets bit 0 of the WDT_CTRL
(Watch Dog Status). Bit 2 of the WDT_CTRL is
self-clearing.
When the polarity bit is 0, the Power LED output
asserts or drives low. If the polarity bit is 1 then
the Power LED output asserts or drives high.
Table 50 - LED Toggle Truth Table
WDT_CFG BIT[3]
WDT_CTRL BIT[0]
WDT_CTRL BIT[1]
POWER LED
WDT T/O STATUS BIT
POWER LED TOGGLE
TOGGLE ON WDT
POWER LED STATE
Toggle
1
0
0
0
X
0
1
1
X
X
0
1
Continuous
Continuous
Toggle
118
Table 51 - Watchdog Timer/Power LED Configuration Registers
CONFIG REG.
WDT_VAL
BIT FIELD
Bits[7:0]
DESCRIPTION
Binary coded time-out value, 0x00 disables the WDT.
Joystick enable
WDT_CFG
Bit[0]
Bit[1]
Keyboard enable
Bit[2]
Mouse enable
Bit[3]
Power LED toggle on WDT time-out
Bits[7:4]
WDT interrupt mapping,
0000b = diables irq mapping
WDT_CTRL
Bit[0]
WDT time-out status bit
Power LED toggle
Bit[1]
Bit[2]
Force Timeout, self-clearing
P20 Force Timeout Enable
Reserved, set to zero
Bit[3]
Bits[7:4]
General Purpose Address Decoder
The GPA_GPW_EN Configuration Register
contains two bits which allow the General
General Purpose I/O pin GP14 may be
configured as a General Purpose Address
Decode Pin. The General Purpose Address
Decoder provides an output decoded from bits
A11-A1 of the 12-bit address stored in a two-
byte Base I/O Address Register (logical device 8
config registers 0x60,0x61) qualified with AEN.
Thus, the decoder provides a two address
decode where A0=X. This General Purpose
output is normally active low, however the
polarity may be altered through the polarity bit in
its GPI/O Configuration Register.
Purpose Address Decode and Write functions to
be independently enabled or disabled.
Joystick Control
The Base I/O address of the Joystick (Game)
Port is fixed at address 0x201.
GP16 Joystick Function
The FDC37C93x may be configured to generate
either a Joystick Chip Select or a Joystick Read
Strobe on GP16. The polarity is programmable
through a bit in the GP16 confiugration register.
When configured as a Joystick Chip Select the
output is simply a decode of the address =
General Purpose Write
General Purpose I/O pin GP15 may be
configured as a General Purpose Write pin. The
General Purpose Write provides an output
decoded from the 12-bit address stored in a
two-byte Base I/O Address Register (logical
device 8 config registers 0x62,0x63) qualified
with IOW and AEN. This General Purpose
output is normally active low, however the
polarity may be altered through the polarity bit in
its GPI/O Configuration Register.
0x201 qualified by AEN active.
When
configured as a Joystick Read Strobe the output
is a decode of the address = 0x201 qualified by
IOR and AEN both active. The Joystick Chip
Select or Read Strobe is normally active low,
however its polarity is programmable through a
bit in the GP20 configuration register.
119
Reset
out is an internal signal from the
GP17 Joystick Function
keyboard controller (Port 20). The FDC37C93x
may be configured to drive this signal onto
GP20 by programming its GP I/O configuration
register. Access to the serial EEPROM is only
available when the FDC37C93x is in the
configuration mode. A set of six configuration
registers, located in Logical Device 6 (RTC) is
used to fully access and configure the serial
EEPROM. The registers are defined as follows:
The FDC37C93x may be configured to generate
a
Joystick Write Strobe on GP17. When
configured as a Joystick Write Strobe the output
is a decode of the address = 0x201 qualified by
IOW and AEN both active.
The Joystick Write Strobe is normally active
low,
however its polarity is programmable
through a bit in the GP20 configuration register.
Serial EEPROM Mode Register, 0xF1
IDE2 Buffer Enable/Reset Out
Bits[3:0]
These are the lock bits which once set deny
access to the serial EEPROM's first 128 bytes in
32 byte blocks. Bit 0 locks the first block, bit 1
the second block, bit 2 the third block and bit 3
the fourth block of 32 bytes. Once these lock
bits are set they cannot be reset in any way
other than by a Hard reset or a Power-on reset.
The FDC37C93x may be configured to provide
an nIDE2_OE buffer enable signal on pin GP20.
The IDE2 Mode Register (0xF0 of Logical
Device 2) contains a bit which determines
whether nIDE1_OE or nIDE2_OE is active for
IDE2 transfers.
If GP20 is selected as a
General Purpose I/O pin, IDE2 I/O accesses
must be configured to activate nIDE1_OE for
IDE2 transfers if a secondary Hard Drive
interface is present. The polarity of nIDE2_OE,
which is normally active low, is programmable
through a bit in the GP20 configuration register.
Bit[4]
This selects the type of EEPROM connected to
the FDC37C93x. If cleared the device must be
either a 93C06 or 93C46 and if set the device
must be either an 93C56 or 93C66.This bit must
be properly set before attempting to access the
serial EEPROM.
Serial EEPROM Interface
Four of the FDC37C93x's general purpose I/O
pins may be configured to provide a 4 wire
direct interface to a family of industry standard
serial EEPROMs. For proper operation the
polarity bits of these four pins must be set to 0
(non-inverting). The interface is depicted below
and will allow connection to either a 93C06
(256-bit), a 93C46 (1K-bit), a 93C56 (2K-bit), or
a 93C66 (4K-bit) device.
Bits[7:5]
Reserved, set to zero.
Serial EEPROM Pointer Register, 0xF2
Bits[7:0]
Use this register to set the Serial EEPROM's
pointer.
The value in this register always
reflects the current EEPROM pointer address.
The Serial Device Pointer increments after each
pair of reads from the Resource Data register or
after each pair of writes to the Program
Resource Data register.
GP21 <---- Serial EEPROM Data In
GP22 ----> Serial EEPROM Data Out
GP23 ----> Serial EEPROM Clock
GP24 ----> Serial EEPROM Enable
120
This bit is set to configure the EEPROM
interface for Write operations. Setting this bit
disables the serial EEPROM prefetch when the
Serial EEPROM Pointer Register is updated
(written or auto-incremented).
Write EEPROM Data Register, 0xF3
Bits[7:0]
This register allows the host to write data into
the serial EEPROM. The FDC37C93x supports
serial EEPROMS with x16 configurations. Two
bytes must be written to this register in order to
generate a EEPROM write cycle. The LSB
leads the MSB. The first write to this register
resets bit 0 of the Write Status register. The
second write resets bit 1 of the Write Status
register and generates a write cycle to the serial
EEPROM. The Write Status register must be
polled before performing a pair of writes to this
register.
Read EEPROM Data Register, 0xF5
Bits[7:0]
This register allows the host to read data from
the serial EEPROM. Data is not valid in this
register until bit 0 of the Read Status Register is
set. Since the EEPROM is a 16-bit device this
register presents the LSB followed by the MSB
for each pair of register reads. Immediately after
the MSB is read bit-0 of the Read Status
Register will be cleared, then the Serial
EEPROM Pointer Register will be auto-
incremented, then the next word of EEPROM
data will be fetched, followed by the Read
Status Register, bit 0 being set.
Write Status Register, 0xF4
Bits[1:0]
When = (1,1)Indicates that the Write EEPROM
Data register is ready to accept a pair of bytes.
When = (1,0) bit 0 is cleared on the first write of
the Write EEPROM Data register. This status
indicates that the serial device controller has
received one byte (LSB) and is waiting for the
second byte (MSB).
Read Status Register, 0xF6
Bit[0]
When set, indicates that data in the Read
EEPROM Data register is valid. This bit is
cleared when EEPROM Data is read until the
next byte is valid. Reading the Read EEPROM
Data register when bit 0 is clear will have no
detremental effects; the data will simply be
invalid.
When = (0,0) bit 1 is cleared on the second
write of the Write EEPROM Data register
indicating that two bytes have been accepted
and that the serial device interface is busy
writing the word to the EEPROM.
GATEA20
Bits[6:2]
Reserved, set to zero
GATEA20 is an internal signal from the
Keyboard controller (Port 21). The FDC37C93x
may be configured to drive this signal onto
GP25 by programming its GPI/O Configuration
Register.
Bit[7]
This bit is cleared to configure the EEPROM
interface for Read operations. Clearing this bit
enables the serial EEPROM prefetch when the
Serial EEPROM Pointer Register is updated
(written or auto-incremented).
121
8042 KEYBOARD CONTROLLER AND REAL TIME CLOCK FUNCTIONAL
DESCRIPTION
The FDC37C93x is a Super I/O, Real Time
The Universal Keyboard Controller uses an
8042 microcontroller CPU core. This section
concentrates on the FDC37C93x enhancements
to the 8042. For general information about the
8042, refer to the "Hardware Description of the
8042" in the 8-Bit Embedded Controller Hand-
book.
Clock and Universal Keyboard Controller that is
designed for intelligent keyboard management
in desktop computer applications. The Super
I/O supports a Floppy Disk Controller, two
16550 type serial ports, one ECP/EPP Parallel
Port and two IDE drive interfaces with support
for four drives.
P24
P25
P21
P20
KIRQ
MIRQ
GP25
GP20 (WD Timer)
8042A
LS05
P27
P10
KDAT
KCLK
MCLK
MDAT
P26
TST0
P23
TST1
P22
P11
Keyboard and Mouse Interface
KIRQ is the Keyboard IRQ
MIRQ is the Mouse IRQ
GP25 - Port 21 is GP25's alternate function output, and can be used to create a GATEA20 signal from
the FDC37C93x
GP20 - This General purpose output can be configured as the 8042 Port 2.0 which is typically used to
create a "keyboard reset" signal. The 8042's P20 can be used to optionally reset the Watch Dog
Timer.
122
register, and Output Data register. Table 52
shows how the interface decodes the control
signals. In addition to the above signals, the
host interface includes keyboard and mouse
IRQ's.
KEYBOARD AND RTC ISA INTERFACE
The FDC37C93x ISA interface is functionally
compatible with the 8042 style host interface. It
consists of the D0-7 data bus; the nIOR, nIOW
and the
Status
register,
Input Data
Table 52 - ISA I/O Address Map
( Addresses 0x60, 0x64, 0x70 and 0x71 are qualified by AEN.)
ISA ADDRESS
BLOCK
RTC
FUNCTION
Address Register (70H)
Data Register (71H)
0x70 (R/W)
0x71 (R/W)
RTC
ISA ADDRESS
nIOW
nIOR
BLOCK
FUNCTION (NOTE 1)
Keyboard Data Write (C/D=0)(60H)
Keyboard Data Read (60H)
0x60
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
KDATA
KDATA
KDCTL
KDCTL
0x64
Keyboard Command Write (C/D=1)(64H)
Keyboard Status Read (64H)
Note 1:
These registers consist of three separate 8 bit registers. Status, Data/Command Write and
Data Read.
Keyboard Data Write
Keyboard Status Read
This is an 8 bit write only register. When
written, the C/D status bit of the status register
is cleared to zero and the IBF bit is set.
This is an 8 bit read only register. Refer to the
description of the Status Register for more
information.
Keyboard Data Read
RTC Address Register
This is an 8 bit read only register. If enabled by
"ENABLE FLAGS", when read, the KIRQ output
is cleared and the OBF flag in the status register
is cleared. If not enabled, the KIRQ and/or
AUXOBF1 must be cleared in software.
Writing to this register sets the CMOS address
that will be read or written.
RTC Data Register
A read of this register will read the contents of
the selected CMOS register. A write to this
register will write to the selected CMOS register.
Keyboard Command Write
This is an 8 bit write only register. When
written, the C/D status bit of the status register
is set to one and the IBF bit is set.
123
Data register via register DBB. A write to this
register automatically sets Bit 0 (OBF) in the
Status register. See Table 53.
CPU-to-Host Communication
The FDC37C93x CPU can write to the Output
Table 53 - Host Interface Flags
FLAG
8042 INSTRUCTION
OUT DBB
Set OBF, and, if enabled, the KIRQ output signal goes high
Host-to-CPU Communication
If "ENFLAGS has not been executed, MIRQ is
controlled by P25, Writing a zero to P25 forces
MIRQ low, a high forces MIRQ high. (MIRQ is
normally selected as IRQ12 for mouse support.)
The host system can send both commands and
data to the Input Data register. The CPU
differentiates between commands and data by
reading the value of Bit 3 of the Status register.
When bit 3 is "1", the CPU interprets the register
contents as a command. When bit 3 is "0", the
CPU interprets the register contents as data.
During a host write operation, bit 3 is set to "1" if
SA2 = 1 or reset to "0" if SA2 = 0.
Gate A20
A general purpose P21 can be routed out to the
general purpose pin GP25 for use as a software
controlled Gate A20 or user defined output.
EXTERNAL
INTERFACE
KEYBOARD
AND
MOUSE
KIRQ
If "EN FLAGS" has been executed and P24 is
set to a one: the OBF flag is gated onto KIRQ.
The KIRQ signal can be connected to system
interrupt to signify that the FDC37C93x CPU
has written to the output data register via "OUT
DBB,A". If P24 is set to a zero, KIRQ is forced
low. On power-up, after a valid RST pulse has
been delivered to the device, KIRQ is reset to 0.
KIRQ will normally reflects the status of writes
"DBB". (KIRQ is normally selected as IRQ1 for
keyboard support.)
Industry-standard PC-AT-compatible keyboards
employ a two-wire, bidirectional TTL interface
for data transmission. Several sources also
supply PS/2 mouse products that employ the
same type of interface. To facilitate system
expansion, the FDC37C93x provides four signal
pins that may be used to implement this
interface directly for an external keyboard and
mouse.
The FDC37C93x has four high-drive, open-drain
output, bidirectional port pins that can be used
for external serial interfaces, such as ISA
external keyboard and PS/2-type mouse
interfaces. They are KCLK, KDAT, MCLK, and
MDAT.
If "ENFLAGS has not been executed: KIRQ can
be controlled by writing to P24. Writing a zero
to P24 forces KIRQ low; a high forces KIRQ
high.
MIRQ
P26 is inverted and output as KCLK. The KCLK
pin is connected to TEST0. P27 is inverted and
output as KDAT. The KDAT pin is connected to
P10. P23 is inverted and output as MCLK. The
MCLK pin is connected to TEST1. P22 is
inverted and output as MDAT. The MDAT pin is
If "EN FLAGS" has been executed and P25 is
set to a one:; IBF is inverted and gated onto
MIRQ. The MIRQ signal can be connected to
system interrupt to signify that the FDC37C93x
CPU has read the DBB register.
124
connected to P11. NOTE: External pull-ups
may be required.
either RESET is driven active or a data byte is
written to the DBBIN register by a master
CPU, this mode will be exited (as above).
However, as the oscillator cell will require an
initialization time, either RESET must be held
active for sufficient time to allow the oscillator to
stabilise. Program execution will resume as
above.
KEYBOARD POWER MANAGEMENT
The keyboard provides support for two power-
saving modes: soft powerdown mode and hard
powerdown mode. In soft powerdown mode,
the clock to the ALU is stopped but the
timer/counter and interrupts are still active. In
hard power down mode the clock to the 8042 is
INTERRUPTS
The FDC37C93x provides the two 8042
interrupts. IBF and the Timer/Counter Overflow.
stopped.
power wherever possible!
Efforts must be made to reduce
MEMORY CONFIGURATIONS
Soft Power Down Mode
This mode is entered by executing a HALT
instruction. The execution of program code is
halted until either RESET is driven active or a
data byte is written to the DBBIN register by a
master CPU. If this mode is exited using the
interrupt, and the IBF interrupt is enabled, then
program execution resumes with a CALL to the
interrupt routine, otherwise the next instruction
is executed. If it is exited using RESET then a
normal reset sequence is initiated and program
execution starts from program memory location
0.
The FDC37C93x provides 2K of on-chip ROM
and 256 bytes of on-chip RAM.
Register Definitions
Host I/F Data Register
The Input Data register and Output Data register
are each 8 bits wide. A write to this 8 bit register
will load the Keyboard Data Read Buffer, set the
OBF flag and set the KIRQ output if enabled. A
read of this register will read the data from the
Keyboard Data or Command Write Buffer and
clear the IBF flag. Refer to the KIRQ and Status
register descriptions for more information.
Hard Power Down Mode
This mode is entered by executing a STOP
instruction.
The oscillator is stopped by
Host I/F Status Register
disabling the oscillator driver cell. When
The Status register is 8 bits wide. Table 54
shows the contents of the Status register.
Table 54 - Status Register
D4 D3
UD C/D
D7
D6
D5
D2
D1
D0
UD
UD
UD
UD
IBF
OBF
125
Status Register
to 1 whenever the FDC37C93x CPU
write to the output data register (DBB).
When the host system reads the output
data register, this bit is automatically reset.
This register is cleared on a reset. This register
is read-only for the Host and read/write by the
FDC37C93x CPU.
UD
Writable by FDC37C93x CPU.
These bits are user-definable.
EXTERNAL CLOCK SIGNAL
The FDC37C93x X1K clock source is a 12 MHz
clock generated from a 14.318 MHz clock. The
reset pulse must last for at least 24 16 Mhz
clock periods. The pulse-width requirement
applies to both internally and externally
generated reset signals. In powerdown mode,
the external clock signal on X1K is not loaded by
the chip.
C/D
(Command Data)-This bit specifies
whether the input data register
contains data or a command (0 =
data, 1 = command). During a host
data/command write operation, this
bit is set to "1" if SA2 = 1 or reset to
"0" if SA2 = 0.
IBF
(Input Buffer Full)- This flag is set to
1 whenever the host system writes
data into the input data register.
Setting this flag activates the
FDC37C93x CPU's nIBF (MIRQ)
interrupt if enabled. When the
FDC37C93x CPU reads the input
data register (DBB), this bit is
The FDC37C93x X1C clock source must be
from a crystal connected across X1C and X2C.
Due to the low current internal oscillator circuit,
this X1C can not be driven by an external clock
signal.
DEFAULT RESET CONDITIONS
automatically reset and the interrupt
is cleared. There is no output pin
associated with this internal signal.
The FDC37C93x has one source of reset: an
external reset via the RESET pin. Refer to
Table 55 for the effect of each type of reset on
the internal registers.
OBF
(Output Buffer Full)- This flag
set
is
Table 55 - Resets
DESCRIPTION
KCLK
HARDWARE RESET (RESET)
Weak High
Weak High
Weak High
Weak High
N/A
KDAT
MCLK
MDAT
Host I/F Data Reg
Host I/F Status Reg
RTCCNTRL
RTCADDR
00H
80H
NC
RTCDATA
NC
NC: No Change N/A: Not Applicable
126
(RESET_DRV active). When the RESET_DRV
pin is active (i.e., system reset) and the battery
voltage is above 1 volt nominal, the following
occurs:
REAL TIME CLOCK
The Real Time Clock is a complete time of day
clock with alarm and one hundred year
calendar, a programmable periodic interrupt,
and a programmable square wave generator.
1
2
3
4
5
Periodic Interrupt Enable (PIE) is cleared to
0.
Alarm Interrupt Enable (AIE) bit is cleared
to 0.
Update ended Interrupt Enable (UIE) bit is
cleared to 0.
Update ended Interrupt Flag (UF) bit is
cleared to 0.
FEATURES
·
·
·
·
Counts seconds, minutes, and hours of the
day.
Counts days of the week, date, month and
year.
Binary or BCD representation of time,
calendar and alarm.
Interrupt Request status Flag (IRQF) bit is
cleared to 0.
6
7
Periodic Interrupt Flag (PIF) is cleared to 0.
The RTC and CMOS registers are not
accessable.
Three interrupts -
each is separately
software maskable. (No daylight savings
time!)
8
9
Alarm Interrupt Flag (AF) is cleared to 0.
nIRQ pin is in high impedance state.
PORT DEFINITION AND DESCRIPTION
When RESET_DRV is active and the battery
voltage is below 1 volt nominal, the following
occurs:
OSC
Crystal Oscillator input. Maximum clock
frequency is 32.768 KHz.
1
2
Registers 00-0D are initialized to 00h.
Access to all registers from the host or
FDC37C93x CPU (8042) are blocked.
RTC Reset
The clock, calendar, or RAM functions are not
affected
by
the
system
reset
127
RTC INTERRUPT
Select to a non-zero value. If IRQ 8 is selected
then the polarity of this IRQ 8 output is
The interrupt generated by the RTC is an active
high output. The RTC interrupt output remains
high as long as the status bit causing the
interrupt is present and the corresponding
programmable through a bit in the OSC Global
Configuration Register.
INTERNAL REGISTERS
interrupt-enable bit is set.
Activating
Table 56 shows the address map of the RTC,
ten bytes of time, calendar, and alarm data, four
control and status bytes, 241 bytes of "CMOS"
registers and one RTC control register.
RESET_DRV or reading register C clears the
RTC interrupt.
The RTC
Interrupt is brought out by
programming the RTC Primary Interrupt
Table 56 - Real Time Clock Address Map
ADDRESS
REGISTER TYPE
REGISTER FUNCTION
Register 0: Seconds
0
1
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R
Register 1: Seconds Alarm
Register 2: Minutes
Register 3: Minutes Alarm
Register 4: Hours
2
3
4
5
Register 5: Hours Alarm
Register 6: Day of Week
Register 7: Date of Month
Register 8: Month
6
7
8
9
Register 9: Year
A
Register A:
B
Register B: (Bit 0 is Read Only)
Register C:
C
D
E-FF
R
Register D:
R/W
Register E-FF: General purpose
All 14 bytes are directly writable and readable by
the host with the following exceptions:
b. Bit 7 of Register A is read only
c. Bits 0 of Register B is read only
d. Bits 7-1 of the Shared RTC Control register
are read only.
a. Registers C and D are read only
128
to be advanced by one second and to check for
an alarm condition. If any of the ten bytes are
Time Calendar and Alarm
read at this
time, the data outputs are
The processor program obtains time and
calendar information by reading the appropriate
locations. The program may initialize the time,
calendar and alarm by writing to these locations.
The contents of the ten time, calendar and
alarm bytes can be in binary or BCD as shown
in Table 57.
undefined. The update cycle time is shown in
Table 58. The update logic contains circuitry for
automatic end-of-month recognition as well as
automatic leap year compensation.
The three alarm bytes may be used in two ways.
First, when the program inserts an alarm time in
the appropriate hours, minutes and seconds
alarm locations, the alarm interrupt is initiated at
the specified time each day if the alarm enable
bit is high. The second usage is to insert a "don't
care" state in one or more of three alarm bytes.
The "don't care" code is any hexadecimal byte
from C0 to FF inclusive. That is the two most
significant bits of each byte, when set to "1"
Before initializing the internal registers, the SET
bit in Register B should be set to a "1" to prevent
time/calendar updates from occurring. The
program initializes the ten locations in the binary
or BCD format as defined by the DM bit in
Register B.The SET bit may now be cleared to
allow updates.
create
a "don't care" situation. An alarm
The 12/24 bit in Register B establishes whether
the hour locations represent 1 to 12 or 0 to 23.
The 12/24 bit cannot be changed without
reinitializing the hour locations. When the 12
hour format is selected, the high order bit of the
hours byte represents PM when it is a "1".
interrupt each hour is created with a "don't care"
code in the hours alarm location. Similarly, an
alarm is generated every minute with "don't
care" codes in the hours and minutes alarm
bytes. The "don't care" codes in all three alarm
bytes create an interrupt every second.
Once per second, the ten time, calendar and
alarm bytes are switched to the update logic
129
Table 57 - Time, Calendar and Alarm Bytes
REGISTER FUNCTION BCD RANGE
Register 0: Seconds
ADD
BINARY RANGE
00-3B
0
1
2
3
4
00-59
00-59
Register 1: Seconds Alarm
Register 2: Minutes
Register 3: Minutes Alarm
Register 4: Hours
00-3B
00-59
00-3B
00-59
00-3B
01-12 am
81-92 pm
00-23
01-0C
81-8C
00-17
(12 hour mode)
(24 hour mode)
5
Register 5: Hours Alarm
(12 hour mode)
01-12 am
81-92 pm
00-23
01-0C
81-8C
00-17
(24 hour mode)
6
7
8
9
Register 6: Day of Week
Register 7: Day of Month
Register 8: Month
01-07
01-07
01-31
01-1F
01-12
01-0C
00-63
Register 9: Year
00-99
Update Cycle
corresponding time byte and issues an alarm if
a match or if a "don't care" code is present.
An update cycle is executed once per second if
the SET bit in Register B is clear and the
DV0-DV2 divider is not clear. The SET bit in the
"1" state permits the program to initialize the
time and calendar bytes by stopping an existing
The length of an update cycle is shown in Table
58. During the update cycle the time, calendar
and alarm bytes are not accessible by the
processor program. If the processor reads these
locations before the update cycle is complete
the output will be undefined. The UIP (update in
progress) status bit is set during the interval.
When the UIP bit goes high, the update cycle
will begin 244 us later. Therefore, if a low is read
on the UIP bit the user has at least 244us before
time/calendar data will be changed.
update and preventing
occurring.
a
new one from
The primary function of the update cycle is to
increment the seconds byte, check for overflow,
increment the minutes byte when appropriate
and so forth through to the year of the century
byte. The update cycle also compares
each
alarm
byte
with
the
Table 58 - Update Cycle Time
INPUT CLOCK
FREQUENCY
MINIMUM TIME
UPDATE CYCLE
UIP BIT
UPDATE CYCLE TIME
32.768 kHz
32.768 kHz
1
0
-
1948 ms
-
244 ms
130
accessible to the processor program at all
times, even during the update cycle.
Control and Status Registers
The RTC has four registers which are
REGISTER A (AH)
MSB
LSB
b7
b6
b5
b4
b3
b2
b1
b0
UIP
DV2
DV1
DV0
RS3
RS2
RS1
RS0
also used to reset the divider chain. When the
time/calendar is first initialized, the program
may start the divider chain at the precise time
stored in the registers. When the divider reset is
removed the first update begins one-half second
later. These three read/write bits are not affected
by RESET_DRV.
UIP
The update in progress bit is a status flag that
may be monitored by the program. When UIP is
a "1" the update cycle is in progress or will soon
begin. When UIP is a "0" the update cycle is not
in progress and will not be for at least 244us.
The time, calendar, and alarm information is
fully available to the program when the UIP bit is
zero. The UIP bit is a read only bit and is not
affected by RESET_DRV. Writing the SET bit in
Register B to a "1" inhibits any update cycle and
then clears the UIP status bit. The UIP bit is only
valid when the RTC is enabled. Refer to Table
58.
RS3-0
The four rate selection bits select one of 15 taps
on the divider chain or disable the divider
output. The selected tap determines rate or
frequency of the periodic interrupt. The program
may enable or disable the interrupt with the PIE
bit in Register B. Table 60 lists the periodic
interrupt rates and equivalent output frequencies
that may be chosen with the RS0 - RS3 bits.
These four bits are read/write bits which are not
affected by RESET_DRV.
DV2-0
Three bits are used to permit the program to
select various conditions of the 22 stage divider
chain. Table 59 shows the allowable
combinations. The divider selection bits are
131
Table 59 - Divider Selection Bits
REGISTER A BITS
OSCILLATOR
FREQUENCY
MODE
DV2
DV1
DV0
32.768 KHz
32.768 KHz
32.768 KHz
32.768 KHz
32.768 KHz
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
X
X
Oscillator Disabled
Oscillator Disabled
Normal Operate
Test
Test
Reset Driver
Table 60 - Periodic Interrupt Rates
32.768 KHz TIME BASE
RATE SELECT
PERIOD RATE OF
INTERRUPT
FREQUENCY OF
INTERRUPT
RS3
0
RS2
0
RS1
0
RS0
0
0.0
0
0
0
1
3.90625 ms
7.8125 ms
122.070 us
244.141 us
488.281 us
976.562 us
1.953125 ms
3.90625 ms
7.8125 ms
15.625 ms
31.25 ms
62.5 ms
256 Hz
128 Hz
8.192 KHz
4.096 KHz
2.048 KHz
1.024 KHz
512 Hz
256 Hz
128 Hz
64 Hz
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
32 Hz
1
1
0
0
16 Hz
1
1
0
1
125 ms
8 Hz
1
1
1
0
250 ms
4 Hz
1
1
1
1
500 ms
2 Hz
132
REGISTER B (BH)
MSB
LSB
b0
b7
b6
PIE
b5
b4
b3
b2
b1
SET
AIE
UIE
RES
DM2
24/12
DSE
SET
UIE
When the SET bit is a "0", the update functions
normally by advancing the counts once per
second. When the SET bit is a "1", an update
cycle in progress is aborted and the program
may initialize the time and calendar bytes
without an update occurring in the middle of
initialization. SET is a read/write bit which is
not modified by RESET_DRV or any internal
functions.
The update-ended interrupt enable bit is a
read/write bit which enables the update-end flag
(UF) bit in Register C to assert IRQB. The
RESET_DRV port or the SET bit going high
clears the UIE bit.
RES
Reserved - read as zero
DM
PIE
The data mode bit indicates whether time and
calendar updates are to use binary or BCD
formats. The DM bit is written by the
processor program and may be read by the
program, but is not modified by any internal
The periodic interrupt enable bit is a read/write
bit which allows the periodic-interrupt flag (PF)
bit in Register C to cause the IRQB port to be
driven low. The program writes a "1" to the PIE
bit in order to receive periodic interrupts at the
rate specified by the RS3 - RS0 bits in Register
A. A zero in PIE blocks IRQB from being
initiated by a periodic interrupt, but the periodic
flag (PF) is still set at the periodic rate. PIE is
not modified by any internal function, but is
cleared to "0" by a RESET_DRV.
functions or by RESET_DRV.
A
"1" in DM
signifies binary data, while a "0" in DM specifies
BCD data.
24/12
The 24/12 control bit establishes the format of
the hours byte as either the 24 hour mode if
set to a "1", or the 12 hour mode if cleared to
a "0". This is a read/write bit which is not
affected by RESET_DRV or any internal
function.
AIE
The alarm interrupt enable bit is a read/write bit,
which when set to a "1" permits the alarm flag
(AF) bit in Register C to assert IRQB. An
alarm interrupt occurs for each second that the
three time bytes equal the three alarm bytes
(including a "don't care" alarm code of binary
11XXXXXX). When the AIE bit is a "0", the AF
bit does not initiate an IRQB signal. The
RESET_DRV port clears AIE to "0". The AIE bit
is not affected by any internal functions.
DSE
The daylight savings enable bit is read only and
is always set to a "0" to indicate that the
daylight savings time option is not available.
133
REGISTER C (CH) - READ ONLY REGISTER
MSB
LSB
b0
0
b7
b6
b5
b4
b3
0
b2
0
b1
0
IRQF
PF
AF
UF
IRQF
AF
The interrupt request flag is set to a "1" when
one or more of the following are true:
The alarm interrupt flag when set to a "1"
indicates that the current time has matched the
alarm time. A "1" in AF causes a "1" to appear in
IRQF and the IRQB port to go low when the AIE
bit is also a "1". A RESET_DRV or a read of
Register C clears the AF bit.
PF = PIE = 1
AF = AIE = 1
UF = UIE = 1
Any time the IRQF bit is a "1", the IRQB signal
is driven low. All flag bits are cleared after
Register C is read or by the RESET_DRV port.
UF
The update-ended interrupt flag bit is set after
each update cycle. When the UIE bit is also a
"1", the "1" in UF causes the IRQF bit to be set
and asserts IRQB. A RESET_DRV or a read of
Register C causes UF to be cleared.
PF
The periodic interrupt flag is a read only bit
which is set to a "1" when a particular edge is
detected on the selected tap of the divider chain.
The RS3 -RS0 bits establish the periodic rate.
PF is set to a "1" independent of the state of
the PIE bit. PF being a "1" sets the IRQF bit
and initiates an IRQB signal when PIE is also a
"1". The PF bit is cleared by RESET_DRV or by
a read of Register C.
b3-0
The unused bits of Register C are read as zeros
and cannot be written.
134
REGISTER D (DH) READ ONLY REGISTER
MSB
LSB
b0
0
b7
b6
0
b5
0
b4
0
b3
0
b2
0
b1
0
VRT
The processor program selects which interrupts,
if any, it wishes to receive by writing a "1" to
the appropriate enable bits in Register B. A "0"
in an enable bit prohibits the IRQB port from
being asserted due to that interrupt cause.
When an interrupt event occurs a flag bit is set
to a "1" in Register C. Each of the three interrupt
sources have separate flag bits in Register C,
which are set independent of the state of the
corresponding enable bits in Register B. The
flag bits may be used with or without enabling
the corresponding enable bits. The flag bits in
Register C are cleared (record of the interrupt
event is erased) when Register C is read.
Double latching is included in Register C to
VRT
When a "1", this bit indicates that the contents
of the RTC are valid. A "0" appears in the VRT
bit when the battery voltage is low. The VRT bit
is read only bit which can only be set by a read
of Register D. Refer to Power Management for
the conditions when this bit is reset. The
processor program can set the VRT bit when the
time and calendar are initialized to indicate that
the time is valid.
b6:b0
The remaining bits of Register D are read as
zeros and cannot be written.
ensure the bits
that are
set are stable
Register EH-FFH: General purpose
throughout the read cycle. All bits which are
high when read by the program are cleared,
and new interrupts are held until after the read
cycle. If an interrupt flag is already set when
the interrupt becomes enabled, the IRQB port is
immediately activated, though the interrupt
initiating the event may have occurred much
earlier.
Registers Eh-FFH are general purpose CMOS
registers. These registers can be used by the
host or 8051 and are fully available during the
time update cycle.
The contents of these
registers are preserved by the battery power.
INTERRUPTS
When an interrupt flag bit is set and the
corresponding interrupt-enable bit is also set,
the IRQB port is driven low. IRQB is asserted as
long as at least one of the three interrupt
sources has its flag and enable bits both set.
The IRQF bit in Register C is a "1" whenever the
IRQB port is being driven low.
The RTC includes three separate fully automatic
sources of interrupts to the processor. The
alarm interrupt may be programmed to occur at
rates from one-per-second to one-a-day. The
periodic interrupt may be selected for rates
from half-a-second to 122.070 us. The update
ended interrupt may be used to indicate to the
program that an update cycle is completed.
Each of these independent interrupts are
described in greater detail in other sections.
135
When VCC rises above the battery voltage, the
RTC switches back to system power. When the
VCC voltage drops below 4.0 volts nominal, all
inputs are locked out so that the internal
registers cannot be modified by the system. This
lockout condition continues for 62 msec (min) to
125 msec (max) after the system power has
been restored. The 62 msec lockout does not
occur under the following conditions:
FREQUENCY DIVIDER
The RTC has 22 binary divider stages following
the clock input. The output of the divider is a 1
Hz signal to the update-cycle logic. The divider
is controlled by the three divider bits (DV3-DV0)
in Register A. As shown in Table 59 the divider
control bits can select the operating mode, or
be used to hold the divider chain reset which
allows precision setting of the time. When the
divider chain is changed from reset to the
operating mode, the first update cycle is
one-half second later. The divider control bits
are also used to facilitate testing of the RTC.
1. The Divider Chain Controls (bits 6-4) are in
any mode but Normal Operation ("010").
2. The VRT bit is a "0".
3. When battery voltage is below 1 volt
nominal and RESET_DRV is a "1". This
will also initialize all registers 00-0D to a
"00".
PERIODIC INTERRUPT SELECTION
The periodic interrupt allows the IRQB port to be
triggered from once every 500 ms to once every
122.07 us. As Table 60 shows, the periodic
interrupt is selected with the RS0-RS3 bits in
Register A. The periodic interrupt is enabled
with the PIE bit in Register B.
To minimize power consumption, the oscillator
is not operational under the following conditions:
4. The Divider Chain Controls (bits 6-4) are in
Oscillator Disabled mode (000, or 001).
5. If VCC=0 and the battery power is removed
and then re-applied (a new battery is
installed) the following occurs:
POWER MANAGEMENT
a. The oscillator is disabled immediately.
b. Initialize all registers 00-0D to a "00"
when VCC is applied.
The RAMD signal controls all bus input to the
RTC and RAM (nIOW, nIOR, RESET_DRV).
When asserted, it disallows any modification of
the RTC and RAM data by the host or 8051.
RAMD is asserted whenever:
If the battery voltage is between 1 volt nominal
and 2.4 volt nominal when VCC is applied:
6. Clear VRT bit to "0". Maintain all other RTC
bits in the state as before VCC was applied
VCC is below 4.0 volts nominal.
When the VCC voltage drops below the battery
voltage, the RTC switches to battery power.
VCC
<4.0
>4.0
HYSTER
BATTERY
REGISTER ACCESS
1
0
1
x
N
Y
Hyster=1 implies that VCC <4.0 volts +/-0.25V; Hyster=0 implies that VCC >4.0 volts +/-0.25V.
136
CONFIGURATION
The Configuration of the FDC37C93x is very FDC37C93x into Configuration Mode.
The
flexible and is based on the configuration
architecture implemented in typical Plug-and-
Play components. The FDC37C93x is designed
for motherboard applications in which the
resources required by their components are
known. With its flexible resource allocation
architecture, the FDC37C93x allows the BIOS to
assign resources at POST.
BIOS uses these configuration ports to initialize
the logical devices at POST. The INDEX and
DATA
ports are only valid when the
FDC37C93x is in Configuration Mode.
The SYSOPT pin is latched on the falling edge
of the RESET_DRV or on Power On Reset to
determine the configuration register's base
address. The SYSOPT pin is used to select the
CONFIG PORT's I/O address at power-up. The
SYSOPT pin is a hardware configuration pin
which is shared with the nRTS1 signal on pin
148. During reset this pin is a weak active low
signal which sinks 30uA. Note: All I/O addresses
are qualified with AEN.
SYSTEM ELEMENTS
Primary Configuration Address Decoder
After a hard reset or Power On Reset the
FDC37C93x is in the Run Mode with all logical
devices disabled. The logical devices may be
configured through two standard Configuration
I/O Ports (INDEX and DATA) by placing the
The INDEX and DATA ports are effective only
when the chip is in the Configuration State.
SYSOPT= 0
(Pull-down resistor)
SYSOPT= 1
TYPE
(10K Pull-up resistor)
PORT NAME
Refer to Note 1
CONFIG PORT
INDEX PORT
DATA PORT
0x03F0
0x0370
0x0370
Write
0x03F0
Write
INDEX PORT + 1
Read/Write
Note 1: If using TTL RS232 drivers use 1K pull-down. If using CMOS RS232 drivers use 10K pull-
down.
Entering the Configuration State
Exiting the Configuration State
The device enters the Configuration State when
the following Config Key is successfully written
to the CONFIG PORT.
The device exits the Configuration State when
the following Config Key is successfully written
to the CONFIG PORT.
Config Key = < 0x55, 0x55>
Config Key = < 0xAA>
137
Table 61 - Configuration Registers
INDEX
TYPE
HARD RESET
SOFT RESET
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
GLOBAL CONFIGURATION REGISTERS
0x02
0x03
0x07
0x20
0x21
0x22
0x23
0x24
0x2D
0x2E
0x2F
W
0x00
0x03
0x00
0x02
0x01
0x00
0x00
0x04
n/a
0x00
n/a
Config Control
Index Address
Logical Device Number
Device ID - hard wired
Device Rev - hard wired
Power Control
Power Mgmt
OSC
R/W
R/W
R
0x00
0x02
0x01
0x00
n/a
R
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
n/a
n/a
TEST 1
n/a
n/a
TEST 2
0x00
n/a
TEST 3
LOGICAL DEVICE 0 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (FDD)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x03,
0xF0
0x03,
0xF0
Primary Base I/O Address
0x70
0x74
0xF0
0xF1
0xF2
0xF4
0xF5
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x06
0x02
0x0E
0x00
0xFF
0x00
0x00
0x06
0x02
n/a
Primary Interrupt Select
DMA Channel Select
FDD Mode Register
FDD Option Register
FDD Type Register
FDD0
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
FDD1
LOGICAL DEVICE 1 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (IDE1)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x01,
0xF0
0x01,
0xF0
Primary Base I/O Address
0x62,
0x63
R/W
R/W
0x03,
0xF6
0x03,
0xF6
Second Base I/O Address
0x70
0x0E
0x0E
Primary Interrupt Select
LOGICAL DEVICE 2 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (IDE2)
138
Table 61 - Configuration Registers
INDEX
TYPE
R/W
HARD RESET
SOFT RESET
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
0x30
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
R/W
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Primary Base I/O Address
0x62,
0x63
R/W
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Second Base I/O Address
0x70
0xF0
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
0x00
n/a
Primary Interrupt Select
IDE2 Mode Register
LOGICAL DEVICE 3 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (Parallel Port)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Primary Base I/O Address
0x70
0x74
0xF0
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x04
0x3C
0x00
0x04
n/a
Primary Interrupt Select
DMA Channel Select
Parallel Port Mode Register
LOGICAL DEVICE 4 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (Serial Port 1)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Primary Base I/O Address
0x70
0xF0
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
0x00
n/a
Primary Interrupt Select
Serial Port 1 Mode Register
LOGICAL DEVICE 5 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (Serial Port 2)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Primary Base I/O Address
0x70
0xF0
0xF1
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
n/a
Primary Interrupt Select
Serial Port 2 Mode Register
IR Options Register
n/a
LOGICAL DEVICE 6 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (RTC)
0x30
0x70
0xF0
0xF1
0xF2
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
n/a
Activate
Primary Interrupt Select
Real Time Clock Mode Register
Serial EEPROM Mode Register
Serial EEPROM Pointer
n/a
0x00
139
Table 61 - Configuration Registers
INDEX
0xF3
TYPE
HARD RESET
SOFT RESET
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
W
n/a
n/a
Write EEPROM Data
Write Status
bits[6:0] R
bit[7] R/W
0xF4
0x03
0x03
0xF5
0xF6
R
R
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
Read EEPROM Data
Read Status
LOGICAL DEVICE 7 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (Keyboard)
0x30
0x70
0x72
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
0x00
Activate
Primary Interrupt Select
Second Interrupt Select
LOGICAL DEVICE 8 CONFIGURATION REGISTERS (Aux I/O)
0x30
R/W
R/W
0x00
0x00
Activate
0x60,
0x61
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Primary Base I/O Address
0x62,
0x63
R/W
0x00,
0x00
0x00,
0x00
Second Base I/O Address
0xE0
0xE1
0xE2
0xE3
0xE4
0xE5
0xE6
0xE7
0xE8
0xE9
0xEA
0xEB
0xEC
0xED
0xF0
0xF1
0xF2
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x01
0x00
0x00
0x00
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
GP10
GP11
GP12
GP13
GP14
GP15
GP16
GP17
GP20
GP21
GP22
GP23
GP24
GP25
GP_INT
GPR_GPW_EN
WDT_VAL
140
Table 61 - Configuration Registers
INDEX
0xF3
TYPE
R/W
R/WNote1
HARD RESET
SOFT RESET
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
0x00
0x00
n/a
n/a
WDT_CFG
WDT_CTRL
0xF4
Note1 : this register contains some bits which are read or write only.
141
The INDEX PORT is used to select
a
Chip Level (Global) Control/Configuration
Registers[0x00-0x2F]
configuration register in the chip. The DATA
PORT is then used to access the selected
register. These registers are accessable only in
the Configuration Mode.
The chip-level (global) registers lie in the
address range [0x00-0x2F]. The design MUST
use all 8 bits of the ADDRESS Port for register
selection. All unimplemented registers and bits
ignore writes and return zero when read.
Table 62 - Chip Level Registers
ADDRESS DESCRIPTION
REGISTER
STATE
Chip (Global) Control Registers
0x00 -
0x01
Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return 0.
Config Control
Default = 0x00
0x02 W
The hardware automatically clears this bit after the
write, there is no need for software to clear the bits.
Bit 0 = 1: Soft Reset. Refer to the "Configuration
Registers" table for the soft reset value for each
register.
C
Index Address
0x03 R/W Bit[7]
= 1 Enable GP1, GP2, +WDT_CTRL when not in
configuration mode
= 0 Disable GP1, GP2, +WDT_CTRL access
when not in configuration mode (Default)
Bits [6:2]
Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return 0.
Bits[1:0]
Sets GP1/GP2 selection register used when in Run
mode (not in Configuration Mode).
= 11
= 10
= 01
= 00
0xEA (Default)
0xE4
0xE2
0xE0
0x04 - 0x06
Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return 0.
Logical Device #
Default = 0x00
0x07 R/W A write to this register selects the current logical
device. This allows access to the control and
configuration registers for each logical device.
Note: the Activate command operates only on the
selected logical device.
C
Card Level
Reserved
0x08 - 0x1F
Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return 0.
142
Table 62 - Chip Level Registers
DESCRIPTION
REGISTER
ADDRESS
STATE
Chip Level, SMSC Defined
Device ID
0x20 R
A
read only register which provides device
C
identification. Bits[7:0] = 0x02 when read
Hard wired
= 0x02
Device Rev
0x21 R
A read only register which provides device revision
information. Bits[7:0] = 0x01 when read
C
C
Hard wired
= 0x01
PowerControl
0x22 R/W Bit[0] FDC Power
Bit[1] IDE1 Enable
Default = 0x00.
on POR or
Bit[2] IDE2 Enable
Bit[3] Parallel Port Power
Reset_Drv hardware
signal.
Bit[4] Serial Port 1 Power
Bit[5] Serial Port 2 Power
Bit[6:7] Reserved (read as 0)
= 0 Power off or disabled
= 1
Power on or enabled
Power Mgmt
0x23 R/W Bit[0] FDC
Bit[1] IDE1
C
Default = 0x00.
on POR or
Bit[2] IDE2
Bit[3] Parallel Port
Reset_Drv hardware
signal
Bit[4] Serial Port 1
Bit[5] Serial Port 2
Bit[6:7] Reserved (read as 0)
= 0 Intelligent Pwr Mgmt off
= 1
Intelligent Pwr Mgmt on
OSC
0x24 R/W Bits[1:0] Reserved, set to zero
Bits[3:2] OSC
C
Default = 0x04, on
POR or Reset_Drv
hardware signal.
= 01
= 10
= 00
= 11
Osc is on, BRG clock is on.
Same as above (01) case.
Osc is on, BRG Clock Enabled.
Osc is off, BRG clock is disabled.
Bit [5:4] Reserved, set to zero
Bit [6] 16 Bit Address Qualification
= 0 12 Bit Address Qualification
= 1 16 Bit Address Qualification
(Refer to the 16-bit Address Qualification in the
SMSC Defined Logical Device Configuration
Register, Device 2 section.)
Bit[7] IRQ8 Polarity
143
Table 62 - Chip Level Registers
DESCRIPTION
REGISTER
ADDRESS
STATE
= 0 IRQ8 is active high
= 1 IRQ8 is active low
Chip Level
0x25 -0x2C Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return 0.
Vendor Defined
TEST 1
0x2E R/W Test Modes: Reserved for SMSC. Users should not
write to this register, may produce undesired
results.
C
C
C
TEST 2
TEST 3
0x2E R/W Test Modes: Reserved for SMSC. Users should not
write to this register, may produce undesired
results.
0x2F R/W Test Modes: Reserved for SMSC. Users should not
write to this register, may produce undesired
results.
Default = 0x00, on
POR or Reset_Drv
hardware signal.
144
logical device and is selected with the Logical
Device # Register (0x07).
Logical
Registers [0x30-0xFF]
Device
Configuration/Control
The INDEX PORT is used to select a specific
logical device register. These registers are then
accessed through the DATA PORT.
Used to access the registers that are assigned
to each logical unit. This chip supports nine
logical units and has nine sets of logical device
registers. The nine logical devices are Floppy,
IDE1, IDE2, Parallel, Serial 1 and Serial 2, Real
Time Clock, Keyboard Controller, and
Auxiliary_I/O. A separate set (bank) of control
and configuration registers exists for each
The Logical Device registers are accessible only
when the device is in the Configuration State.
The logical register addresses are:
Table 63 - Logical Device Registers
LOGICAL DEVICE
REGISTER
ADDRESS
DESCRIPTION
STATE
ActivateNote1
(0x30)
Bits[7:1] Reserved, set to zero.
Bit[0]
C
Default = 0x00
= 1 Activates the logical device currently
selected through the Logical Device
# register.
= 0 Logical device currently selected is
inactive
Logical Device Control
Logical Device Control
Mem Base Addr
(0x31-0x37) Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return
0.
C
C
C
C
(0x38-0x3f) Vendor Defined - Reserved - Writes are
ignored, reads return 0.
(0x40-0x5F) Reserved - Writes are ignored, reads return
0.
All logical devices contain 0x60, 0x61. IDE1 and
IDE2, (Logical Devices 0x01 and 0x02 respectively)
contain 0x60 - 0x63 since the IDE registers are split
and two base addresses are required. In the case of
IDE [0x60,0x61] are used to set the I/O base of the
TASK FILE registers and [0x62,0x63] are used to set
the I/O base of the MISCELLANEOUS AT
I/O Base Addr.
(0x60-0x6F)
(see Device Base I/O
Address Table)
0x60,2,... =
addr[15:8]
Default = 0x00
0x61,3,... =
addr[7:0]
registerNote2
.
Logical Device 0x08 contains 0x60 -
0x63 to support GPA on base address defined by
0x60:0x61 and GPW on a base address defined by
0x62:0x63. Unused registers will ignore writes and
return zero when read.
145
Table 63 - Logical Device Registers
LOGICAL DEVICE
REGISTER
ADDRESS
(0x70,072)
DESCRIPTION
STATE
Interrupt Select
0x70 is implemented for each logical device.
Refer to Interrupt Configuration Register
description. Only the keyboard controller
uses Interrupt Select register 0x72. Unused
register (0x72) will ignore writes and return
zero when read. Interrupts default to edge
high (ISA compatible).
C
Defaults :
0x70 = 0x00,
0x72 = 0x00,
(0x71,0x73) Reserved - not implemented. These register
locations ignore writes and return zero when
read.
DMA Channel Select
Default = 0x04
(0x74,0x75) Only 0x74 is implemented for FDC , and
Parallel port. 0x75 is not implemented and
ignores writes and returns zero when read.
Refer to DMA Channel Configuration.
C
32-Bit Memory Space
Configuration
(0x76-0xA8) Reserved - not implemented. These register
locations ignore writes and return zero when
read.
Logical Device
Logical Device Config.
Reserved
(0xA9-0xDF) Reserved - not implemented. These register
locations ignore writes and return zero when
read.
C
C
C
(0xE0-0xFE) Reserved - Vendor Defined (see SMSC
defined
Logical
Device
Configuration
Registers)
0xFF
Reserved
Note 1: A logical device will be active and powered up according to the following equation:
DEVICE ON (ACTIVE) = (Activate Bit SET or Pwr/Control Bit SET).
The Logical device's Activate Bit and its Pwr/Control Bit are linked such that setting or
clearing one sets or clears the other. If the I/O Base Addr of the logical device is not within
the Base I/O range as shown in the Logical Device I/O map, then read or write is not valid
and is ignored.
Note2: The IDE/FDC split register, normally found at either 0x3F7 or 0x377 is now an FDC support
only register. The IDE logical Device will now support only a status register (typically found
at 0x3F6 or 0x376). The IDE Decoder operates as follows :
nHDCS0# = IDE TASK BASE + [7:0]
nHDCS1# = IDE MISC AT BASE + 0 (typically located at 0x3F6 or 0x376)
146
Table 64 - I/O Base Address Configuration Register Description
LOGICAL LOGICAL REGISTER
BASE I/O
RANGE (NOTE3)
FIXED
BASE OFFSETS
DEVICE
DEVICE
INDEX
NUMBER
0x00
FDC
0x60,0x61
[0x100:0x0FF8]
+0 : SRA
+1 : SRB
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES +2 : DOR
+3 : TSR
+4 : MSR/DSR
+5 : FIFO
+7:DIR/CCR
0x01
IDE1
0x60,0x61
[0x100:0x0FF8]
IDE TASK
+0 : Data Register (16 bit)
+1 : ERRF/WPRE
+2 : Sector Count
+3 : Sector Number
+4 : Cylinder Low
+5 : Cylinder High
+6 : Head,Drive
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES
+7 : Status/Command
0x62,0x63
0x60,0x61
[0x100:0x0FFF]
ON 1 BYTE BOUNDARIES
IDE MISC AT
+ 0 : Status/Fixed Disk
0x02
IDE2
[0x100:0x0FF8]
IDE TASK
+0 : Data Register (16 bit)
+1 : ERRF/WPRE
+2 : Sector Count
+3 : Sector Number
+4 : Cylinder Low
+5 : Cylinder High
+6 : Head,Drive
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES
+7 : Status/Command
0x62,0x63
[0x100:0x0FFF]
IDE MISC AT
ON 1 BYTE BOUNDARIES
+ 0 : Status/Fixed Disk
147
Table 64 - I/O Base Address Configuration Register Description
LOGICAL LOGICAL REGISTER
BASE I/O
RANGE (NOTE3)
FIXED
BASE OFFSETS
DEVICE
DEVICE
INDEX
NUMBER
0x03
Parallel
Port
0x60,0x61
[0x100:0x0FFC]
ON 4 BYTE BOUNDARIES +1 : Status
+0 : Data|ecpAfifo
(EPP Not supported)
or
+2 : Control
+3 : EPP Address
+4 : EPP Data 0
[0x100:0x0FF8]
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES +5 : EPP Data 1
(all modes supported, +6 : EPP Data 2
EPP is only available when +7 : EPP Data 3
the base address is on an 8- +400h : cfifo|ecpDfifo|tfifo
byte boundary)
|cnfgA
+401h : cnfgB
+402h : ecr
0x04
0x05
Serial Port 0x60,0x61
1
[0x100:0x0FF8]
+0 : RB/TB|LSB div
+1 : IER|MSB div
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES +2 : IIR/FCR
+3 : LCR
+4 : MSR
+5 : LSR
+6 : MSR
+7 : SCR
Serial Port 0x60,0x61
2
[0x100:0x0FF8]
+0 : RB/TB|LSB div
+1 : IER|MSB div
ON 8 BYTE BOUNDARIES +2 : IIR/FCR
+3 : LCR
+4 : MSR
+5 : LSR
+6 : MSR
+7 : SCR
0x06
0x07
0x08
RTC
KYBD
Not Relocatable
Fixed Base Address
+0 : Address Register
+1 : Data Register
n/a
Not Relocatable
Fixed Base Address
+0 : Data Register
+4 : Command/Status Reg.
n/a
Aux. I/O
0x60,0x61
0x62,0x63
[0x00:0xFFF]
ON 1 BYTE BOUNDARIES
+0 : GPR
[0x00:0xFFF]
+0 : GPW
ON 1 BYTE BOUNDARIES
Note 3: This chip uses ISA address bits [A11:A0] to decode the base address of each of its
logical devices.
148
Table 65 - Interrupt Select Configuration Register Description
REG INDEX DEFINITION
NAME
STATE
Interrupt
0x70 (R/W) Bits[3:0] selects which interrupt level is used for Interrupt 0.
C
request level
select 0
0x00=no interrupt selected.
0x01=IRQ1
0x02=IRQ2
o
o
o
0x0E=IRQ14
0x0F=IRQ15
Note: All interrupts are edge high (except ECP/EPP)
Note:
An Interrupt is activated by setting the Interrupt Request Level Select 0 register to a non-zero
value AND :
for the FDC logical device by setting DMAEN, bit D3 of the Digital Output Register.
for the PP logical device by setting IRQE, bit D4 of the Control Port and in addition
for the PP logical device in ECP mode by clearing serviceIntr, bit D2 of the ecr.
for the Serial Port logical device by setting any combination of bits D0-D3 in the IER and by
setting the OUT2 bit in the UART's Modem Control (MCR) Register.
for the RTC by (refer to the RTC section of this spec.)
for the KYBD by (refer to the KYBD controller section of this spec.)
IRQ pins must tri-state if not used/selected by any Logical Device. Refer to Appendix A
Note:
Table 66 - DMA Channel Select Configuration Register Description
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
DMA Channel 0x74 (R/W)
select 0
Bits[2:0] select the DMA Channel.
0x00=DMA0
C
0x01=DMA1
0x02=DMA2
0x03=DMA3
0x04-0x07= No DMA active
Note:
Note:
A DMA channel is activated by setting the DMA Channel Select 0 register to [0x00-0x03] AND
:
for the FDC logical device by setting DMAEN, bit D3 of the Digital Output Register.
for the PP logical device in ECP mode by setting dmaEn, bit D3 of the ecr.
DMAREQ pins must tri-state if not used/selected by any Logical Device. Refer to Appendix A
149
Configuration Registers reset to their default
values only on hard resets generated by POR or
the RESET_DRV signal. These registers are
not affected by soft resets.
SMSC Defined Logical Device Configuration
Registers
The SMSC Specific Logical Device
Table 67 - Floppy Disk Controller, Logical Device 0 [Logical Device Number = 0x00]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
FDD Mode Register
0xF0 R/W Bit[0] Floppy Mode
C
= 0 Normal Floppy Mode (default)
= 1 Enhanced Floppy Mode 2 (OS2)
Bit[1] FDC DMA Mode
Default = 0x0E
= 0
= 1
Burst Mode is enabled
Non-Burst Mode (default)Note4
Bit[3:2] Interface Mode
= 11
= 10
= 01
= 00
AT Mode (default)
(Reserved)
PS/2
Model 30
Bit[4] : Swap Drives 0,1 Mode
= 0
= 1
No swap (default)
Drive and Motor sel 0 and 1 are
swapped.
Bits[7:5] Reserved, set to zero.
FDD Option
Register
0xF1 R/W Bits[1:0] Reserved, set to zero
Bits[3:2] Density Select
C
= 00
= 01
= 10
= 11
Normal (default)
Default = 0x00
Normal (reserved for users)
1 (forced to logic "1")
0 (forced to logic "0")
Bits[5:4] Media ID Polarity
= 00
= 01
= 10
= 11
(default)
Bits[7:6] Boot Floppy
= 00
= 01
= 10
FDD 0 (default)
FDD 1
Reserved (neither drive A or B is a boot
drive).
= 11
Reserved (neither drive A or B is a boot
drive).
150
Table 67 - Floppy Disk Controller, Logical Device 0 [Logical Device Number = 0x00]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
FDD Type Register
0xF2 R/W Bits[1:0] Floppy Drive A Type
Bits[3:2] Floppy Drive B Type
C
Default = 0xFF
Bits[5:4] Reserved (could be used to store Floppy
Drive C type)
Bits[7:6] Reserved (could be used to store Floppy
Drive D Type)
Note: The FDC37C93x supports two floppy drives
0xF3 R
Reserved, Read as 0 (read only)
C
C
FDD0
0xF4 R/W Bits[1:0] Drive Type select
Bits[2] Read as 0 (read only)
Bits[3:4] Data Rate Table Select
Bits[5] Read as 0 (read only)
Bits[6] Precomp Disable
Default = 0x00
Bits[7] Read as 0 (read only)
FDD1
0xF5 R/W Refer to definition and default for 0xF4
C
151
Table 68 - IDE Drive 1, Logical Device 1 [Logical Device Number = 0x01]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
IDE1
Mode Register
IDE1 HI and LO byte pass through external buffers
controlled by IDE1_OE.
Table 69 - IDE Drive 2, Logical Device 2 [Logical Device Number = 0x02]
NAME REG INDEX DEFINITION
0xF0 R/W Bit[0] : IDE2 Configuration Options
STATE
IDE2
C
Mode Register
= 0 :
= 1 :
IDE2 HI and LO bytes pass through external
buffers controlled by IDE2_OE.
Default = 0x00
IDE2_OE not used. IDE2 HI and LO byte
passes through external buffer controlled by
IDE1_OE.
Bits[7:1] : Reserved, set to zero
16 Bit Address Qualification
When IDE2 is not active (IDE2 active bit = L2 - CR30 - Bit0), nHDCS2, nHDCS3 and IDE2_IRQ are in
high impedance; 16_ADR = CR24.6.
IDE2 ACTIVE BIT = 1
IDE2 ACTIVE BIT = 0
IDE2 ACTIVE BIT = 0
16BIT_ADR = X
16BIT_ADR = 0
16BIT_ADR = 1
nHDCS2 (pin 27)
nHDCS3 (pin 28)
IDE2_IRQ (pin 29)
nCS (pin 53)
Output
Output
Hi-Z
Hi-Z
Input (SA13)
Input (SA14)
Input (SA15)
Input (SA12)
Input (IRQ)
Input (SA12)
Hi-Z
Input (SA12)
152
Table 70 - Parallel Port, Logical Device 3 [Logical Device Number = 0x03]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
PP Mode Register
0xF0 R/W Bits[2:0] Parallel Port Mode
= 100 Printer Mode (default)
C
Default = 0x3C
= 000 Standard and Bi-directional (SPP) Mode
= 001 EPP-1.9 and SPP Mode
= 101 EPP-1.7 and SPP Mode
= 010 ECP Mode
= 011 ECP and EPP-1.9 Mode
= 111 ECP and EPP-1.7 Mode
Bit[6:3] ECP FIFO Threshold
0111b (default)
Bit[7] PP Interupt Type
Not valid when the parallel port is in the Printer
Mode (100) or the Standard & Bi-directional Mode
(000).
= 1 Pulsed Low, released to high-Z (665/666).
= 0 IRQ follows nACK when parallel port in EPP
Mode or [Printer,SPP, EPP] under ECP.
IRQ level type when the parallel port is in ECP,
TEST, or Centronics FIFO Mode.
153
Table 71 - Serial Port 1, Logical Device 4 [Logical Device Number = 0x04]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
Serial Port 1
0xF0 R/W Bit[0] MIDI Mode
C
Mode Register
= 0
MIDI support disabled (default)
= 1 MIDI support enabled
Default = 0x00
Bit[1] High Speed
= 0
High Speed Disabled(default)
= 1 High Speed Enabled
Bit[7:2] Reserved, set to zero
Table 72 - Serial Port 2, Logical Device 5 [Logical Device Number = 0x05]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
Serial Port 2
0xF0 R/W Bit[0] MIDI Mode
C
Mode Register
= 0 MIDI support disabled (default)
= 1 MIDI support enabled
Bit[1] High Speed
Default = 0x00
= 0 High Speed disabled(default)
= 1 High Speed enabled
Bit[7:2] Reserved, set to zero
IR Option Register
Default = 0x00
0xF1 R/W Bit[0] Receive Polarity
C
= 0 Active High (Default)
= 1 Active Low
Bit[1] Transmit Polarity
= 0 Active High (Default)
= 1 Active Low
Bit[2] Duplex Select
= 0 Full Duplex (Default)
= 1 Half Duplex
This register sets
the IR Options and
uses the same bit
definitions as the
FDC37C667
Bits[5:3] IR Mode
= 000 Standard (Default)
= 001 IrDA
= 010 ASK-IR
= 011 Reserved
= 1xx
Reserved
Bit[6] IR Location Mux
= 0 Use Serial port TX2 and RX2 (Default)
= 1 Use alternate IRRX (pin 98) and IRTX (pin 99)
Bit[7] Reserved
154
Table 73 - RTC, Logical Device 6 [Logical Device Number = 0x06]
REG INDEX DEFINITION
NAME
STATE
RTC Mode Register
0xF0 R/W Bit[0] = 1 : Lock CMOS RAM 80-9Fh
Bit[1] = 1 : Lock CMOS RAM A0-BFh
Bit[2] = 1 : Lock CMOS RAM C0-DFh
Bit[3] = 1 : Lock CMOS RAM E0-FFh
Bits[6:4] Reserved, set to zero
Bit[7]
C
Default = 0x00
= 0 Select lower 128-byte bank of RAM (includes
RTC RAM).
= 1 Select Upper 128-byte bank of RAM
Note: Once set, bits[3:0] can not be cleared by a
write; bits[3:0] are cleared only on Power On Reset
or upon a Hard Reset.
Serial EEPROM
Mode Register
0xF1 R/W Bit[0] = 1 : Lock EEPROM 00-1Fh
C
Bit[1] = 1 : Lock EEPROM 20-3Fh
Bit[2] = 1 : Lock EEPROM 40-5Fh
Bit[3] = 1 : Lock EEPROM 60-7Fh
Bit[4] EEPROM Type
Default = 0x00
= 0 256 bit,1K-bit (93C06,93C46)
= 1 2K-bit,4K-bit (93C56,93C66)
Bits[7:5] Reserved, set to zero
Note: Once set, bits[3:0] can not be cleared by a
write; bits[3:0] are cleared only on Power On Reset
or upon a Hard Reset.
Serial EEPROM
Pointer
0xF2 R/W Use this register to set the Serial EEPROM's pointer.
The value in this register always reflects the current
EEPROM pointer address. The Serial Device Pointer
increments after each pair of reads from the
Resource Data register or after each pair of writes to
the Program Resource Data register.
C
C
Default = 0x00, on
POR, Reset_Drv or
Software Reset.
Write EEPROM
Data
0xF3 W
This register is used to program the serial device
from the host. This device supports serial
EEPROMS in x16 configurations. Two bytes must
be written to this register in order to generate a
EEPROM write cycle. The LSB leads the MSB. The
first write to this register resets bit 0 of the Write
Status register. The second write resets bit 1 of the
Write Status register and generates a write cycle to
the serial EEPROM. The Write Status register must
be polled before performing a pair of writes to this
register.
155
Table 73 - RTC, Logical Device 6 [Logical Device Number = 0x06]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
Write Status
0xF4
Bits [1:0]
= 1,1
C
Indicates that the Write EEPROM Data
register is ready to accept a pair of bytes.
Bit 0 is cleared on the first write of the Write
Default = 0x03, on
POR, Reset_Drv
or Software Reset.
Bit[6:0]
Read Only = 1,0
EEPROM Data register.
This status
Bit[7] R/W
indicates that the serial device controller has
received one byte (LSB) and is waiting for
the second byte (MSB).
= 0,0
Bit 1 is cleared on the second write of the
Write EEPROM Data register indicating that
two bytes have been accepted and that the
serial device interface is busy writing the
word to the EEPROM.
Bits [6:2] Reserved, set to zero
Bit [7]
= 0
Enables a prefetch of serial EEPROM when
the Serial EEPROM Pointer Register is
written. This will typically be used when the
host CPU wishes random read access from
the serial EEPROM.
= 1 Disables a prefetch of serial EEPROM when the
Serial EEPROM Pointer Register is written.
This bit is typically set when the host CPU
wishes to perform random word or block
writes to the serial EEPROM.
156
Table 73 - RTC, Logical Device 6 [Logical Device Number = 0x06]
Read EEPROM
Data
0xF5 R
This register allows the host to read data from the
serial EEPROM. Data is not valid in this register
until bit-0 of the Read Status Register is set. Since
the EEPROM is a 16-bit device this register presents
the LSB followed by th MSB for each pair of register
reads. Immediately after the MSB is read bit 0 of the
Read Status Register will be cleared, then the Serial
EEPROM Pointer Register will be auto-incremented,
then the next word of EEPROM data will be fetched,
followed by the Read Status Register, bit 0 being set.
C
Read Status
0xF6 R
Bit 0 = 1 indicates that data in the Read EEPROM
Data register is valid. This bit is cleared when
EEPROM Data is read until the next byte is valid.
Reading the Read EEPROM Data register when bit-0
is clear will have no detremental effects; the data will
simply be invalid.
C
157
KBYD, Logical Device 7 [Logical Device Number = 0x07]. No SMSC defined registers for this device,
all accesses to 0xF0 through 0xFF return zero.
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.0
STATE
GP10
0xE0
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func
(If configured as input, the input signal is steered to
the selected IRQ)
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Alt Fuct IRQ mapping
1111 = IRQ15
.........
0011 = IRQ3
0010 = Invalid
0001 = IRQ1
0000 = Disable
GP11
Default = 0x01
0xE1
0xE2
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.1
Same as for GP10
C
C
GP12
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.2
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity :=1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func : WDT output or IRRX input.
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
(IRRX - if bit-6 of the IR Options Register is set)
Bits[7:4] : Reserved = 0000
158
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.3
STATE
GP13
0xE3
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func : Power LED or IRTX output
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
(IRTX - if bit-6 of the IR Options Register is set)
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
GP14
0xE4
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.4
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: General Purpose Address Decode
(Active Low) Decodes two address bytes
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
GP15
0xE5
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.5
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
C
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: Gen. Purpose Write Strobe (Active
Low)
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
159
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.6
STATE
GP16
0xE6
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[4:3] Alt Func: Joystick (Active Low)
=01
=10
=00
Joystick RD Stb function
Joystick CS function
Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:5] Reserved = 000
GP17
0xE7
General Purpose I/0 bit 1.7
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func : Joystick Write Strobe (Active Low)
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
GP20
0xE8
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.0
C
Bit[0] In/Out :
=1 Input, =0 Output
Default = 0x01
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En :=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: IDE2 buffer enable (Active Low)
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bit[4] Alt func: 8042 P20, Typically used to generate
a "Keyboard Reset" used by systems in order to
switch from "protected mode" back to "real mode"
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:5] Reserved = 000
Note:
Bit[3] and Bit[4] should not both be set at the
same time
160
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.1
STATE
GP21
0xE9
C
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: Serial EEPROM Data In
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
GP22
0xEA
0xEB
0xEC
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.2
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: Serial EEPROM Data Out
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
C
C
C
Default = 0x01
GP23
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.3
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: Serial EEPROM clock
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
Default = 0x01
GP24
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.4
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En
Default = 0x01
=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: Serial EEPROM enable
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] Reserved = 0000
161
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
General Purpose I/0 bit 2.5
Bit[0] In/Out : =1 Input, =0 Output
STATE
GP25
0xED
C
Default = 0x01
Bit[1] Polarity : =1 Invert, =0 No Invert
Bit[2] Int En :=1 Enable Combined IRQ
=0 Disable Combined IRQ
Bit[3] Alt Func: GATEA20
=1 Select alternate function
=0 Select basic I/O function
Bits[7:4] : Reserved, = 0000
0xEE-0xEF Reserved
C
C
GP_INT
0xF0
General Purpose I/O Combined Interrupt
Bits[2:0] Reserved, = 000
Default = 0x00
Bit[3] GP IRQ Filter Select
0 = Debounce Filter Bypassed
1 = Debounce Filter Enabled
Bits[7:4] Combined IRQ mapping
1111 = IRQ15
.........
0011 = IRQ3
0010 = Invalid
0001 = IRQ1
0000 = Disable
0xF1
0xF2
General Purpose Read/Write enable
C
C
GPA_GPW_EN
Bit[0]
=1 enable GP Addr Decoder
=0 disable GPA decoder.
Default = 0x00
Bit[1]
=1 enable GPW, =0 disable GPW
Bits[7:2] Reserved, = 000000
Note: if the logical device's activate bit is not set then
bits 0 and 1 have no effect.
WDT_VAL
Watch-dog Timer Time-out Value
Binary coded, units = minutes
0x00 Time out disabled
0x01 Time-out = 1 minute
.........
Default = 0x00
0xFF Time-out = 255 minutes
162
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
WDT_CFG
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
STATE
0xF3
Watch-dog timer Configuration
Bit[0] Joy-stick Enable
C
Default = 0x00
=1 WDT is reset upon an I/O read or write of the
Game Port
=0 WDT is not affected by I/O reads or writes to the
Game Port.
Bit[1] Keyboard Enable
=1 WDT is reset upon a Keyboard interrupt.
=0 WDT is not affected by Keyboard interrupts.
Bit[2] Mouse Enable
=1 WDT is reset upon a Mouse interrupt
=0 WDT is not affected by Mouse interrupts.
Bit[3] PWRLED Time-out enable
=1 Enables the Power LED to toggle at a 1Hz rate
with 50 percent duty cycle while the Watch-dog
Status bit is set.
=0 Disables the Power LED toggle during Watch-
dog timeout status.
Bits[7:4] WDT Interrupt Mapping
1111 = IRQ15
.........
0011 = IRQ3
0010 = Invalid
0001 = IRQ1
0000 = Disable
163
Table 74 - Auxilliary I/O, Logical Device 8 [Logical Device Number = 0x08]
NAME
REG INDEX
DEFINITION
Watch-dog timer Control
STATE
WDT_CTRL
0xF4
C
Bit[0] Watch-dog Status Bit, R/W
Default = 0x00
=1 WD timeout occured
=0 WD timer counting
Bit[1] Power LED Toggle Enable, R/W
=1 Toggle Power LED at 1Hz rate with 50 percent
duty cycle. (1/2 sec. on, 1/2 sec. off)
=0 Disable Power LED Toggle
Bit[2] Force Timeout, W
=1 Forces WD timeout event; this bit is self-clearing
Bit[3] P20 Force Timeout Enable, R/W
= 1 Allows rising edge of P20, from the Keyboard
Controller, to force the WD timeout event. A
WD timeout event may still be forced by
setting the Force Timeout Bit, bit 2.
= 0 P20 activity does not generate the WD timeout
event.
Note: The P20 signal will remain high for a minimum
of 1us and can remain high indefinitely. Therefore,
when P20 forced timeouts are enabled, a self-
clearing edge-detect circuit is used to generate a
signal which is ORed with the signal generated by
the Force Timeout Bit.
Bits[7:4] Reserved - Set to 0
Note:
This register is also available at index 03 when not in configuration mode. See Table 47B.
164
3. To
place
the
chip
into
the
RESET_DRIVE
Configuration State the Config Key is sent
to the chip's CONFIG PORT. Once the
initiation key is received correctly the chip
enters into the Configuration State (The
auto Config ports are enabled).
This is an active high input. The input is
digitally filtered.
When this input is detected the device powers-
up to its internal default state (all logical devices
disabled) and remains inactive until configured
otherwise.
4. The system sets the logical device
information and activates desired logical
devices through the chips INDEX and DATA
ports.
Sequence of Operation
5. The system sends other commands.
1. At power-up, or when the RESET_DRV
signal is active all logical device
configuration registers are set to their
internal default state.
6. To exit the Configuration State the system
writes 0xAA to the CONFIG PORT. The
chip returns to the RUN State.
2. The chip enters the RUN State, and is ready
to be placed into Configuration State.
Note : Only two states are defined (Run and
Configuration). In the Run State the
chip will always be ready to enter the
Configuration State.
165
APPENDIX A
FDC Core Modifications
1.
2.
FDC DMA Mode to default to Non-Burst Mode.
a. Register xx Bit x is default to a x at powerup.
FDC Core command to handle Density Select function. Implement to simplify support
of 3-Mode drives for users/customers.
DRIVE RATE TABLE
DATA RATE
DATA RATE
DRATE (1)
DENSEL
(1)
DRT1
DRT0
SEL 1
SEL 0
MFM
FM
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1Meg
500
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
250
150
125
300
250
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1Meg
500
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
250
250
125
500
250
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1Meg
500
---
250
---
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
2Meg
250
125
Drive Rate Table (Recommended)
00 = Regular drives and 2.88 vertical format
01 = 3-mode drive
10 = 2 meg tape
(1) DENSEL, DRATE1 and DRATE0 map onto output pins DRVDEN0 and DRVDEN1
166
DT0
DT1
DRVDEN0 (1)
DRVDEN1 (1)
DRIVE TYPE
4/2/1 MB 3.5"
0
0
DENSEL
DRATE0
2/1 MB 5.25" FDDS
2/1.6/1 MB 3.5" (3-MODE)
0
1
1
1
0
1
DRATE1
nDENSEL
DRATE0
DRATE0
DRATE0
DRATE1
There are two of the following registers in the configuration data space, one for each drive.
FDD0 - 0xF4
FDD1 - 0xF5
D7
0
D6
D5
0
D4
D3
D2
0
D1
D0
PTS
DRT1
DRT0
DT0
DT1
PTS
DTx
= 0 Use Precompensation
= 1 No Precompensation
= Drive Type select
DRTx = Data Rate Table select
(1) DENSEL, DRATE1 and DRATE0 map onto three output pins DRVDEN0 and DRVDEN1.
IDE Controller Modifications
FDC/HDC split register eliminated. Typical system design implementations put the FDC registers
at I/O Base address 0x3f0 and the IDE Misc AT registers at I/O Base address 0x3f6. Looking at
the registers used by the FDC and the IDE shows an overlap at I/O address 0x3f6 and 0x3f7.
System I/O accesses to 0x3f6 result in no contention as 0x3f6 is undefined for the FDC. Sytem
I/O writes to 0x3f7 result in no contention as the IDE interface does not perform writes to this
register. The only contention would normally occur when the system issues I/O reads to 0x3f7.
THE FDC37C667, HOWEVER, WILL NOT DECODE IDE ACCESS TO 0x3f7 (see section 3b,
Logical Device I/O Map for IDE devices). The FDC, when configured for the AT mode, drives bit
D7 only. When configured for PS/2 or Model 30 mode the FDC will drive the entire byte.
167
Logical Device IRQ and DMA Operation
1. IRQ and DMA Enable and Disable: Any time the IRQ or DACK for a logical block is disabled by a
register bit in that logical block, the IRQ and/or DACK must be disabled. This is in addition to the
IRQ and DACK disabled by the Configuration Registers (active bit or address not valid).
a.
FDC: For the following cases, the IRQ and DACK used by the FDC are disabled
(high impedance). Will not respond to the DREQ
i. Digital Output Register (Base+2) bit D3 (DMAEN) set to "0".
ii. The FDC is in power down (disabled).
b.
c.
IDE1 and IDE2: No additional conditions.
Serial Port1 and 2:
i. Modem Control Register (MCR) Bit D2 (OUT2) - When OUT2 is a logic "0", the
serial port interrupt is forced to a high impedance state - disabled.
d.
Parallel Port:
i. SPP and EPP modes: Control Port (Base+2) bit D4 (IRQE) set to "0", IRQ is
disabled (high impedance).
ii. ECP Mode:
(1)
(2)
(DMA) dmaEn from ecr register. See table.
IRQ - See table.
MODE
IRQ PIN
PDREQ PIN
(FROM ECR REGISTER)
CONTROLLED BY CONTROLLED BY
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
PRINTER
SPP
IRQE
IRQE
(on)
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
dmaEn
FIFO
ECP
(on)
EPP
IRQE
IRQE
(on)
RES
TEST
CONFIG
IRQE
e.
Game Port and ADDR: No IRQ or DACK used.
f.
Real Time Clock (RTC):
i. (refer to the RTC section of this data sheet.)
Keyboard Controller (KYBD):
g.
168
i. (refer to the KYBD controller section of this spec.)
2.
The ECP Parallel port Config Reg B reflects the IRQ and DRQ selected by the Configuration
Registers.
Table "B"
CONFIG REG B
Table "A"
CONFIG REG B
IRQ SELECTED
BITS 5:3
DMA SELECTED
BITS 2:0
15
110
3
011
14
101
2
1
010
11
100
001
10
011
All Others
000
9
010
7
5
001
111
All Others
000
169
OPERATIONAL DESCRIPTION
MAXIMUM GUARANTEED RATINGS*
Operating Temperature Range......................................................................................... 0oC to +70oC
Storage Temperature Range..........................................................................................-55o to +150oC
Lead Temperature Range (soldering, 10 seconds) ....................................................................+325oC
Positive Voltage on any pin, with respect to Ground................................................................Vcc+0.3V
Negative Voltage on any pin, with respect to Ground.................................................................... -0.3V
Maximum Vcc................................................................................................................................. +7V
*Stresses above those listed above could cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress
rating only and functional operation of the device at any other condition above those indicated in the
operation sections of this specification is not implied.
Note: When powering this device from laboratory or system power supplies, it is important that the
Absolute Maximum Ratings not be exceeded or device failure can result. Some power supplies exhibit
voltage spikes on their outputs when the AC power is switched on or off. In addition, voltage
transients on the AC power line may appear on the DC output. If this possibility exists, it is suggested
that a clamp circuit be used.
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(TA = 0°C - 70°C, Vcc = +5 V ± 10%)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
MIN
2.0
TYP
MAX
UNITS
COMMENTS
I Type Input Buffer
VILI
VIHI
0.8
V
V
TTL Levels
Low Input Level
High Input Level
IS Type Input Buffer
VILIS
VIHIS
VHYS
0.8
0.4
V
V
Schmitt Trigger
Schmitt Trigger
Low Input Level
High Input Level
2.2
250
mV
Schmitt Trigger Hysteresis
ICLK Input Buffer
VILCK
VIHCK
V
V
Low Input Level
3.0
High Input Level
ICLK2 Input Buffer
500
mV
V P - P
Input Level
170
PARAMETER
Input Leakage
SYMBOL
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
COMMENTS
(All I and IS buffers)
IIL
-10
+10
VIN = 0
Low Input Leakage
mA
IIH
-10
2.4
+10
4.0
2.0
VIN = VCC
High Input Leakage
mA
3.0
1.0
100
V
VBAT
VCC=VSS=0
VCC=5V, VBAT=3V
IBAT Standby Current
mA
nA
Input Leakage
O4 Type Buffer
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 4 mA
IOH = -2 mA
2.4
-10
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
O8SR Type Buffer
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
Rise Time
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 8 mA
IOH = -8 mA
2.4
-10
5
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
ns
ns
TRT
TFL
5
Fall Time
O24 Type Buffer
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 24 mA
IOH = -12 mA
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
2.4
-10
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
171
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
COMMENTS
O16SR Type Buffer
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 16 mA
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
Rise Time
2.4
-10
5
IOH = -16 mA
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
ns
ns
TRT
TFL
5
Fall Time
OD16P Type Buffer
VOL
IOL
0.4
V
IOL = 16 mA
IOH = 90 mA
(Note 2)
Low Output Level
Output Leakage
-10
+10
mA
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
OD24 Type Buffer
Low Output Level
Output Leakage
VOL
IOL
0.4
V
IOL = 24 mA
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
OD48 Type Buffer
Low Output Level
Output Leakage
VOL
IOL
0.4
V
IOL = 48 mA
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
OP24 Type Buffer
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 24 mA
IOH = -12 mA
2.4
-10
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
172
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
COMMENTS
OCLK2 Type Buffer
VOL
VOH
IOL
0.4
V
V
IOL = 2 mA
Low Output Level
High Output Level
Output Leakage
3.5
-10
IOH = -2 mA
+10
VIN = 0 to VCC
(Note 1)
mA
IIL
IIL
± 10
± 10
VCC = 0V
VIN = 6V Max
ChiProtect
mA
mA
(SLCT, PE, BUSY, nACK, nERROR)
VCC = 0V
VIN = 6V Max
Backdrive
(nSTROBE, nAUTOFD, nINIT,
nSLCTIN)
IIL
± 10
VCC = 0V
VIN = 6V Max
Backdrive
(PD0-PD7)
mA
Suppy Current Active
70
ICCI
mA
All outputs open
4.5
90
Note 1: All output leakages are measured with the current pins in high impedance. Output leakage is
measured with the low driving output off, either for a high level output or a high impedance
state.
Note 2: KBCLK, KBDATA, MCLK, MDATA contain 90mA min pull-ups.
CAPACITANCE TA = 25°C; fc = 1MHz; VCC = 5V
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
LIMITS
TYP
UNIT
TEST CONDITION
MIN
MAX
Clock Input Capacitance
CIN
20
pF
All pins except pin
under test tied to AC
ground
Input Capacitance
Output Capacitance
CIN
10
20
pF
pF
COUT
173
TIMING DIAGRAMS
t1
t2
Vcc
t3
Reg 71
FIGURE 3 - POWER-UP TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
Vcc Slew from 4.5V to 0V
MIN
300
100
125
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ms
t1
t2
t3
Vcc Slew from 0V to 4.5V
ms
Reg 71 after powerup (Note 1)
250
ms
Note 1: Internal write-protection period after Vcc passes 4.5 volts on power-up
174
t10
AEN
t3
SA[x], nCS
t2
t1
t4
t6
nIOW
SD[x]
t11
t5
DATA VALID
GP I/O
FINTR
t7
t8
PINTR
IBF
t9
FIGURE 4 - ISA WRITE
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
MIN
10
TYP
MAX UNITS
SA[x], nCS and AEN valid to nIOW asserted
nIOW asserted to nIOW deasserted
ns
ns
ns
ns
t2
80
t3
nIOW asserted to SA[x], nCS invalid
SD[x] Valid to nIOW deasserted
10
t4
45
t5
SD[x] Hold from nIOW deasserted
0
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
t6
nIOW deasserted to nIOW asserted
25
10
t7
nIOW deasserted to FINTR deasserted (Note 1)
nIOW deasserted to PINTER deasserted (Note 2)
IBF (internal signal) asserted from nIOW deasserted
nIOW deasserted to AEN invalid
55
260
40
t8
t9
t10
t11
nIOW deasserted to GPI/O out Valid
100
Note 1: FINTR refers to the IRQ used by the floppy disk.
Note 2: PINTR refers to the IRQ used by the parallel port
175
t13
AEN
t3
SA[x], nCS
t1
t7
t2
t6
nIOR
SD[x]
t4
t5
DATA VALID
PD[x], nERROR,
PE, SLCT, ACK, BUSY
t10
FINTER
t9
PINTER
PCOBF
t11
t12
AUXOBF1
nIOR/nIOW
t8
FIGURE 5A - ISA READ
SEE TIMING PARAMETERS ON PAGE 177
176
FIGURE 5B - ISA READ TIMING
DESCRIPTION
NAME
t1
MIN
10
TYP MAX UNITS
SA[x], nCS and AEN valid to nIOR asserted
ns
ns
ns
t2
nIOR asserted to nIOR deasserted
50
t3
nIOR asserted to SA[x], nCS invalid
nIOR asserted to Data Valid
10
t4
50
25
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
t5
Data Hold/float from nIOR deasserted
nIOR deasserted
10
25
t6
t8
nIOR asserted after nIOW deasserted
nIOR/nIOR, nIOW/nIOW transfers from/to ECP FIFO
Parallel Port setup to nIOR asserted
nIOR asserted to PINTER deasserted
nIOR deasserted to FINTER deasserted
nIOR deasserted to PCOBF deasserted (Notes 3,5)
nIOR deasserted to AUXOBF1 deasserted (Notes 4,5)
nIOW deasserted to AEN invalid
80
t8
150
t7
20
55
t9
t10
t11
t12
t13
260
80
80
10
Note 1: FINTR refers to the IRQ used by the floppy disk.
Note 2: PINTR refers to the IRQ used by the parallel port.
Note 3: PCOBF is used for the Keyboard IRQ.
Note 4: AUXOBF1 is used for the Mouse IRQ.
Note 5: Applies only if deassertion is performed in hardware.
177
t2
t1
PCOBF
AUXOBF1
nWRT
t3
IBF
nRD
FIGURE 6 - INTERNAL 8042 CPU TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP MAX UNITS
t1
t2
t3
nWRT deasserted to AUXOBF1 asserted (Notes 1,2)
nWRT deasserted to PCOBF asserted (Notes 1,3)
nRD deasserted to IBF deasserted (Note 1)
40
40
40
ns
ns
ns
Note 1: IBF, nWRT and nRD are internal signals.
Note 2: PCOBF is used for the Keyboard IRQ.
Note 3: AUXOBF1 is used for the Mouse IRQ.
178
t1
t2
t2
X1K
FIGURE 7A - INPUT CLOCK TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
Clock Cycle Time for 14.318MHZ
Clock High Time/Low Time for 14.318MHz
Clock Cycle Time for 32KHZ
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t1
t2
65
25
ns
Clock High Time/Low Time for 32KHz
Clock Rise Time/Fall Time (not shown)
5
ns
t4
RESET
FIGURE 7B - RESET TIMING
DESCRIPTION
NAME
MIN
1.5
TYP MAX
UNITS
t4
nRESET Low Time (Note 1)
ms
Note 1: The nRESET low time is dependent upon the processor clock. The nRESET must be active
for a minimum of 24 x16MHz clock cycles.
179
IDEx_IRQ
t1
t2
IRQx
FIGURE 8 - IRQ TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
IDE_IRQ low-high edge to IRQ low-high
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
t1
30
ns
edge propagation delay. Edge High type
interrupt selected.
t2
IDE_IRQ high-low edge to IRQ high-low
edge propagation delay. Edge high type
interrupt selected.
30
ns
Note:
Definitions:
IDE IRQ input and pass-through IRQ timing
IDE_ IRQ is the Interrupt request input from an IDE Hard Drive which is defined as
a low to high edge type interrupt held high until the interrupt is serviced.
180
SDx
A[x]
t1
t1
nIOR
t2
t2
nIOROP
nIOW
t3
t3
nIOWOP
FIGURE 9 - SA[x], nIOROP, nIOWOP TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
SD[x] in to A[x] output
MIN
TYP
MAX
25
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t3
nIOR in to nIOROP output
nIOW in to nIOWOP output
25
ns
25
ns
181
nROMCS
nROMOE
t7
t2
Note 2
t4
t3
t2
t3
t1
t8
RD[x]
SD[x]
Note 1
t6
t5
FIGURE 10 - ROM INTERFACE TIMING
Note 1: RD[x] driven by FDC37C93x, SD[x] driven by system
Note 2: RD[x] driven by ROM, SD[x] driven by FDC37C9x
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
SD[x] valid to RD[x] valid
MIN
TYP
MAX
25
UNITS
ns
t2
nROMCS active to RD[X] driven
nROMCS inactive to RD[X] float
RD[x] valid to SD[x] valid
25
ns
t3
25
ns
t4
25
ns
t5
nROMCS active to SD[X] driven
nROMCS inactive to SD[X] float
nROMOE active to RD[x] float
nROMOE inactive to RD[x] driven
25
ns
t6
25
ns
t7
25
ns
t8
25
ns
Note 1: Outputs have a 50 pf load.
182
t15
AEN
t16
t3
t2
FDRQ,
PDRQ
t1
t4
nDACK
t12
t14
t11
t6
t5
nIOR
or
t8
nIOW
t10
t9
DATA VALID
t7
DATA
(DO-D7)
t13
TC
FIGURE 11 - DMA TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
nDACK Delay Time from FDRQ High
DRQ Reset Delay from nIOR or nIOW
FDRQ Reset Delay from nDACK Low
nDACK Width
0
100
100
ns
t3
ns
t4
150
0
ns
t5
nIOR Delay from FDRQ High
nIOW Delay from FDRQ High
Data Access Time from nIOR Low
Data Set Up Time to nIOW High
Data to Float Delay from nIOR High
Data Hold Time from nIOW High
nDACK Set Up to nIOW/nIOR Low
nDACK Hold after nIOW/nIOR High
TC Pulse Width
ns
t6
0
ns
t7
100
60
ns
t8
40
10
10
5
ns
t9
ns
t10
t11
t12
t13
t14
t15
t16
ns
ns
10
60
40
10
ns
ns
AEN Set Up to nIOR/nIOW
ns
AEN Hold from nDACK
ns
TC Active to PDRQ Inactive
100
ns
183
t3
nDIR
t4
t1
t2
nSTEP
t5
nDS0-3
nINDEX
nRDATA
t6
t7
t8
nWDATA
nIOW
t9
t9
nDS0-3,
MTR0-3
FIGURE 12 - DISK DRIVE TIMING (AT MODE ONLY)
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
nDIR Set Up to STEP Low
MIN
TYP
4
MAX
UNITS
X*
t2
nSTEP Active Time Low
24
96
132
20
2
X*
t3
nDIR Hold Time after nSTEP
nSTEP Cycle Time
X*
t4
X*
t5
nDS0-3 Hold Time from nSTEP Low
nINDEX Pulse Width
X*
t6
X*
t7
nRDATA Active Time Low
nWDATA Write Data Width Low
nDS0-3, MTRO-3 from End of nIOW
40
.5
ns
t8
Y*
t9
25
ns
*X specifies one MCLK period and Y specifies one WCLK period.
MCLK = Controller Clock to FDC
WCLK = 2 x Data Rate
184
nIOW
t1
nRTSx,
nDTRx
t5
IRQx
nCTSx,
nDSRx,
nDCDx
t6
t2
t4
IRQx
nIOW
t3
IRQx
nIOR
nRIx
FIGURE 13 - SERIAL PORT TIMING
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
nRTSx, nDTRx Delay from nIOW
MIN
TYP
MAX UNITS
200
100
120
125
100
100
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
t2
IRQx Active Delay from nCTSx, nDSRx, nDCDx
IRQx Inactive Delay from nIOR (Leading Edge)
IRQx Inactive Delay from nIOW (Trailing Edge)
IRQx Inactive Delay from nIOW
t3
t4
t5
10
t6
IRQx Active Delay from nRIx
185
nAEN
A0-A9
t9
t2
t1
nIDEENLO,
nIDEENHI,
nHDCSx,
nGAMECS
FIGURE 14 - IDE INTERFACE TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
t1
t2
t9
nIDEENLO, nIDEENHI, nGAMECS, nHDCSx Delay
from nAEN
40
ns
nIDEENLO, nIDEENHI, nGAMECS, nHDCSx Delay
from A0 - A9
40
40
ns
ns
nIDEENLO Delay from nIDEENHI, AEN
186
PD0- PD7
nIOW
t6
t1
nINIT, nSTROBE.
nAUTOFD, SLCTIN
nACK
t2
nPINTR
(SPP)
t4
t3
PINTR
(ECP or EPP Enabled)
nFAULT (ECP)
nERROR
(ECP)
t5
t2
t3
PINTR
FIGURE 15 - PARALLEL PORT TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
t1
PD0-7, nINIT, nSTROBE, nAUTOFD Delay from
nIOW
100
ns
t2
t3
t4
t5
t6
PINTR Delay from nACK, nFAULT
PINTR Active Low in ECP and EPP Modes
PINTR Delay from nACK
60
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
200
300
105
105
100
nERROR Active to PINTR Active
PD0 - PD7 Delay from IOW Active
187
t18
t9
A0-A10
SD<7:0>
t17
t8
t12
t19
nIOW
t10
t11
IOCHRDY
t13
t22
t20
t2
t5
nWRITE
PD<7:0>
t1
t16
t3
t14
t4
nDATAST
nADDRSTB
t15
t6
t7
nWAIT
PDIR
t21
FIGURE 16A - EPP 1.9 DATA OR ADDRESS WRITE CYCLE
SEE TIMING PARAMETERS ON PAGE 189
188
FIGURE 16B - EPP 1.9 DATA OR ADDRESS WRITE CYCLE TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
nIOW Asserted to PDATA Valid
MIN
0
TYP
MAX
50
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t3
t4
nWAIT Asserted to nWRITE Change (Note 1)
nWRITE to Command Asserted
60
5
185
35
ns
ns
nWAIT Deasserted to Command Deasserted
(Note 1)
60
190
ns
t5
t6
nWAIT Asserted to PDATA Invalid (Note 1)
Time Out
0
10
0
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
12
t7
Command Deasserted to nWAIT Asserted
SDATA Valid to nIOW Asserted
nIOW Deasserted to DATA Invalid
nIOW Asserted to IOCHRDY Asserted
t8
10
0
t9
t10
t11
0
24
nWAIT Deasserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
(Note 1)
60
160
t12
t13
t14
t15
t16
t17
t18
t19
t20
t21
t22
IOCHRDY Deasserted to nIOW Deasserted
nIOW Asserted to nWRITE Asserted
nWAIT Asserted to Command Asserted (Note 1)
Command Asserted to nWAIT Deasserted
PDATA Valid to Command Asserted
Ax Valid to nIOW Asserted
10
0
ns
ns
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
70
210
10
60
0
10
40
10
40
60
0
nIOW Asserted to Ax Invalid
nIOW Deasserted to nIOW or nIOR Asserted
nWAIT Asserted to nWRITE Asserted (Note 1)
nWAIT Asserted to PDIR Low
185
PDIR Low to nWRITE Asserted
0
Note 1: nWAIT must be filtered to compensate for ringing on the parallel bus cable. WAIT is
considered to have settled after it does not transition for a minimum of 50 nsec.
189
t20
t12
A0-A10
IOR
t19
t11
t22
t13
SD<7:0>
t18
t10
t8
IOCHRDY
t24
t23
t27
t17
PDIR
nWRITE
t9
t21
PData bus driven
by peripheral
t2
t25
t5
t4
t16
PD<7:0>
t28
t14
t26
t1
t3
DATASTB
ADDRSTB
t15
t7
t6
nWAIT
FIGURE 17A - EPP 1.9 DATA OR ADDRESS READ CYCLE
SEE TIMING PARAMETERS ON PAGE 191
190
FIGURE 17B - EPP 1.9 DATA OR ADDRESS READ CYCLE TIMING PARAMETERS
NAME
DESCRIPTION
PDATA Hi-Z to Command Asserted
MIN
0
TYP
MAX
30
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t3
nIOR Asserted to PDATA Hi-Z
0
50
ns
nWAIT Deasserted to Command Deasserted
(Note 1)
60
180
ns
t4
t5
Command Deasserted to PDATA Hi-Z
Command Asserted to PDATA Valid
PDATA Hi-Z to nWAIT Deasserted
PDATA Valid to nWAIT Deasserted
nIOR Asserted to IOCHRDY Asserted
nWRITE Deasserted to nIOR Asserted (Note 2)
0
0
ns
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
ns
t6
0
t7
0
t8
0
24
t9
0
t10
nWAIT Deasserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
(Note 1)
60
160
t11
t12
t13
t14
t15
t16
t17
t18
t19
t20
t21
t22
t23
t24
t25
t26
t27
t28
IOCHRDY Deasserted to nIOR Deasserted
nIOR Deasserted to SDATA Hi-Z (Hold Time)
PDATA Valid to SDATA Valid
0
0
ns
ns
ns
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
40
75
0
nWAIT Asserted to Command Asserted
Time Out
0
195
12
10
60
60
0
nWAIT Deasserted to PDATA Driven (Note 1)
nWAIT Deasserted to nWRITE Modified (Notes 1,2)
SDATA Valid to IOCHRDY Deasserted (Note 3)
Ax Valid to nIOR Asserted
190
190
85
40
10
0
nIOR Deasserted to Ax Invalid
10
nWAIT Asserted to nWRITE Deasserted
nIOR Deasserted to nIOW or nIOR Asserted
nWAIT Asserted to PDIR Set (Note 1)
PDATA Hi-Z to PDIR Set
185
40
60
0
185
nWAIT Asserted to PDATA Hi-Z (Note 1)
PDIR Set to Command
60
0
180
20
nWAIT Deasserted to PDIR Low (Note 1)
nWRITE Deasserted to Command
60
1
180
Note 1: nWAIT is considered to have settled after it does not transition for a minimum of 50 ns.
Note 2: When not executing a write cycle, EPP nWRITE is inactive high.
Note 3: 85 is true only if t7 = 0.
191
t18
t9
A0-A10
SD<7:0>
t17
t8
t6
t19
t12
nIOW
t10
t20
t11
IOCHRDY
nWRITE
t2
t5
t13
t1
PD<7:0>
t16
t3
t4
nDATAST
nADDRSTB
t21
nWAIT
PDIR
FIGURE 18A - EPP 1.7 DATA OR ADDRESS WRITE CYCLE
SEE TIMING PARAMETERS ON PAGE 193
192
FIGURE 18B - EPP 1.7 DATA OR ADDRESS WRITE CYCLE PARAMETERS
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
nIOW Asserted to PDATA Valid
MIN
0
TYP
MAX
50
UNITS
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ms
ns
ns
ns
t2
Command Deasserted to nWRITE Change
nWRITE to Command
0
40
t3
5
35
t4
nIOW Deasserted to Command Deasserted (Note 2)
Command Deasserted to PDATA Invalid
Time Out
50
t5
50
10
10
0
t6
12
t8
SDATA Valid to nIOW Asserted
t9
nIOW Deasserted to DATA Invalid
nIOW Asserted to IOCHRDY Asserted
nWAIT Deasserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
IOCHRDY Deasserted to nIOW Deasserted
nIOW Asserted to nWRITE Asserted
PDATA Valid to Command Asserted
Ax Valid to nIOW Asserted
t10
t11
t12
t13
t16
t17
t18
t19
t20
t21
0
24
40
10
0
50
35
10
40
10
100
nIOW Deasserted to Ax Invalid
nIOW Deasserted to nIOW or nIOR Asserted
nWAIT Asserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
Command Deasserted to nWAIT Deasserted
45
0
Note 1: nWRITE is controlled by clearing the PDIR bit to "0" in the control register before performing
an EPP Write.
Note 2: The number is only valid if nWAIT is active when IOW goes active.
193
t20
A0-A10
nIOR
t15
t19
t11
t22
t13
t12
SD<7:0>
t8
t10
t3
IOCHRDY
nWRITE
t5
t4
PD<7:0>
t23
t2
nDATASTB
nADDRSTB
t21
nWAIT
PDIR
FIGURE 19A - EPP 1.7 DATA OR ADDRESS READ CYCLE
SEE TIMING PARAMETERS ON PAGE 195
194
FIGURE 19B - EPP 1.7 DATA OR ADDRESS READ CYCLE PARAMETERS
NAME
t2
DESCRIPTION
nIOR Deasserted to Command Deasserted
nWAIT Asserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
Command Deasserted to PDATA Hi-Z
Command Asserted to PDATA Valid
nIOR Asserted to IOCHRDY Asserted
nWAIT Deasserted to IOCHRDY Deasserted
IOCHRDY Deasserted to nIOR Deasserted
nIOR Deasserted to SDATA High-Z (Hold Time)
PDATA Valid to SDATA Valid
MIN
TYP
MAX
50
UNITS
ns
t3
0
0
0
40
ns
t4
ns
t5
ns
t8
24
50
ns
t10
t11
t12
t13
t15
t19
t20
t21
t22
t23
ns
0
0
ns
40
40
12
ns
ns
Time Out
10
40
10
0
ms
Ax Valid to nIOR Asserted
ns
nIOR Deasserted to Ax Invalid
ns
Command Deasserted to nWAIT Deasserted
nIOR Deasserted to nIOW or nIOR Asserted
nIOR Asserted to Command Asserted
ns
40
ns
55
ns
Note:
WRITE is controlled by setting the PDIR bit to "1" in the control register before performing an
EPP Read.
195
ECP PARALLEL PORT TIMING
The timing is designed to provide 3 cable
Parallel Port FIFO (Mode 101)
round-trip times for data setup if Data is driven
simultaneously with HostClk ().
The standard parallel port is run at or near the
peak 500Kbytes/sec allowed in the forward
direction using DMA. The state machine does
not examine and begins the next transfer based
on Busy. Refer to Figure 20.
Reverse-Idle Phase
The peripheral has no data to send and keeps
PeriphClk high. The host is idle and keeps
HostAck low.
ECP Parallel Port Timing
The timing is designed to allow operation at
approximately 2.0 Mbytes/sec over a 15ft cable.
If a shorter cable is used then the bandwidth
will increase.
Reverse Data Transfer Phase
The interface transfers data and commands
from the peripheral to the host using an inter-
locked HostAck and PeriphClk.
Forward-Idle
The Reverse Data Transfer Phase may be en-
tered from the Reverse-Idle Phase. After the
previous byte has beed accepted the host sets
HostAck () low. The peripheral then sets
PeriphClk () low when it has data to send. The
data must be stable for the specified setup time
prior to the falling edge of PeriphClk. When the
host is ready it to accept a byte it sets. HostAck
() high to acknowledge the handshake. The
peripheral then sets PeriphClk () high. After the
host has accepted the data it sets HostAck ()
low, completing the transfer. This sequence is
shown in Figure 22.
When the host has no data to send it keeps
HostClk () high and the peripheral will leave
PeriphClk (Busy) low.
Forward Data Transfer Phase
The interface transfers data and commands
from the host to the peripheral using an inter-
locked PeriphAck and HostClk. The peripheral
may indicate its desire to send data to the host
by asserting .
The Forward Data Transfer Phase may be
entered from the Forward-Idle Phase. While in
the Forward Phase the peripheral may
asynchronously assert the () to request that the
channel be reversed. When the peripheral is not
busy it sets PeriphAck (Busy) low. The host then
sets HostClk () low when it is prepared to send
data. The data must be stable for the specified
setup time prior to the falling edge of HostClk.
The peripheral then sets PeriphAck (Busy) high
to acknowledge the handshake. The host then
Output Drivers
To facilitate higher performance data transfer,
the use of balanced CMOS active drivers for
critical signals (Data, HostAck, HostClk,
PeriphAck, PeriphClk) are used ECP Mode.
Because the use of active drivers can present
compatibility problems in Compatible Mode
(the control signals, by tradition, are specified
as open-collector), the drivers are dynamically
changed from open-collector to totem-pole. The
sets HostClk () high. The peripheral
then
timing for the
specified in
Capabilities
dynamic driver change
the
Port
is
IEEE 1284 Extended
Protocol and ISA
accepts the data and sets PeriphAck (Busy)
low, completing the transfer. This sequence is
shown in Figure 21.
196
Interface Standard, Rev. 1.09, Jan. 7, 1993,
available from Microsoft. The dynamic driver
change must be implemented properly to
prevent glitching the outputs.
t6
t3
PDATA
t1
t2
t5
nSTROBE
t4
BUSY
FIGURE 20 - PARALLEL PORT FIFO TIMING
NAME
t1
DESCRIPTION
DATA Valid to nSTROBE Active
MIN
600
600
450
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ns
t2
nSTROBE Active Pulse Width
ns
t3
DATA Hold from nSTROBE Inactive (Note 1)
nSTROBE Active to BUSY Active
BUSY Inactive to nSTROBE Active
BUSY Inactive to PDATA Invalid (Note 1)
ns
t4
500
ns
t5
680
80
ns
t6
ns
Note 1: The data is held until BUSY goes inactive or for time t3, whichever is longer. This only
applies if another data transfer is pending. If no other data transfer is pending, the data is
held indefinitely.
197
t2
PDATA<7:0>
t1
t5
t6
nACK
t4
t3
t4
nAUTOFD
FIGURE 21 - ECP PARALLEL PORT REVERSE TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
0
TYP
MAX
60
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t3
nAUTOFD Valid to nSTROBE Asserted
PDATA Valid to nSTROBE Asserted
0
60
ns
BUSY Deasserted to nAUTOFD Changed
(Notes 1,2)
80
180
ns
t4
t5
t6
t7
t8
BUSY Deasserted to PDATA Changed (Notes 1,2)
nSTROBE Deasserted to Busy Asserted
80
0
180
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
nSTROBE Deasserted to Busy Deasserted
0
BUSY Deasserted to nSTROBE Asserted (Notes 1,2)
BUSY Asserted to nSTROBE Deasserted (Note 2)
80
80
200
180
Note 1: Maximum value only applies if there is data in the FIFO waiting to be written out.
Note 2: BUSY is not considered asserted or deasserted until it is stable for a minimum of 75 to 130
ns.
198
t3
t4
nAUTOFD
PDATA<7:0>
t2
t1
t7
t8
t6
t5
t6
BUSY
FIGURE 22 - ECP PARALLEL PORT FORWARD TIMING
NAME
DESCRIPTION
MIN
0
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ns
t1
t2
t3
PDATA Valid to nACK Asserted
nAUTOFD Deasserted to PDATA Changed
0
ns
nACK Asserted to nAUTOFD Deasserted
(Notes 1,2)
80
200
200
ns
t4
t5
t6
nACK Deasserted to nAUTOFD Asserted (Note 2)
nAUTOFD Asserted to nACK Asserted
80
0
ns
ns
ns
nAUTOFD Deasserted to nACK Deasserted
0
Note 1: Maximum value only applies if there is room in the FIFO and terminal count has not been
received. ECP can stall by keeping nAUTOFD low.
Note 2: nACK is not considered asserted or deasserted until it is stable for a minimum of 75 to 130
ns.
199
D
3
D1
DETAIL "A"
R1
120
81
R2
121
80
0
L
5
L1
E
E1
W
2
7
D1/4
e
E1/4
160
41
1
40
4
A
A2
T / T
D
E
H
0
1
0.10
A1
SEE DETAIL
-C-
Notes:
1) Coplanarity is 0.100 mm
MIN
NOM
MAX
4.07
0.5
A
A1
0.05
3.10
2) Tolerance on the position of the leads is 0.120
mm maximum
A2
D
3.67
30.95 31.20
31.45
3) Package body dimensions D1 and E1 do
include the mold protrusion. Maximum mold
protrusion is 0.25 mm
D1
E3
27.90 28.00 28.10
30.95 31.20 31.45
27.90 28.00 28.10
E1
H
4) Dimensions TD and TE are important for testing
by robotic handler
0.10
0.65
0.200
0.95
L
0.80
1.60
5)
Dimensions for foot length L when measured
the centerline of the leads are given at the table
Dimension for foot length L when measured at
the gauge plane 0.25 mm above the seating
plane, is 0.78 - 1.03 mm
L1
e
0.65BSC
0
0
0.20
7
0.40
W
R1
R2
6) Controlling dimension: millimeter
0.20
0.30
7) Details of pin 1 identifier are optional but must
be located within the zone indicated
T
T
30.45
30.45
D
E
FIGURE 23 - 160 PIN QFP PACKAGE OUTLINE
200
FDC37C93x ERRATA SHEET
PAGE
SECTION/FIGURE/ENTRY
CORRECTION
DATE
REVISED
1
1
4
Real Time Clock
IDE Interface
"typ" changed to "max"
See Italicized Text
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
Pin Configuration
Pin
#120
changed
changed
changed
to
to
to
"nROMDIR"
8
Bios Buffers
"nROMOE"
"nROMDIR"
8/14/95
8/14/95
10
Block Diagram
"nGPRD"
"nGPA", "nROMOE" changed
to "nROMDIR"
109
111
Bios Buffer
Table 46
"nROMOE"
"nROMDIR"
changed
to
8/14/95
8/14/95
"GP Read Strobe" changed to
"GP Address Decoder"
112
119
122
127
128
131
136
142
144
Second Paragraph
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
First Paragraph Removed
See Italicized Text
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
General Purpose Read/Write
8042 Keyboard Controller
Port Definition and Description
RTC Interrupt
UIP/DV 2-0/RS 3-0
Power Management
Table 62/Bit[7]
OSC, Bits[3:2]
"when PWRGD is active.
When PWRGD is inactive,
OSC is off and BRG Clock is
disabled (default)" was re-
moved.
150
151
160
FDD Option Register, Bits[7:6]
FDD Type Register, Bits[5:4] and [7:6]
Table 74, GP20, Bit[4]
See Italicized Text
See Italicized Text
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
"RESET OUT (Active Low)"
removed, see italicized text
162
165
167
Table 74
See Italicized Text
Step 2 was removed
Removed
8/14/95
8/14/95
8/14/95
Sequence Operation
Items 3 and 4
PAGE
SECTION/FIGURE/ENTRY
CORRECTION
DATE
REVISED
167
168
"IDE Controller Modifications"
Added
Added
8/14/95
8/14/95
"Logical Device IRQ and DMA
Operation"
173
Supply Current Active
See Italicized Text
8/14/95
1995© STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS
CORP.
Circuit diagrams utilizing SMSC products are included as a means of illustrating
typical applications; consequently complete information sufficient for construction
purposes is not necessarily given. The information has been carefully checked
and is believed to be entirely reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed for
inaccuracies. Furthermore, such information does not convey to the purchaser of
the semiconductor devices described any licenses under the patent rights of
SMSC or others. SMSC reserves the right to make changes at any time in order to
improve design and supply the best product possible. SMSC products are not
designed, intended, authorized or warranted for use in any life support or other
application where product failure could cause or contribute to personal injury or
severe property damage. Any and all such uses without prior written approval of
an Officer of SMSC and further testing and/or modification will be fully at the risk of
the customer.
FDC37C93x Rev. 8/14/95
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