External Interface (XINTF)
External Interface (XINTF)
(XINTF)
Reference Guide
List of Figures
1 External Interface Block Diagram ......................................................................................... 9
2 Access Flow Diagram ..................................................................................................... 11
3 Relationship Between XTIMCLK and SYSCLKOUT .................................................................. 12
4 Typical 16-bit Data Bus XINTF Connections .......................................................................... 14
5 Typical 32-bit Data Bus XINTF Connections .......................................................................... 15
6 XTIMING0/6/7 Register ................................................................................................... 23
7 XINTF Configuration Register (XINTCNF2) ............................................................................ 27
8 XBANK Register ........................................................................................................... 29
9 XREVISION Register ..................................................................................................... 29
10 XRESET Register ......................................................................................................... 30
11 XTIMCLK and XCLKOUT Mode Waveforms .......................................................................... 33
12 Generic Read Cycle (XTIMCLK = SYSCLKOUT mode) ............................................................. 34
13 Generic Read Cycle (XTIMCLK = SYSCLKOUT mode) .......................................................... 35
14 Generic Write Cycle (XTIMCLK = SYSCLKOUT mode) ............................................................. 36
List of Tables
1 16-bit Mode Behavior ..................................................................................................... 15
2 32-bit Mode Behavior ..................................................................................................... 15
3 Pulse Duration in Terms of XTIMCLK Cycles ......................................................................... 17
4 Relationship Between Lead/Trail Values and the XTIMCLK/X2TIMING Modes .................................. 20
5 Relationship Between Active Values and the XTIMCLK/X2TIMING Modes ....................................... 21
6 Valid XBANK Configurations ............................................................................................. 22
7 XINTF Configuration and Control Register Mapping ................................................................. 23
8 XTIMING0/6/7 Register Field Descriptions............................................................................. 23
9 XINTF Configuration Register Field Descriptions ..................................................................... 27
10 XBANK Register Field Descriptions ..................................................................................... 29
11 XREVISION Register Field Descriptions ............................................................................... 29
12 XRESET Register Field Descriptions ................................................................................... 30
13 XINTF Signal Descriptions ............................................................................................... 31
14 Revisions ................................................................................................................... 37
This document describes the external interface (XINTF) used in the F2833x or F2823x device. The XINTF
is a nonmultiplexed asynchronous bus.
Notational Conventions
This document uses the following conventions.
Hexadecimal numbers are shown with the suffix h or with a leading 0x. For example, the following
number is 40 hexadecimal (decimal 64): 40h or 0x40.
Registers in this document are shown in figures and described in tables.
Each register figure shows a rectangle divided into fields that represent the fields of the register.
Each field is labeled with its bit name, its beginning and ending bit numbers above, and its
read/write properties below. A legend explains the notation used for the properties.
Reserved bits in a register figure designate a bit that is used for future device expansion.
SPRU963 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Boot ROM Reference Guide describes the purpose and features of
the bootloader (factory-programmed boot-loading software) and provides examples of code. It also
describes other contents of the device on-chip boot ROM and identifies where all of the information
is located within that memory.
SPRUFB7 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP) Reference Guide
describes the McBSP available on the 2833x and 2823x devices. The McBSPs allow direct
interface between a DSP and other devices in a system.
SPRUFB8 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Direct Memory Access (DMA) Module Reference Guide
describes the DMA on the 2833x and 2823x devices.
SPRUG04 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Enhanced Pulse Width Modulator (ePWM) Module Reference
Guide describes the main areas of the enhanced pulse width modulator that include digital motor
control, switch mode power supply control, UPS (uninterruptible power supplies), and other forms of
power conversion.
SPRUG02 TMS320x2833x, 2823x High-Resolution Pulse Width Modulator (HRPWM) Reference
Guide describes the operation of the high-resolution extension to the pulse width modulator
(HRPWM).
SPRUFG4 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Enhanced Capture (eCAP) Module Reference Guide describes
the enhanced capture module. It includes the module description and registers.
SPRUG05 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Enhanced Quadrature Encoder Pulse (eQEP) Module
Reference Guide describes the eQEP module, which is used for interfacing with a linear or rotary
incremental encoder to get position, direction, and speed information from a rotating machine in
high-performance motion and position control systems. It includes the module description and
registers.
SPRUEU1 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Enhanced Controller Area Network (eCAN) Reference Guide
describes the eCAN that uses established protocol to communicate serially with other controllers in
electrically noisy environments.
SPRUFZ5 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Serial Communications Interface (SCI) Reference Guide
describes the SCI, which is a two-wire asynchronous serial port, commonly known as a UART. The
SCI modules support digital communications between the CPU and other asynchronous peripherals
that use the standard non-return-to-zero (NRZ) format.
SPRUEU3 TMS320x2833x, 2823x DSC Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Reference Guide
describes the SPI - a high-speed synchronous serial input/output (I/O) port - that allows a serial bit
stream of programmed length (one to sixteen bits) to be shifted into and out of the device at a
programmed bit-transfer rate.
SPRUG03 TMS320x2833x, 2823x Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C) Module Reference Guide describes
the features and operation of the inter-integrated circuit (I2C) module.
Tools Guides
SPRU513 TMS320C28x Assembly Language Tools v5.0.0 User's Guide describes the assembly
language tools (assembler and other tools used to develop assembly language code), assembler
directives, macros, common object file format, and symbolic debugging directives for the
TMS320C28x device.
SPRU514 TMS320C28x Optimizing C/C++ Compiler v5.0.0 User's Guide describes the
TMS320C28x C/C++ compiler. This compiler accepts ANSI standard C/C++ source code and
produces TMS320 DSP assembly language source code for the TMS320C28x device.
SPRU608 TMS320C28x Instruction Set Simulator Technical Overview describes the simulator,
available within the Code Composer Studio for TMS320C2000 IDE, that simulates the instruction
set of the C28x core.
SPRU625 TMS320C28x DSP/BIOS 5.32 Application Programming Interface (API) Reference
Guide describes development using DSP/BIOS.
The external interface (XINTF) is a nonmultiplexed asynchronous bus, similar to the TMS320x281x
external interface.
This guide is applicable for the XINTF found on the TMS320x2833x family of processors. This includes all
Flash-based and RAM-based devices within the 2833x family.
1 Functional Description
The XINTF is mapped into three fixed memory-mapped zones as defined in Figure 1.
Each of the 28x XINTF zones has a chip-select signal that is toggled when an access is made to that
particular zone. On some devices the chip-select signals for two zones may be internally ANDed together
to form a single shared chip select. In this manner, the same memory is connected to both zones or
external decode logic can be used to separate the two.
Each of the three zones can also be programmed with a specified number of wait states, strobe signal
set-up and hold timing. The number of wait states, set-up and hold timing is separately specified for a read
access and a write access. In addition, each zone can be programmed for extending wait states externally
using the XREADY signal or not. The programmable wait-state, chip-select and programmable strobe
timing enables glueless interface to external memories and peripherals.
You specify the set-up/hold and access wait states for each XINTF zone by configuring the associated
XTIMINGx registers. The access timing is based on an internal clock called XTIMCLK. XTIMCLK can be
set to the same rate as the SYSCLKOUT or to one-half of SYSCLKOUT. The rate of XTIMCLK applies to
all of the XINTF zones. XINTF bus cycles begin on the rising edge of XCLKOUT and all timings and
events are generated with respect to the rising edge of XTIMCLK.
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Zone 6 and 7 both use external addresses 0x00000 - 0xFFFFF. Depending on which zone is
accessed, the appropriate zone chip select signal (XZCS6 or XZCS7) will also go low.
XA(19:0)
0x00100000 XZCS6
XINTF Zone 6
(1M x 16)
0x00200000 XZCS7
XINTF Zone 7
(1M x 16) XA0/XWE1
0x00300000
XWE0
XRD
XR/W
XREADY
XHOLD
XHOLDA
XCLKOUT
A Each zone can be programmed with different wait states, setup and hold timings. A dedicated zone chip select
(XZCS) signal toggles when an access to a particular zone is performed. These features enable glueless connection
to many external memories and peripherals.
B Zones 1 5 are reserved for future expansion.
C When the XINTF clock is enabled in PCLKCR3, all zones are enabled.
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MOV @REG1,AL
TBIT @REG2,#BIT_X
Write
Read
The 28x CPU automatically protects writes followed by reads to the same memory location. The protection
mechanism described above is for cases where the address is not the same, but within a given region of
protected memory. In this case, the order of execution is preserved by the CPU automatically inserting
enough NOP cycles for the write to complete before the read occurs.
This execution ordering becomes a concern only when peripherals are mapped to the XINTF. A write to
one register may update status bits in another register. In this case, the write to the first register must
finish before the read to the second register takes place. If the write and read operations are performed in
the natural pipeline order, the wrong status may be read since the write would happen after the read. This
reversal is not a concern when memory is mapped to the XINTF. Thus, Zone 0 would not typically be used
to access memory but instead would be used only to access external peripherals.
If other zones are used to access peripherals that require write-followed-by-read instruction order to be
preserved the following solutions can be used:
Add up to 3 NOP assembly instructions between a write and read instructions. Fewer than three can
be used if the code is analyzed and it is found that the pipeline stalls for other reasons.
Move other instructions before the read to make sure that the write and read are at least three CPU
cycles apart.
Use the -mv compiler option to automatically insert NOP assembly instructions between write and read
accesses. This option should be used with caution because this out-of-order execution is a concern
only when accessing peripherals mapped to XINTF and not normal memory accesses.
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XINTF, SARAM,
Continue Execution
Flash, or OTP
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XTIMING0
0 0 XTIMING6 LEAD/ACTIVE/TRAIL
1 XTIMING7
XBANK
SYSCLKOUT
C28x /2 1 XTIMCLK
CPU /2 1 XCLKOUT
0
0
XINTCNF2
(CLKOFF)
All accesses to all of the XINTF zones are based on the frequency of the internal XINTF clock, XTIMCLK.
When configuring the XINTF, you must choose the ratio for the internal XINTF clock, XTIMCLK, with
respect to SYSCLKOUT. XTIMCLK can be configured to be either equal or one half of SYSCLKOUT by
writing to the XTIMCLK bit in the XINTFCNF2 register. By default XTIMCLK is one-half of SYSCLKOUT.
All XINTF accesses begin on the rising edge of the external clock out, XCLKOUT. In addition, external
logic may be clocked off of XCLKOUT. The frequency of XCLKOUT can be configured as a ratio of the
internal XINTF clock, XTIMCLK. XCLKOUT can be configured to be either equal or one-half of XTIMCLK
by writing to the CLKMODE bit in the XINTFCNF2 register. By default, XCLKOUT is one-half of XTIMCLK,
or one-fourth of the CPU clock, SYSCLKOUT.
To reduce system noise, you may choose to not output XCLKOUT on a pin. This is done by writing a 1 to
the XINTCNF2[CLKOFF] bit.
The total active period for any access that does not sample XREADY is 1 XTIMCLK cycle plus the number
wait states specified in the corresponding XTIMING register. By default, the active wait states are set to
the 14 XTIMCLK cycles for both read and write accesses.
The trail period serves as a hold time in which the chip-select signal remains low but the read and write
strobes are brought back high. The total trail period, in XTIMCLK cycles can be configured in the zones
XTIMING register. By default the trail period is set to the maximum six XTIMCLK cycles for both read and
write accesses.
Based on system requirements, the lead, active and trail wait state values can be configured to best fit the
devices connected to a particular XINTF zone. The following should be considered when selecting the
timing parameters:
Minimum wait state requirements as described in Section 4
The timing characteristics of the XINTF, as described in the device data manual
The timing requirements of the external device
Any additional delays between the 28x device and the external device
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CS XZCS0/6/7
A(19:1) XA(19:1)
A(0) XA0/XWE1
OE XRD
WE XWE0
D(15:0) XD(15:0)
When an XINTF zone is configured for 32-bit mode (XTIMINGx[XSIZE] = 1), the XA0/XWE1 signal is the
active low write strobe XWE1. XWE1 is used, along with XWE0 for 32-bit bus operation as shown in
Figure 5.
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CS
A(18:0) XA(19:1)
OE XRD
WE XWE0
D(15:0) XD(15:0)
High 16-bits
A(18:0)
CS XZCS0/6/7
OE
WE XA0/XWE1
(select XWE1)
D(31:16) XD(31:16)
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www.ti.com Configuring Lead, Active, and Trail Wait States
NOTE: Minimum wait-state configurations must be used for each zones XTIMING register. These
wait-state requirements are in addition to any timing requirements as specified by the device
to which it is interfaced. For information on requirements for a particular device, see the data
sheet for that device.
No internal device hardware is included to detect illegal settings.
4.1 USEREADY = 0
If the XREADY signal is ignored (USEREADY = 0), then the following requirement must be met:
Lead: LR tc(XTIM)
LW tc(XTIM)
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1 Lead: LR tc(XTIM)
LW tc(XTIM)
2 Active: AR 2 tc(XTIM)
AW 2 tc(XTIM)
1 Lead: LR tc(XTIM)
LW tc(XTIM)
2 Active: AR 2 tc(XTIM)
AW 2 tc(XTIM)
3 Lead + Active: LR + AR 4 tc(XTIM)
LW + AW 4 tc(XTIM)
These requirements result in the following three possible XTIMING register configurations:
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or
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Table 4 and Table 5 show the relationship between Lead/Active/Trail values and the XTIMCLK/X2TIMING
modes.
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Configuring XBANK Cycles www.ti.com
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6 XINTF Registers
Table 7 shows the XINTF configuration registers. Modification of these registers will affect the timing of
XINTF accesses and should be performed only by code running outside of the XINTF.
The individual timing parameters can be programmed into the XTIMING registers described in Figure 6.
NOTE:
Minimum wait-state requirements for different modes are shown in Section 2.
The external device to which the 28x is interfaced may have additional timing constraints.
See the vendor documentation for details.
No logic is included to detect illegal settings.
15 14 13 12 11 9 8
READYMODE USEREADY XRDLEAD XRDACTIVE XRDTRAIL
R/W-1 R/W-1 R/W-1 R/W-1 R/W-1
7 6 5 2 1 0
XRDTRAIL XWRLEAD XWRACTIVE XWRTRAIL
R/W-1 R/W-1 R/W-1
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset
(1)
This register is EALLOW protected.
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15 12 11 10 9 8
Reserved HOLDAS HOLDS HOLD Reserved
R-0 R-x R-y R-0 R-1
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
WLEVEL Reserved Reserved CLKOFF CLKMODE WRBUFF
R-0 R-0 R-1 R/W-0 R/W-1 R/W-0
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset/ x = XHOLDA output; y = XHOLD input
(1)
This register is EALLOW protected.
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R-0 R/W-0
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset
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7 Signal Descriptions
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8 Waveforms
Figure 11 shows example timing waveforms for various XTIMCLK and XCLKOUT modes assuming
X2TIMING = 0 and Lead = 2, Active = 2 and Trail = 2.
NOTE: The diagrams included in this document are conceptual, cycle-by-cycle representations of
the XINTF behavior. They do not take into account any buffer delays and additional setup
times that will be found on a physical device. For more exact device-specific timing
information for the XINTF, see the data sheet electrical timing specifications for that device.
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SYSCLKOUT
XTIMCLK
XCLKOUT (/1)
XRD/XWE
T=2 T=2
L=2 A=2 L=2
A=2
XINTF Read or Write XINTF Read or Write
SYSCLKOUT
XTIMCLK
XCLKOUT (/2)
XRD/XWE L=2
T=2
T=2
A=2 L=2
A=2
Alignment Cycle
XINTF Read or Write XINTF Read or Write
SYSCLKOUT
XTIMCLK
XCLKOUT (/1)
XRD/XWE
Trail=2
Lead=2 Active=2 Lead=2
XINTF Read
XINTF Read or Write or Write
SYSCLKOUT
XTIMCLK
XCLKOUT (/2)
Alignment
XRD/XWE Cycle
Lead=2 Active=2 Lead=2
Trail=2
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SYSCLKOUT
XTIMCLK
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/2 Mode)
XRD
1XTIMCLK
XREADY
(synch)
XREADY 3XTIMCLK
(asynch)
XA(19:0)
valid
XZCSx
XD(15:0)
or XD(31:0)
valid
A XRDLEAD = 2, XRDACTIVE = 4, XRDTRAIL = 2
The XREADY signal can be sampled synchronously or asynchronously or ignored by each zone. If it is
sampled synchronously, then the XREADY signal MUST meet set-up and hold timing relative to one
XTIMCLK edge before the end of the active period. If it is sampled asynchronously, then the XREADY
signal MUST meet set-up and hold timing relative to three XTIMCLK edges before the end of the active
period. If XREADY is low at the sampling interval, an extra XTIMCLK period is added to the active phase
and the XREADY input is sampled again on the next rising edge of XTIMCLK. XCLKOUT has no effect on
the sampling interval.
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XTIMCLK
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/2 Mode)
XRD
1XTIMCLK
XREADY
(synch)
3XTIMCLK
XREADY
(asynch)
XA(19:0) valid
XZCSx
XD(15:0) valid
or XD (31:0)
A XRDLEAD = 1, XRDACTIVE = 3, XRDTRAIL = 1
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XTIMCLK
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/1 Mode)
XCLKOUT
(/2 Mode)
XWE0, XWE1
1XTIMCLK
XREADY
(synch)
XREADY 3XTIMCLK
(asynch)
XA(19:0)
valid
XZCSx
XD(15:0)
or XD(31:0)
valid
A XWRACTIVE = 2, XWRACTIVE = 4, XWRTRAIL = 2
B If the lead and active timing parameters are set low enough, it may not be possible to generate a valid XREADY
signal. No hardware is added to detect this.
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