Analog Devices ADSP-2173, ADSP-2171 Datasheet

a
EXTERNAL
ADDRESS
BUS
EXTERNAL
DATA
BUS
ARITHMETIC UNITS
SHIFTER
MAC
ALU
MEMORY
SERIAL PORTS
SPORT 0
SPORT 1
FLAGS
DATA
ADDRESS
GENERATORS
DAG 1
DAG 2
PROGRAM
SEQUENCER
PROGRAM MEMORY ADDRESS
DATA MEMORY ADDRESS
DATA MEMORY DATA
TIMER
PROGRAM MEMORY DATA
DATA
MEMORY
2K x 16
PROGRAM
ROM
8K x 24
PROGRAM
RAM
2K x 24
POWERDOWN
CONTROL
LOGIC
HOST
INTERFACE
PORT
ADSP-2100 BASE
ARCHITECTURE
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
FEATURES 30 ns Instruction Cycle Time (33 MIPS) from
16.67 MHz Crystal at 5.0 V
50 ns Instruction Cycle Time (20 MIPS) from 10 MHz
Crystal at 3.3 V
ADSP-2100 Family Code & Function Compatible with
New Instruction Set Enhancements for Bit Manipula­tion Instructions, Multiplication Instructions, Biased
Rounding, and Global Interrupt Masking Bus Grant Hang Logic 2K Words of On-Chip Program Memory RAM 2K Words of On-Chip Data Memory RAM 8K Words of On-Chip Program Memory ROM
(ADSP-2172) 8- or 16-Bit Parallel Host Interface Port 300 mW Typical Power Dissipation at 5.0 V at 30 ns 70 mW Typical Power Dissipation at 3.3 V at 50 ns Powerdown Mode Featuring Less than 0.55 mW (ADSP-
2171/ADSP-2172) or 0.36 mW (ADSP-2173) CMOS
Standby Power Dissipation with 100 Cycle Recovery
from Powerdown Dual Purpose Program Memory for Both Instruction
and Data Storage Independent ALU, Multiplier/Accumulator, and Barrel
Shifter Computational Units Two Independent Data Address Generators Powerful Program Sequencer Provides
Zero Overhead Looping
Conditional Instruction Execution Two Double-Buffered Serial Ports with Companding
Hardware and Automatic Data Buffering Programmable 16-Bit Interval Timer with Prescaler Programmable Wait State Generation Automatic Booting of Internal Program Memory from
Byte-Wide External Memory, e.g., EPROM, or
Through Host Interface Port Stand-Alone ROM Execution (Optional) Single-Cycle Instruction Execution Single-Cycle Context Switch Multifunction Instructions Three Edge- or Level-Sensitive External Interrupts Low Power Dissipation in Standby Mode 128-Lead TQFP and 128-Lead PQFP
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The ADSP-2171, ADSP-2172, and ADSP-2173 are single-chip microcomputers optimized for digital signal processing (DSP) and other high-speed numeric processing applications. The ADSP-2171 and ADSP-2172 are designed for 5.0 V applica­tions. The ADSP-2173 is designed for 3.3 V applications. The ADSP-2172 also has 8K words (24-bit) of program ROM.
REV. A
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
The ADSP-217x combines the ADSP-2100 base architecture (three computational units, data address generators, and a pro­gram sequencer) with two serial ports, a host interface port, a programmable timer, extensive interrupt capabilities, and on­chip program and data memory.
In addition, the ADSP-217x supports new instructions, which include bit manipulations–bit set, bit clear, bit toggle, bit test– new ALU constants, new multiplication instruction (x squared), biased rounding, and global interrupt masking, for increased flexibility. The ADSP-217x also has a Bus Grant Hang Logic
BGH) feature.
( The ADSP-217x provides 2K words (24-bit) of program RAM
and 2K words (16-bit) of data memory. The ADSP-2172 pro­vides an additional 8K words (24-bit) of program ROM. Power­down circuitry is also provided to meet the low power needs of battery operated portable equipment. The ADSP-217x is avail­able in 128-pin TQFP and 128-pin PQFP packages.
Fabricated in a high-speed, double metal, low power, CMOS process, the ADSP-217X operates with a 30 ns instruction cycle time. Every instruction can execute in a single processor cycle.
The ADSP-217x’s flexible architecture and comprehensive in­struction set allow the processor to perform multiple operations in parallel. In one processor cycle the ADSP-217x can:
generate the next program address
fetch the next instruction
perform one or two data moves
update one or two data address pointers
perform a computational operation
This takes place while the processor continues to:
receive and transmit data through the two serial ports
receive and/or transmit data through the host interface port
decrement timer
© Analog Devices, Inc., 1995
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A. Tel: 617/329-4700 Fax: 617/326-8703
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Development System
The ADSP-2100 Family Development Software, a complete set of tools for software and hardwaresystem development, supports the ADSP-217x. The System Builder provides a high-level method for defining the architecture of systems under develop­ment. The Assembler has an algebraic syntax that is easy to program and debug. The Linker combines object files into an executable file. The Simulator provides an interactive instruction-level simulation with a reconfigurable user interface to display different portions of the hardware environment. A PROM Splitter generates PROM programmer compatible files. The C Compiler, based on the Free Software Foundation’s GNU C Compiler, generates ADSP-217x assembly source code. The Runtime Library includes over 100 ANSI-standard mathematical and DSP-specific functions.
EZ-Tools, low cost, easy-to-use hardware tools, also support the ADSP-217x.
®
The ADSP-217x EZ-ICE
Emulator aids in the hardware de­bugging of ADSP-217x systems. The emulator consists of hard­ware, host computer resident software, the emulator probe, and the pin adaptor. The emulator performs a full range of emula­tion functions including stand-alone operation or operation in the target, setting up to 20 breakpoints, single-step or full-speed operation in the target, examining and altering registers and memory values, and PC upload/download functions. If you plan to use the emulator, you should consider the emulator’s restric­tions (differences between emulator and processor operation).
®
The EZ-LAB
Evaluation Board is a PC plug-in card, but it can operate in stand-alone mode. The evaluation board/system de­velopment board executes EPROM-based or downloaded pro­grams. Modular Analog Front End daughter cards with different codecs will be made available.
EZ-ICE and EZ-LAB are registered trademarks of Analog Devices, Inc.
Additional Information
This data sheet provides a general overview of ADSP-217x functionality. For additional information on the architecture and instruction set of the processor, refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual. For more information about the Development System and ADSP-217x programmer’s reference information, refer to the ADSP-2100 Family Assembler Tools & Simulator Manual.
ARCHITECTURE OVERVIEW
Figure 1 is an overall block diagram of the ADSP-217x. The processor contains three independent computational units: the ALU, the multiplier/accumulator (MAC) and the shifter. The computational units process 16-bit data directly and have provi­sions to support multiprecision computations. The ALU per­forms a standard set of arithmetic and logic operations; division primitives are also supported. The MAC performs single-cycle multiply, multiply/add and multiply/subtract operations with 40 bits of accumulation. The shifter performs logical and arithmetic shifts, normalization, denormalization, and derive exponent operations. The shifter can be used to efficiently implement numeric format control including multiword and block floating-point representations.
The internal result (R) bus directly connects the computational units so that the output of any unit may be the input of any unit on the next cycle.
A powerful program sequencer and two dedicated data address generators ensure efficient delivery of operands to these compu­tational units. The sequencer supports conditional jumps, sub­routine calls and returns in a single cycle. With internal loop counters and loop stacks, the ADSP-217x executes looped code with zero overhead; no explicit jump instructions are required to maintain the loop.
DATA
ADDRESS
GENERATOR
#1
INPUT REGS
ALU
OUTPUT REGS
DATA
ADDRESS
GENERATOR
#2
INPUT REGS
OUTPUT REGS
MAC
INSTRUCTION
REGISTER
PROGRAM
SEQUENCER
16
R BUS
PROGRAM ROM
8K X 24
PROGRAM SRAM
2K X 24
CONTROL
LOGIC
PMA BUS
DMA BUS
PMD BUS
DMD BUS
TRANSMIT REG
RECEIVE REG
SERIAL PORT 0
5
14
14
24
BUS
EXCHANGE
16
INPUT REGS
SHIFTER
OUTPUT REGS
Figure 1. ADSP-217x Block Diagram
DATA SRAM
2K X 16
COMPANDING
CIRCUITRY
ADDRESS
GENERATOR
TRANSMIT REG
RECEIVE REG
SERIAL PORT 1
5
BOOT
TIMER
POWER DOWN
CONTROL
LOGIC
FLAGS
MUX
MUX
CONTROL
REGISTERS
2
3
EXTERNAL
ADDRESS
14
EXTERNAL
24
HIP
HIP
BUS
DATA
BUS
11
HIP
DATA
BUS
16
–2–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Two data address generators (DAGs) provide addresses for simultaneous dual operand fetches (from data memory and pro­gram memory). Each DAG maintains and updates four address pointers. Whenever the pointer is used to access data (indirect addressing), it is post-modified by the value of one of four pos­sible modify registers. A length value may be associated with each pointer to implement automatic modulo addressing for circular buffers.
Efficient data transfer is achieved with the use of five internal buses.
Program Memory Address (PMA) Bus
Program Memory Data (PMD) Bus
Data Memory Address (DMA) Bus
Data Memory Data (DMD) Bus
Result (R) Bus
The two address buses (PMA and DMA) share a single external address bus, allowing memory to be expanded off-chip, and the two data buses (PMD and DMD) share a single external data bus.
Program memory can store both instructions and data, permit­ting the ADSP-217x to fetch two operands in a single cycle, one from program memory and one from data memory. The ADSP­217x can fetch an operand from on-chip program memory and the next instruction in the same cycle.
The memory interface supports slow memories and memory­mapped peripherals with programmable wait state generation. External devices can gain control of external buses with bus request/grant signals ( Mode) allows the ADSP-217x to continue running from inter­nal memory. Normal execution mode requires the processor to halt while buses are granted.
In addition to the address and data bus for external memory connection, the ADSP-217x has a configurable 8- or 16-bit Host Interface Port (HIP) for easy connection to a host proces­sor. The HIP is made up of 16 data/address pins and 11 control pins. The HIP is extremely flexible and provides a simple inter­face to a variety of host processors. For example, the Motorola 68000 series, the Intel 80C51 series and the Analog Devices’ ADSP-2101 can be easily connected to the HIP. The host pro­cessor can initialize the ASDP-217x’s on-chip memory through the HIP.
The ADSP-217x can respond to eleven interrupts. There can be up to three external interrupts, configured as edge or level sensi­tive, and eight internal interrupts generated by the Timer, the Serial Ports (“SPORTs”), the HIP, the powerdown circuitry, and software. There is also a master RESET signal.
The two serial ports provide a complete synchronous serial in­terface with optional companding in hardware and a wide vari­ety of framed or frameless data transmit and receive modes of operation. Each port can generate an internal programmable serial clock or accept an external serial clock.
Boot circuitry provides for loading on-chip program memory automatically from byte-wide external memory. After reset, seven wait states are automatically generated. This allows, for example, a 30 ns ADSP-217x to use an external 200 ns EPROM as boot memory. Multiple programs can be selected
BR and BG). One execution mode (Go
and loaded from the EPROM with no additional hardware. The on-chip program memory can also be initialized through the HIP.
The ADSP-217x features three general-purpose flag outputs whose states can be simultaneously changed through software. You can use these outputs to signal an event to an external device. In addition, the data input and output pins on SPORT1 can be alternatively configured as an input flag and an output flag.
A programmable interval timer generates periodic interrupts. A 16-bit count register (TCOUNT) is decremented every n pro­cessor cycles, where n-l is a scaling value stored in an 8-bit regis­ter (TSCALE). When the value of the count register reaches zero, an interrupt is generated and the count register is reloaded from a 16-bit period register (TPERIOD).
The ADSP-217x instruction set provides flexible data moves and multifunction (one or two data moves with a computation) instructions. Every instruction can be executed in a single pro­cessor cycle. The ADSP-217x assembly language uses an alge­braic syntax for ease of coding and readability. A comprehensive set of development tools supports program development.
Serial Ports
The ADSP-217x incorporates two complete synchronous serial ports (SPORT0 and SPORT1) for serial communications and multiprocessor communication.
Here is a brief list of the capabilities of the ADSP-217x SPORTs. Refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual for further details.
SPORTs are bidirectional and have a separate, double­buffered transmit and receive section.
SPORTs can use an external serial clock or generate their own serial clock internally.
SPORTs have independent framing for the receive and trans­mit sections. Sections run in a frameless mode or with frame synchronization signals internally or externally generated. Frame sync signals are active high or inverted, with either of two pulse widths and timings.
SPORTs support serial data word lengths from 3 to 16 bits and provide optional A-law and µ-law companding according to CCITT recommendation G.711.
SPORT receive and transmit sections can generate unique interrupts on completing a data word transfer.
SPORTs can receive and transmit an entire circular buffer of data with only one overhead cycle per data word. An interrupt is generated after a data buffer transfer.
SPORT0 has a multichannel interface to selectively receive and transmit a 24 or 32 word, time-division multiplexed, serial bitstream.
SPORT1 can be configured to have two external interrupts (IRQ0 and IRQ1) and the Flag In and Flag Out signals. The internally generated serial clock may still be used in this configuration.
REV. A
–3–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Pin Description
The ADSP-217x is available in 128-lead TQFP and 128-lead PQFP packages. Table I contains the pin descriptions.
Table I. ADSP-217x Pin List
Pin # Group of Input/ Name Pins Output Function
Address 14 O Address output for program,
data and boot memory spaces
Data 24 I/O Data I/O pins for program
and data memories. Input only for boot memory space, with two MSBs used as boot space addresses.
RESET 1 I Processor reset input IRQ2 1 I External interrupt request #2 BR 1 I External bus request input BG 1 O External bus grant output BGH 1 O External bus grant hang output PMS 1 O External program memory select DMS 1 O External data memory select BMS 1 O Boot memory select RD 1 O External memory read enable WR 1 O External memory write enable
MMAP 1 I Memory map select CLKIN,
XTAL 2 I External clock or quartz crystal
input
CLKOUT 1 O Processor clock output
HSEL 1 I HIP select input HACK 1 O HIP acknowledge output
HSIZE 1 8/16 bit host select input
0 = 16-bit; 1 = 8-bit
BMODE 1 I Boot mode select input
0 = EPROM/data bus; 1 = HIP
HMD0 1 I Bus strobe select input
0 = RD, WR; 1 = RW, DS
HMD1 1 I HIP address/data mode select
input 0 = separate; 1 = multiplexed
HRD/HRW 1 I HIP read strobe/read/write
select input
HWR/HDS 1 I HIP write strobe/host data
strobe select input
HD15–0/ HAD15-0 16 I/O HIP data/data and address
HA2/ALE 1 I Host address 2/Address latch
enable input
HA1–0/ Unused 2 I Host addresses 1 and 0 inputs
SPORT0 5 I/O Serial port 0 I/O pins (TFS0,
RFS0, DT0, DR0, SCLK0)
SPORT1 5 I/O Serial port 1 I/O pins or
IRQ1 (TFS1) 1 I External interrupt request #1 IRQ0 (RFS1) 1 I External interrupt request #0
SCLK1 1 O Programmable clock output FO (DT1) 1 O Flag Output pin FI (DR1) 1 I Flag Input pin FL2–0 3 O General purpose flag output
pins
V
DD
GND 11 Ground pins PWD 1 I Powerdown pin PWDACK 1 O Powerdown acknowledge pin
Host Interface Port
The ADSP-217x host interface port is a parallel I/O port that al­lows for an easy connection to a host processor. Through the HIP, the ADSP-217x can be used as a memory-mapped periph­eral to a host computer. The HIP can be thought of as an area of dual-ported memory, or mailbox registers, that allow commu­nication between the computational core of the ADSP-217x and the host computer.
The HIP is completely asynchronous. The host processor can write data into the HIP while the ADSP-217x is operating at full speed.
The HIP can be configured with the following pins:
HSIZE configures HIP for 8-bit or 16-bit communication with the host processor.
BMODE (when MMAP = 0) determines whether the ADSP­217x boots from the host processor (through the HIP) or ex­ternal EPROM (through the data bus).
HMD0 configures the bus strobes as separate read and write strobes, or a single read/write select and a host data strobe.
HMD1 selects separate address (3-bit) and data (16-bit) buses, or a multiplexed, 16-bit address/data bus with address latch enable.
Tying these pins to appropriate values configures the ADSP­217x for straight-wire interface to a variety of industry-standard microprocessors and microcomputers.
In 8-bit reads, the ADSP-217x three-states the upper eight bits of the bus. When the host processor writes an 8-bit value to the HIP, the upper eight bits are all zeros. For additional informa­tion refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual.
HIP Operation
The HIP contains six data registers (HDR5–0) and two status registers (HSR7–6) with an associated HMASK register for masking interrupts from individual HIP data registers. All HIP data registers are memory-mapped into the internal data memory of the ADSP-217x. HIP transfers can be managed us­ing either interrupts or a polling scheme. These registers are shown in the section “ADSP-217x Registers.”
The HIP allows a software reset to be performed by the host processor. The internal software reset signal is asserted for five ADSP-217x processor cycles.
6 Power supply pins
–4–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Interrupts
The interrupt controller allows the processor to respond to the eleven possible interrupts and reset with minimum overhead. The ADSP-217x provides up to three external interrupt input
IRQ0, IRQ1 and IRQ2. IRQ2 is always available as a dedi-
pins, cated pin; SPORT1 may be reconfigured for
IRQ0, IRQ1, and the flags. The ADSP-217x also supports internal interrupts from the timer, the host interface port, the two serial ports, software, and the powerdown control circuit. The interrupt levels are in­ternally prioritized and individually maskable (except power­down and reset). The input pins can be programmed to be either level- or edge-sensitive. The priorities and vector ad­dresses of all interrupts are shown in Table II, and the interrupt registers are shown in Figure 2.
Interrupts can be masked or unmasked with the IMASK regis­ter. Individual interrupt requests are logically ANDed with the bits in IMASK; the highest priority unmasked interrupt is then selected.The powerdown interrupt is nonmaskable.
The ADSP-217x masks all interrupts for one instruction cycle following the execution of an instruction that modifies the IMASK register. This does not affect autobuffering.
The interrupt control register, ICNTL, allows the external in­terrupts to be either edge- or level-sensitive. Interrupt routines can either be nested with higher priority interrupts taking prece­dence or processed sequentially.
The IFC register is a write-only register used to force and clear interrupts generated from software.
Table II. Interrupt Priority & Interrupt Vector Addresses
Interrupt Vector
Source of Interrupt Address (Hex)
Reset (or Power-Up with PUCR = 1) 0000 (Highest Priority) Powerdown (Nonmaskable) 002C IRQ2 0004 HIP Write 0008 HIP Read 000C SPORT0 Transmit 0010 SPORT0 Receive 0014 Software Interrupt 1 0018 Software Interrupt 0 001C SPORT1 Transmit or SPORT1 Receive or
IRQ1 0020
IRQ0 0024
Timer 0028 (Lowest Priority) On-chip stacks preserve the processor status and are automati-
cally maintained during interrupt handling. The stacks are twelve levels deep to allow interrupt nesting. The following instructions allow global enable or disable servic-
ing of the interrupts (including powerdown), regardless of the state of IMASK. Disabling the interrupts does not affect autobuffering.
ENA INTS; DIS INTS;
When you reset the processor, the interrupt servicing is enabled.
ICNTL
43210
0
SPORT1 Transmit or IRQ1
SPORT1 Receive or IRQ0
IRQ0 Sensitivity IRQ1 Sensitivity IRQ2 Sensitivity
Interrupt Nesting 1 = enable, 0 = disable
INTERRUPT FORCE
SPORT0 Transmit
SPORT0 Receive
IRQ2
Software 1 Software 0
Timer
1 = edge 0 = level
IMASK
101112131415 9876543210
IRQ2 HIP Write HIP Read
SPORT0 Transmit
SPORT0 Receive
IFC
9876543210101112131415
0000000000000 000
Figure 2. Interrupt Registers
1 = enable, 0 = disable0000000000000000
Timer IRQ0 or SPORT1 Receive IRQ1 or SPORT1 Transmit Software 0 Software 1
INTERRUPT CLEAR
Timer SPORT1 Receive or IRQ0 SPORT1 Transmit or IRQ1 Software 0 Software 1 SPORT0 Receive SPORT0 Transmit IRQ2
REV. A
–5–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
LOW POWER OPERATION
The ADSP-217x has three low power modes that significantly reduce the power dissipation when the device operates under standby conditions. These modes are:
Powerdown
Idle
Slow Idle
The CLKOUT pin may also be disabled to reduce external power dissipation. The CLKOUT pin is controlled by Bit 14 of SPORT0 Autobuffer Control Register, DM[0x3FF3].
Powerdown
The ADSP-217x processor has a low power feature that lets the processor enter a very low power dormant state through hard­ware or software control. Here is a brief list of powerdown fea­tures. Refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual, Chapter 9 “System Interface” for detailed information about the powerdown feature.
Powerdown mode holds the processor in CMOS standby with a maximum current of less than 100 µA in some modes.
Quick recovery from powerdown. The processor begins ex­ecuting instructions in as few as 100 CLKIN cycles.
Support for an externally generated TTL or CMOS processor clock. The external clock can continue running during powerdown without affecting the lowest power rating and 100 CLKIN cycle recovery.
Support for crystal operation includes disabling the oscillator to save power (the processor automatically waits 4096 CLKIN cycles for the crystal oscillator to start and stabilize), and let­ting the oscillator run to allow 100 CLKIN cycle startup.
Powerdown is initiated by either the powerdown pin ( or the software powerdown force bit.
Interrupt support allows an unlimited number of instructions to be executed before optionally powering down. The powerdown interrupt also can be used as a non-maskable, edge sensitive interrupt.
Context clear/save control allows the processor to continue where it left off or start with a clean context when leaving the powerdown state.
RESET pin also can be used to terminate powerdown,
The and the host software reset feature can be used to terminate powerdown under certain conditions.
Powerdown acknowledge pin indicates when the processor has entered powerdown.
Idle
When the ADSP-217x is in the Idle Mode, the processor waits indefinitely in a low power state until an interrupt occurs. When an unmasked interrupt occurs, it is serviced; execution then continues with the instruction following the IDLE instruction.
Slow Idle
The IDLE instruction is enhanced on the ADSP-217x to let the processor’s internal clock signal be slowed during IDLE, further reducing power consumption. The reduced clock frequency, a
PWD)
programmable fraction of the normal clock rate, is specified by a selectable divisor given in the IDLE instruction. The format of the instruction is
IDLE (n); where n = 16, 32, 64, or 128. This instruction keeps the proces-
sor fully functional, but operating at the slower clock rate. While it is in this state, the processor’s other internal clock signals, such as SCLK, CLKOUT, and timer clock, are reduced by the same ratio. The default form of the instruction, when no clock divisor is given, is the standard IDLE instruction.
When the IDLE (n) instruction is used, it effectively slows down the processor’s internal clock and thus its response time to in­coming interrupts––the 1-cycle response time of the standard idle state is increased by n, the clock divisor. When an enabled interrupt is received, the ADSP-217x will remain in the idle state for up to a maximum of n processor cycles (n = 16, 32, 64, or 128) before resuming normal operation.
When the IDLE (n) instruction is used in systems that have an externally generated serial clock (SCLK), the serial clock rate may be faster than the processor’s reduced internal clock rate. Under these conditions, interrupts must not be generated at a faster rate than can be serviced, due to the additional time the processor takes to come out of the idle state (a maximum of n processor cycles).
SYSTEM INTERFACE
Figure 3 shows a basic system configuration with the ADSP­217x, two serial devices, a host processor, a boot EPROM, and optional external program and data memories. Up to 14K words of data memory and 16K words of program memory can be sup­ported. Programmable wait state generation allows the processor to interface easily to slow memories. The ADSP-217x also pro­vides one external interrupt and two serial ports or three exter­nal interrupts and one serial port.
Clock Signals
The ADSP-217x can be clocked by either a crystal or by a TTL­compatible clock signal.
The CLKIN input cannot be halted, changed during operation, or operated below the specified frequency during normal opera­tion. The only exception is while the processor is in the Power­down State. For additional information, refer to Chapter 9, ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual for detailed information on this powerdown feature.
If an external clock is used, it should be a TTL-compatible sig­nal running at half the instruction rate. The signal is connected to the processor’s CLKIN input. When an external clock is used, the XTAL input must be left unconnected.
The ADSP-217x uses an input clock with a frequency equal to half the instruction rate; a 16.67 MHz input clock yields a 30 ns processor cycle (which is equivalent to 33 MHz). Normally, in­structions are executed in a single processor cycle. All device timing is relative to the internal instruction clock rate, which is indicated by the CLKOUT signal when enabled.
–6–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
CLOCK OR
CRYSTAL
CLKIN
CLKOUT
RESET
IRQ2
BR
BG
MMAP
3
FL2-0
A
PROGRAM
(OPTIONAL)
NOTE: THE TWO MSBs OF THE DATA BUS ARE USED AS THE MSBs OF THE BOOT EPROM ADDRESS. THIS IS ONLY REQUIRED FOR THE 27C256 AND 27C512.
24
D
MEMORY
XTAL
CS
OE
WE
PWD
PWDACK
RD WR
6
97
V
GND
DD
ADSP-217x
ADDRESSPMS DMS
14
AD
DATA MEMORY
OE
PERIPHERALS
WE
(OPTIONAL)
DATA
24
D
16
4
HOST MODE
23-8
&
CS
16
HIP
SERIAL PORT 0
SERIAL
PORT 1
BMS
HIP CONTROL
HIP DATA/ADDR
SCLK RFS TFS DT DR
SCLK RFS or IRQ0
TFS or IRQ1 DT or FO DR or FI
D
23-22
14
2
A
BOOT MEMORY
OE
D
15-8
8
D
e.g., EPROM
27C64 27C128 27C256 27C512
HOST
PROCESSOR
(OPTIONAL)
SERIAL DEVICE
(OPTIONAL)
SERIAL DEVICE
(OPTIONAL)
CS
Figure 3. ADSP-217x Basic System Configuration
Because the ADSP-217x includes an on-chip oscillator circuit, an external crystal may be used. The crystal should be con­nected across the CLKIN and XTAL pins, with two capacitors connected as shown in Figure 4. A parallel-resonant, fundamen­tal frequency, microprocessor-grade crystal should be used.
CLKIN CLKOUT
ADSP-217x
XTAL
Figure 4. External Crystal Connections
A clock output (CLKOUT) signal is generated by the processor at the processor’s cycle rate. This can be enabled and disabled by the CLKODIS bit in the SPORT0 Autobuffer Control Reg­ister, DM[0x3FF3].
Reset
The RESET signal initiates a master reset of the ADSP-217x.
RESET signal must be asserted during the power-up se-
The quence to assure proper initialization.
RESET during initial
power-up must be held long enough to allow the internal clock
to stabilize. If RESET is activated any time after power-up, the clock continues to run and does not require stabilization time.
The power-up sequence is defined as the total time required for the crystal oscillator circuit to stabilize after a valid V
DD
is ap­plied to the processor, and for the internal phase-locked loop (PLL) to lock onto the specific crystal frequency. A minimum of 2000 CLKIN cycles ensures that the PLL has locked but does not include the crystal oscillator start-up time. During this power-up sequence the any subsequent resets, the mum pulse width specification, t
The
RESET input contains some hysteresis; however, if you use
an RC circuit to generate your
RESET signal should be held low. On
RESET signal must meet the mini-
.
RSP
RESET signal, the use of an ex-
ternal Schmidt trigger is recommended. The master reset sets all internal stack pointers to the empty
stack condition, masks all interrupts and clears the MSTAT reg­ister. When
RESET is released, if there is no pending bus re­quest and the chip is configured for booting (MMAP = 0), the boot-loading sequence is performed. Then the first instruction is fetched from internal program memory location 0x0000.
REV. A
–7–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Program Memory Interface
The on-chip program memory address bus (PMA) and the on­chip program memory data bus (PMD) are multiplexed with on-chip DMA and DMD buses, creating a single external data bus and a single external address bus. The 14-bit address bus directly addresses up to 16K words. 10K words of memory for ADSP-217x with optional 8K ROM and 2K words of memory for the non-ROM version are on-chip. The data bus is bidirec­tional and 24 bits wide to external program memory. Program memory may contain code and data.
The program memory data lines are bidirectional. The program memory select ( memory and can be used as a chip select signal. The write (
PMS) signal indicates access to the program
WR)
signal indicates a write operation and is used as a write strobe. The read (
RD) signal indicates a read operation and is used as a
read strobe or output enable signal. The ADSP-217x writes data from its 16-bit registers to the 24-
bit program memory using the PX register to provide the lower eight bits. When it reads data (not instructions) from 24-bit pro­gram memory to a 16-bit data register, the lower eight bits are placed in the PX register.
Program Memory Maps ADSP-217x
Program memory can be mapped in two ways, depending on the state of the MMAP pin. Figure 5 shows the different configura­tions. When MMAP = 0, internal RAM occupies 2K words be­ginning at address 0x0000. In this configuration, the boot loading sequence (described in “Boot Memory Interface”) is au­tomatically initiated when
2K
INTERNAL RAM
BOOTED
8K
INTERNAL ROM
(ROMENABLE = 1)
OR
8K
EXTERNAL
(ROMENABLE = 0)
6K
EXTERNAL
MMAP = 0 BMODE = 0 or 1
0000
07FF 0800
27FF 2800
3FFF
RESET is released.
2K
EXTERNAL
8K
INTERNAL ROM
(ROMENABLE = 1)
OR
8K
EXTERNAL
(ROMENABLE = 0)
4K
EXTERNAL
2K
INTERNAL RAM
MMAP = 1 BMODE = 0
0000
07FF 0800
27FF 2800
37FF 3800
3FFF
2K
INTERNAL RAM
NOT BOOTED
8K
INTERNAL ROM
(ROMENABLE
DEFAULTS
TO 1
DURING RESET)
6K
EXTERNAL
MMAP = 1 BMODE = 1
0000
07FF 0800
27FF 2800
3FFF
Figure 5. ADSP-217x Memory Maps
When MMAP = 1, words of external program memory begin at address 0x0000 and internal RAM is located in the upper 2K words, beginning at address 0x3800. In this configuration, pro­gram memory is not loaded although it can be written to and read from under program control.
The optional ROM always resides at locations PM[0x0800] through PM[0x27FF] regardless of the state of the MMAP pin. The ROM is enabled by setting the ROMENABLE bit in the Data Memory Wait State control register, DM[0x3FFE]. When the ROMENABLE bit is set to 1, addressing program memory in this range will access the on-chip ROM. When set to zero, addressing program memory in this range will access external program memory. The ROMENABLE bit is set to 0 on chip re­set unless MMAP and BMODE = 1.
The program memory interface can generate 0 to 7 wait states for external memory devices; default is to 7 wait states after RESET.
Boot Memory Interface
The ADSP-217x can load on-chip memory from external boot memory space. The boot memory space consists of 64K by 8-bit space, divided into eight separate 8K by 8-bit pages. Three bits in the system control register select which page is loaded by the boot memory interface. Another bit in the system control regis­ter allows the user to force a boot loading sequence under soft­ware control. Boot loading from page 0 after
RESET is initiated
automatically if MMAP = 0. The boot memory interface can generate 0 to 7 wait states; it
defaults to 7 wait states after
RESET. This allows the ADSP­217x to boot from a single low cost EPROM such as a 27C256. Program memory is booted one byte at a time and converted to 24-bit program memory words.
BMS and RD signals are used to select and to strobe the
The boot memory interface. Only 8-bit data is read over the data bus, on pins D8–D15. To accommodate addressing up to eight pages of boot memory, the two MSBs of the data bus are used in the boot memory interface as the two MSBs of the boot space address.
The ADSP-2100 Family Assembler and Linker support the cre­ation of programs and data structures requiring multiple boot pages during execution.
RD and WR must always be qualified by PMS, DMS, or BMS to ensure the correct program, data, or boot memory accessing.
HIP Booting
The ADSP-217x can also boot programs through its Host Inter­face Port. If BMODE = 1 and MMAP = 0, the ADSP-217x boots from the HIP. If BMODE = 0, the ADSP-217x boots through the data bus (in the same way as the ADSP-2101), as described above in “Boot Memory Interface.” For additional in­formation about HIP booting, refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual, Chapter 7, “Host Interface Port.”
The ADSP-2100 Family Development Software includes a util­ity program called the HIP Splitter. This utility allows the cre­ation of programs that can be booted via the ADSP-217x’s HIP, in a similar fashion as EPROM-bootable programs generated by the PROM Splitter utility.
–8–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
3BFF 3C00
37FF 3800
DATA MEMORY
12K
EXTERNAL
3FFF
0000
2FFF 3000
1K
RESERVED
MEMORY MAPPED
REGISTERS/
RESERVED
2K
INTERNAL
DATA RAM
03FF 0400
07FF 0800
WAIT STATES
DWAIT 2
(10K EXTERNAL)
3FFF
0000
2FFF 3000
NO WAIT
STATES
DWAIT 0
(1K EXTERNAL)
DWAIT 1
(1K EXTERNAL)
Stand-Alone ROM Execution
When the MMAP and BMODE pins both are set to 1, the ROM is automatically enabled and execution commences from program memory location 0x0800 at the start of ROM. This feature lets an embedded design operate without external memory components. To operate in this mode, the ROM coded program must copy an interrupt vector table to the appropriate locations in program memory RAM. In this mode, the ROM enable bit defaults to 1 during reset.
Table III. Boot Summary Table
BMODE = 0 BMODE = 1
MMAP = 0 Boot from EPROM, Boot from HIP, then
then execution starts execution starts at at internal RAM internal RAM location location 0x0000 0x0000
MMAP = 1 No booting, execution Stand-Alone Mode,
starts at external memory execution starts at location 0x0000 internal ROM location
0x0800
Ordering Procedure for ADSP-2172 Processors
To place an order for a custom ROM-coded ADSP-2172 pro­cessor, you must:
1. Complete the following forms contained in the ADSP ROM Ordering Package, available from your Analog Devices sales representative:
ADSP-2172 ROM Specification Form ROM Release Agreement ROM NRE Agreement & Minimum Quantity Order (MQO) Acceptance Agreement for Pre-production ROM Products.
2. Return the forms to Analog Devices along with two copies of the Memory Image File (.EXE file) of your ROM code. The files must be supplied on two 3.5" or 5.25" floppy disks for IBM PC (DOS 2.01 or higher).
3. Place a purchase order with Analog Devices for nonrecurring engineering charges (NRE) associated with ROM product development.
After this information is received, it is entered into Analog Devices’ ROM Manager System which assigns a custom ROM model number to the product. This model number will be branded on all prototype and production units manufactured to these specifications.
To minimize the risk of code being altered during this process, Analog Devices verifies that the .EXE files on both floppy disks are identical, and recalculates the checksums for the .EXE file en­tered into the ROM Manager System. The checksum data, in the form of a ROM memory map, a hard copy of the .EXE file, and a ROM Data Verification Form are returned to you for inspection.
A signed ROM Verification Form and a purchase order for pro­duction units are required prior to any product being manufac­tured. Prototype units may be applied toward the minimum order quantity.
REV. A
Upon completion of the prototype manufacture, Analog Devices will ship prototype units and a delivery schedule update for pro­duction units. An invoice against your purchase order for the NRE charges is issued at this time.
There is a charge for each ROM mask generated and a mini­mum order quantity. Consult your sales representative for details. A separate order must be placed for parts of a specific package type, temperature range, and speed grade.
Data Memory Interface
The data memory address (DMA) bus is 14 bits wide. The bidi­rectional external data bus is 24 bits wide, with the upper 16 bits (D8–D23) used for data memory data (DMD) transfers.
The data memory select (
DMS) signal indicates access to the
data memory and can be used as a chip select signal. The write
WR) signal indicates a write operation and can be used as a
( write strobe. The read (
RD) signal indicates a read operation
and can be used as a read strobe or output enable signal. The ADSP-217x supports memory-mapped I/O, with the pe-
ripherals memory mapped into the data or program memory ad­dress spaces and accessed by the processor in the same manner.
Data Memory Map
The on-chip data memory RAM resides in the 2K words of data memory beginning at address 0x3000, as shown in Figure 6. In addition, data memory locations from 0x3800 to the end of data memory at 0x3FFF are reserved. Control registers for the sys­tem, timer, wait state configuration, host interface port, and se­rial port operations are located in this region of memory.
Figure 6. ADSP-217x Data Memory Map
The remaining 12K of data memory is external. External data memory is divided into three zones, each associated with its own wait state generator. By mapping peripherals into different zones, you can accommodate peripherals with different wait state requirements. All zones default to 7 wait states after RESET. For compatibility with other ADSP-2100 Family pro­cessors, bit definitions for DWAIT 3 and DWAIT4 are shown in the Data Memory Wait State Control Register, but they are not used by the ADSP-217x.
–9–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Bus Request & Bus Grant
The ADSP-217x can relinquish control of the data and address buses to an external device. When the external device requires access to memory, it asserts the bus request (
BR) signal. If the ADSP-217x is not performing an external memory access, then it responds to the active
BR input in the following processor
cycle by:
three-stating the data and address buses and the
PMS, DMS,
BMS, RD, WR output drivers,
asserting the bus grant (
BG) signal, and
halting program execution. If the Go Mode is enabled, the ADSP-217x will not halt pro-
gram execution until it encounters an instruction that requires an external memory access.
If the ADSP-217x is performing an external memory access when the external device asserts the three-state the memory interfaces or assert the
BR signal, then it will not
BG signal until
the processor cycle after the access completes, which can be up to eight cycles later depending on the number of wait states. The instruction does not need to be completed when the bus is granted. If a single instruction requires two external memory ac­cesses, the bus will be granted between the two accesses.
When the
BR signal is released, the processor releases the BG signal, reenables the output drivers and continues program ex­ecution from the point where it stopped.
The bus request feature operates at all times, including when the processor is booting and when
The new Bus Grant Hang logic and associated
RESET is active.
BGH pin allow
the ADSP-217x to operate in a multiprocessor environment with a minimal number of “wasted” processor cycles. The bus grant hang pin is asserted when the ADSP-217x desires a cycle,
but cannot execute it because the bus is granted to some other processor. With the
BGH signal, the other processor(s) in the system can be alerted that the ADSP-217x is hung and release the bus by deasserting bus request. Once the bus is released the ADSP-217x executes the external access and deasserts
BGH. This is a signal to the other processors that external memory is now available.
ADSP-217X REGISTERS
Figure 7 summarizes all the registers in the ADSP-217x. Some registers store values. For example, AX0 stores an ALU oper­and; I4 stores a DAG2 pointer. Other registers consist of control bits and fields, or status flags. For example, ASTAT contains status flags from arithmetic operations, and fields in DWAIT control the numbers of wait states for different zones of data memory.
A secondary set of registers in all computational units allows a single-cycle context switch.
The bit and field definitions for control and status registers are given in the rest of this section, except for IMASK, ICNTL and IFC, which are defined earlier in this data sheet. The system control register, DWAIT register, timer registers, HIP control registers, HIP data registers, and SPORT control registers are all mapped into data memory; that is, registers are accessed by reading and writing data memory locations rather than register names. The particular data memory address is shown with each memory-mapped register.
Register bit values shown on the following pages are the default bit values after reset. If no values are shown, the bits are indeter­minate at reset. Reserved bits are shown in gray; these bits should always be written with zeros.
AX0
DAG 1
I0 I1 I2 I3
PROGRAM SEQUENCER
ICNTL
SSTAT
M0 M1 M2 M3
ALU
DAG 2
L0 L1 L2 L3
M4
I4
M5
I5
M6
I6
M7
I7
AY1AY0AX1
MX0 MX1 MY0 MY1
AFAR
MR0 MR1 MFMR2
CNTR
OWRCNTR
L4 L5
COUNT STACK
L6
4 X 14
L7
MAC
IFC
IMASK MSTAT ASTAT
STATUS
STACK 12 X 25
SI SE SB
SHIFTER
SR0 SR1
LOOP
STACK
4 X 18
PC STACK 16 X 14
14
14
24
16
PMA BUS
DMA BUS
PMD BUS
DMD BUS
0x3FFF
SYSTEM CONTROL
0x3FFE
DM WAIT CONTROL
PX
TX0
RX0
0x3FFA-0x3FF3
CONTROL REGISTERS
SPORT 0
PROGRAM
ROM
8K X 24
PROGRAM
SRAM
2K X 24
RX1 TX1
0x3FF2-0x3FEF
CONTROL REGISTERS
SPORT 1
DATA SRAM
2K X 16
0x3FFD 0x3FFC 0x3FFB
TIMER
TPERIOD TCOUNT TSCALE
HOST
INTERFACE
PORT
0x3FE0-0x3FE5 0x3FE6-0x3FE7
0x3FE8
POWERDOWN
DATA STATUS HMASK
FLAGS
CONTROL
LOGIC
Figure 7. ADSP-217x Registers Control Register
–10–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
ASTAT
76543210
00000000
AZ ALU Result Zero AN ALU Result Negative AV ALU Overflow AC ALU Carry AS ALU X Input Sign AQ ALU Quotient MV MAC Overflow SS Shifter Input Sign
MSTAT
6543210
0000000
SSTAT (Read-Only)
76543210
10101010
PC Stack Empty PC Stack Overflow Count Stack Empty Count Stack Overflow Status Stack Empty Status Stack Overflow Loop Stack Empty Loop Stack Overflow
Data Register Bank Select 0 = primary, 1 = secondary
Bit Reverse Mode Enable (DAG1) ALU Overflow Latch Mode Enable AR Saturation Mode Enable MAC Result Placement
0 = fractional, 1 = integer Timer Enable Go Mode Enable
1514131211109876543210
SPORT0 Enable
1 = enabled, 0 = disabled
SPORT1 Enable
1 = enabled, 0 = disabled
SPORT1 Configure
1 = serial port
0 = FI, FO, IRQ0, IRQ1, SCLK
1514131211109876543210
System Control Register
0x3FFF
1010000011111000
BWAIT
BPAGE Boot Page Select
BFORCE Boot Force Bit
Boot Wait States
Timer Registers
TPERIOD Period Register
TCOUNT Counter Register
00000000
TSCALE Scaling Register
PWAIT Program Memory Wait States
0x3FFD
0x3FFC
0x3FFB
REV. A
Control Registers
–11–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
ROM Enable/Data Memory Wait State
1514131211109876543210
DWAIT4 DWAIT0DWAIT1DWAIT2DWAIT3
ROM enable 1 = enable 0 = disable
Control Register
0x3FFE
1111111011111111
SPORT0 Multichannel Receive Word Enable Registers
1 = Channel Enabled 0 = Channel Ignored
0x3FFA
31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16
0x3FF9
1514131211109876543210
1514131211109876543210
Multichannel Enable MCE
Internal Serial Clock Generation ISCLK
Receive Frame Sync Required RFSR
Receive Frame Sync Width RFSW
Multichannel Frame Delay MFD
Only If Multichannel Mode Enabled
Transmit Frame Sync Required TFSR
Transmit Frame Sync Width TFSW
ITFS Internal Transmit Frame Sync Enable
(or MCL Multichannel Length; 1 = 32 words, 0 = 24 words
Only If Multichannel Mode Enabled)
SPORT0 Multichannel Transmit Word Enable Registers
31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16
1514131211109876543210
SPORT0 Control Register
0x3FF6
0000000000000000
1 = Channel Enabled 0 = Channel Ignored
0x3FF8
0x3FF7
SLEN Serial Word Length
DTYPE Data Format
00 = right justify, zero-fill unused MSBs 01 = right justify, sign extend into unused MSBs 10 = compand using µ-law 11 = compand using A-law
INVRFS Invert Receive Frame Sync INVTFS Invert Transmit Frame Sync
(or INVTDV Invert Transmit Data Valid
Only If Multichannel Mode Enabled)
IRFS Internal Receive Frame Sync Enable
Control Registers
–12–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
SPORT0 SCLKDIV
Serial Clock Divide Modulus
0x3FF5
1514131211109876543210
SPORT0 RFSDIV
Receive Frame Sync Divide Modulus
0x3FF4
1514131211109876543210
SPORT0 Autobuffer Control Register
0x3FF3
1514131211109876543210
000000
CLKOUT Disable Control Bit
CLKODIS
BIASRND
MAC Biased Rounding Control Bit
TIREG
Transmit Autobuffer I Register
TMREG
Transmit Autobuffer M Register
Flag Out (Read Only)
Internal Serial Clock Generation ISCLK
Receive Frame Sync Required RFSR
Receive Frame Sync Width RFSW
Transmit Frame Sync Required TFSR
Transmit Frame Sync Width TFSW
ITFS Internal Transmit Frame Sync Enable
RBUF Receive Autobuffering Enable
TBUF Transmit Autobuffering Enable
RMREG Receive Autobuffer M Register
RIREG Receive Autobuffer I Register
SPORT1 Control Register
0x3FF2
1514131211109876543210
000000000000000
SLEN Serial Word Length
DTYPE Data Format
00 = right justify, zero-fill unused MSBs 01 = right justify, sign extend into unused MSBs 10 = compand using µ-law 11 = compand using A-law
INVRFS Invert Receive Frame Sync INVTFS Invert Transmit Frame Sync IRFS Internal Receive Frame Sync Enable
REV. A
Control Registers
–13–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
SPORT1 SCLKDIV
Serial Clock Divide Modulus
0x3FF1
1514131211109876543210
SPORT1 Autobuffer Control Register
1514131211109876543210
000000
XTALDIS
XTAL Pin Drive Disable
during Powerdown
1 = disabled, 0 = enabled
(disable XTAL pin when no external
crystal connected)
XTALDELAY
4096 Cycle Delay Enable
1 = delay, 0 = no delay
PDFORCE
Powerdown Force
PUCR
Powerup Context Reset Enable
1 = soft reset (context clear),
0 = resume execution
SPORT1 RFSDIV
Receive Frame Sync Divide Modulus
0x3FF0
1514131211109876543210
0x3FEF
RBUF Receive Autobuffer Enable
TBUF Transmit Autobuffer Enable
RMREG Receive M Register
RIREG Receive I Register
TMREG Transmit M Register
TIREG Transmit I Register
HIP Data Registers
HDR5
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
HDR4
HDR3
HDR2
HDR1
HDR0
0x3FE5
0x3FE4
0x3FE3
0x3FE2
0x3FE1
0x3FE0
HMASK Register
0x3FE8
1514131211109876543210
0000000000000000
Host HDR5
Read
Host HDR4
Read
Host HDR3
Read
Host HDR2
Read
Host HDR1
Read
Host HDR0
Read
Interrupt Enables 1 = Enable 0 = Disable
Control Registers
Host HDR0 Write
Host HDR1 Write
Host HDR2 Write
Host HDR3 Write
Host HDR4 Write
Host HDR5 Write
–14–
REV. A
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
HSR6
0x3FE6
1514131211109876543210
0000000000000000
2171 HDR5 Write 2171 HDR4 Write 2171 HDR3 Write 2171 HDR2 Write 2171 HDR1 Write 2171 HDR0 Write
Overwrite Mode
Software Reset
Host HDR0 Write Host HDR1 Write Host HDR2 Write Host HDR3 Write Host HDR4 Write Host HDR5 Write
HSR7
0x3FE7
1514131211109876543210
0000000000000001
2171 HDR0 Write 2171 HDR1 Write 2171 HDR2 Write 2171 HDR3 Write 2171 HDR4 Write 2171 HDR5 Write
Control Registers
Biased Rounding
A new mode allows biased rounding in addition to the normal unbiased rounding. When the BIASRND bit is set to 0, the nor­mal unbiased rounding operations occur. When the BIASRND bit is set to 1, biased rounding occurs instead of the normal un­biased rounding. When operating in biased rounding mode all rounding operations with MR0 set to 0x8000 will round up, rather than only rounding odd MR1 values up. For example:
MR value before RND biased RND result unbiased RND result 00-0000-8000 00-0001-8000 00-0000-8000 00-0001-8000 00-0002-8000 00-0002-8000 00-0000-8001 00-0001-8001 00-0001-8001 00-0001-8001 00-0002-8001 00-0002-8001 00-0000-7FFF 00-0000-7FFF 00-0000-7FFF 00-0001-7FFF 00-0001-7FFF 00-0001-7FFF
This mode only has an effect when the MR0 register contains 0x8000, all other rounding operation work normally. This mode was added to allow more efficient implementation of bit speci­fied algorithms which specify biased rounding such as the GSM speech compression routines. Unbiased rounding is preferred for most algorithms.
Note: BIASRND bit is Bit 12 of the SPORT0 Autobuffer
Control register.
INSTRUCTION SET DESCRIPTION
The ADSP-217x assembly language instruction set has an alge­braic syntax that was designed for ease of coding and read­ability. The assembly language, which takes full advantage of the processor’s unique architecture, offers the following benefits:
The algebraic syntax eliminates the need to remember cryptic assembler mnemonics. For example, a typical arithmetic add instruction, such as AR = AX0 + AY0, resembles a simple equation.
Every instruction assembles into a single, 24-bit word that can execute in a single instruction cycle.
The syntax is a superset ADSP-2100 Family assembly lan­guage and is completely source and object code compatible with other family members. Programs may need to be relo­cated to utilize internal memory and conform to the ADSP­217x’s interrupt vector and reset vector map.
Sixteen condition codes are available. For conditional jump, call, return, or arithmetic instructions, the condition can be checked and the operation executed in the same instruction cycle.
Multifunction instructions allow parallel execution of an arith­metic instruction with up to two fetches or one write to pro­cessor memory space during a single instruction cycle.
Consult the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual for a complete description of the syntax and an instruction set reference.
REV. A
–15–
ADSP-2171/ADSP-2172/ADSP-2173
Example Code
The following example is a code fragment that performs the filter tap update for an adaptive (least-mean-squared algorithm) filter. Notice that the computations in the instructions are written like algebraic equations.
MF=MX0*MY1 (RND), MX0=DM (I2,M1); /* MF=error*beta */ MR=MX0*MF (RND), AY0=PM (I6,MS);
DO adapt UNTIL CE;
AR=MR1 + AY0, MX0=DM (I2,M1), AY0=PM (I6,M7);
adapt:
Interrupt Enable
The ADSP-217x supports an interrupt enable instruction. Inter­rupts are enabled by default at reset. The instruction source code is specified as follows:
Syntax: ENA INTS; Description: Executing the ENA INTS instruction allows all
Interrupt Disable
The ADSP-217x supports an interrupt disable instruction. The instruction source code is specified as follows:
Syntax: DIS INTS; Description: Reset enables interrupt servicing. Executing the
PM(I6,M6) =AR, MR=MX0*MF (RND); MODIFY (I2, M3); /* Point to oldest data */ MODIFY (I6, M7); /* Point to start of data */
unmasked interrupts to be serviced again.
DIS INTS instruction causes all interrupts to be masked without changing the contents of the IMASK register. Disabling interrupts does not affect the autobuffer circuitry, which will operate normally whether or not interrupts are enabled. The disable interrupt instruction masks all user interrupts including the powerdown interrupt.
–16–
REV. A
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