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ADSP-2183KST-160 Datasheet(PDF) 5 Page - Analog Devices |
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ADSP-2183KST-160 Datasheet(HTML) 5 Page - Analog Devices |
5 / 31 page ADSP-2183 –5– REV. C Table I. Interrupt Priority and Interrupt Vector Addresses Interrupt Vector Source of Interrupt Address (Hex) Reset (or Power-Up with PUCR = 1) 0000 (Highest Priority) Power-Down (Nonmaskable) 002C IRQ2 0004 IRQL1 0008 IRQL0 000C SPORT0 Transmit 0010 SPORT0 Receive 0014 IRQE 0018 BDMA Interrupt 001C SPORT1 Transmit or IRQ1 0020 SPORT1 Receive or IRQ0 0024 Timer 0028 (Lowest Priority) Interrupt routines can either be nested, with higher priority interrupts taking precedence, or processed sequentially. Inter- rupts 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 power-down interrupt is nonmaskable. The ADSP-2183 masks all interrupts for one instruction cycle following the execution of an instruction that modifies the IMASK register. This does not affect serial port autobuffering or DMA transfers. The interrupt control register, ICNTL, controls interrupt nest- ing and defines the IRQ0, IRQ1 and IRQ2 external interrupts to be either edge- or level-sensitive. The IRQE pin is an external edge-sensitive interrupt and can be forced and cleared. The IRQL0 and IRQL1 pins are external level-sensitive interrupts. The IFC register is a write-only register used to force and clear interrupts. On-chip stacks preserve the processor status and are automati- cally maintained during interrupt handling. The stacks are twelve levels deep to allow interrupt, loop and subroutine nesting. The following instructions allow global enable or disable servic- ing of the interrupts (including power down), regardless of the state of IMASK. Disabling the interrupts does not affect serial port autobuffering or DMA. ENA INTS; DIS INTS; When the processor is reset, interrupt servicing is enabled. LOW POWER OPERATION The ADSP-2183 has three low power modes that significantly reduce the power dissipation when the device operates under standby conditions. These modes are: • Power-Down • Idle • Slow Idle The CLKOUT pin may also be disabled to reduce external power dissipation. Power-Down The ADSP-2183 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 power- down features. Refer to the ADSP-2100 Family User’s Manual, Third Edition, “System Interface” chapter for detailed information about the power-down feature. • Quick recovery from power-down. The processor begins executing instructions in as few as 300 CLKIN cycles. • Support for an externally generated TTL or CMOS processor clock. The external clock can continue running during power-down without affecting the lowest power rating and 300 CLKIN cycle recovery. • Support for crystal operation includes disabling the oscil- lator to save power (the processor automatically waits 4096 CLKIN cycles for the crystal oscillator to start and stabi- lize), and letting the oscillator run to allow 300 CLKIN cycle start-up. • Power-down is initiated by either the power-down pin ( PWD) or the software power-down force bit. • Interrupt support allows an unlimited number of instruc- tions to be executed before optionally powering down. The power-down interrupt also can be used as a non- maskable, edge-sensitive interrupt. • Context clear/save control allows the processor to con- tinue where it left off or start with a clean context when leaving the power-down state. •The RESET pin also can be used to terminate power-down. • Power-down acknowledge pin indicates when the processor has entered power-down. Idle When the ADSP-2183 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-2183 to let the processor’s internal clock signal be slowed, further reducing power consumption. The reduced clock frequency, a programmable fraction of the normal clock rate, is speci- fied 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 processor 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. |
Similar Part No. - ADSP-2183KST-160 |
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Similar Description - ADSP-2183KST-160 |
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