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MU9C8K64-40TDC Datasheet(PDF) 11 Page - List of Unclassifed Manufacturers |
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MU9C8K64-40TDC Datasheet(HTML) 11 Page - List of Unclassifed Manufacturers |
11 / 30 page Register Descriptions MU9C Binary Routing Coprocessor (RCP) Family Rev. 6 11 Address register. Address Database access is controlled through the control states on the DSC and AC12–0 lines (/AV=HIGH) in Hardware Control mode, or through the Instruction register in Software Control mode. Chip Select There are two methods of selecting an MU9C RCP: through Hardware control inputs /CS1 and /CS2, and through software control through the Data Select register. Chip Select Inputs The Chip Select lines /CS1 and /CS2 enable an MU9C RCP to participate in a control cycle. If either /CS1 or /CS2 are LOW the device is selected. By connecting all the /CS1 lines together in a multi-device system, and decoding the lines to each individual device’s /CS2 line, control states can operate locally within a single device or globally in all devices. Control states can be broadcast to all devices within the system by pulling the /CS1 lines LOW, for operations such as Write Comparand register; individual devices can be selected to respond to a control state such as Write at Address by pulling a single decoded /CS2 line LOW. Device Select Register One dedicated line is needed per device to do local selection of one device within a multi-device system. In cases where control lines are at a premium, the Device Select register can be used as the method of selection. If Device Select Register bit DS8 is LOW, only the device or devices whose Page Address value, held in Configuration Register bits FR3-0, match with the Device Select Register bits DS3–0 will be selected. Note that the match condition of the Device Select register is ORed with the state of the /CS1 and /CS2 lines. If DS8 is HIGH, the device remains unselected through the Device Select register. The conditions of the Device Select register, the /CS1 and /CS2 lines are sampled at the time of the falling edge of /E. In a particular MU9C RCP within a system, that CAM will be selected under the following conditions: Therefore, the /CS1 lines of all devices are tied together for global cycles that broadcast control states to all devices within the system; then, for local cycles, an individual device is selected by loading all the Device Select Registers bit DS8 LOW and bits DS3–0 with the Page Address value of the device to be selected. On a subsequent cycle, /CS1 and /CS2 remain HIGH, and only the device whose Page Address value matches with its DS3–0 will respond. After an individual device has been selected, a global Write cycle to the Device Select register using /CS1 line is executed to select another device, or to disable the software chip select mechanism altogether. Vertical Cascading A system of any practical depth can be designed by vertically cascading MU9C RCPs. The scheme uses a daisy chain to provide system level prioritization as well as Match, Multiple Match, and Full flags. There are three daisy chains: Match, Multiple Match, and Full. When a control state is broadcast that accesses the highest-priority matching location or Status register, the daisy chain ensures only that the device that responds is the one with the highest-priority match in the system. All other devices will have their DQ31–0 lines and PA:AA bus outputs held in high-impedance. Therefore, the Match Flag daisy chain controls access to the system resources for control states that are conditional on the results of the previous Compare cycle. During a Comparison cycle, the Match and Multiple Match flags will not change until /E goes HIGH during that cycle. At this time, the daisy chain starts to resolve system-level prioritization. Once sufficient time has elapsed for the daisy chain to be resolved, the PA:AA bus can be enabled with /OE, and Status Register Read cycles will access only the highest-priority matching device. Note that the daisy chain resolves system-level prioritization combinatorially once initiated by /E going HIGH. Other cycles that do not affect the daisy chain or match results can take place in the MU9C RCP while the daisy chain is resolving, for example, WR CR, allowing some degree of pipelining. During a Write cycle, the Full flag will not change until /E goes HIGH during that cycle. There is a small propagation delay per device in the daisy chain. Alternatively, vertical cascading can be done with external logic that provides prioritization and select lines back into each device. The MU9C RCP architecture supports external prioritization for cases where the daisy chain overhead proves unacceptable. Figure 4 shows a system in which a number of MU9C RCPs are vertically cascaded. (/CS1=LOW) OR (/CS2=LOW) OR ((DS8 = LOW) AND (DS3–0 = PA3–0)) |
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