Features * High-performance, Low-power AVR(R) 8-bit Microcontroller * Advanced RISC Architecture * * * * * * * * * - 133 Powerful Instructions - Most Single Clock Cycle Execution - 32 x 8 General Purpose Working Registers + Peripheral Control Registers - Fully Static Operation - Up to 16 MIPS Throughput at 16 MHz - On-chip 2-cycle Multiplier Non volatile Program and Data Memories - 32K/64K/128K Bytes of In-System Reprogrammable Flash (AT90CAN32/64/128) * Endurance: 10,000 Write/Erase Cycles - Optional Boot Code Section with Independent Lock Bits * Selectable Boot Size: 1K Bytes, 2K Bytes, 4K Bytes or 8K Bytes * In-System Programming by On-Chip Boot Program (CAN, UART, ...) * True Read-While-Write Operation - 1K/2K/4K Bytes EEPROM (Endurance: 100,000 Write/Erase Cycles) (AT90CAN32/64/128) - 2K/4K/4K Bytes Internal SRAM (AT90CAN32/64/128) - Up to 64K Bytes Optional External Memory Space - Programming Lock for Software Security JTAG (IEEE std. 1149.1 Compliant) Interface - Boundary-scan Capabilities According to the JTAG Standard - Programming Flash (Hardware ISP), EEPROM, Lock & Fuse Bits - Extensive On-chip Debug Support CAN Controller 2.0A & 2.0B - ISO 16845 Certified (1) - 15 Full Message Objects with Separate Identifier Tags and Masks - Transmit, Receive, Automatic Reply and Frame Buffer Receive Modes - 1Mbits/s Maximum Transfer Rate at 8 MHz - Time stamping, TTC & Listening Mode (Spying or Autobaud) Peripheral Features - Programmable Watchdog Timer with On-chip Oscillator - 8-bit Synchronous Timer/Counter-0 * 10-bit Prescaler * External Event Counter * Output Compare or 8-bit PWM Output - 8-bit Asynchronous Timer/Counter-2 * 10-bit Prescaler * External Event Counter * Output Compare or 8-Bit PWM Output * 32Khz Oscillator for RTC Operation - Dual 16-bit Synchronous Timer/Counters-1 & 3 * 10-bit Prescaler * Input Capture with Noise Canceler * External Event Counter * 3-Output Compare or 16-Bit PWM Output * Output Compare Modulation - 8-channel, 10-bit SAR ADC * 8 Single-ended Channels * 7 Differential Channels * 2 Differential Channels With Programmable Gain at 1x, 10x, or 200x - On-chip Analog Comparator - Byte-oriented Two-wire Serial Interface - Dual Programmable Serial USART - Master/Slave SPI Serial Interface * Programming Flash (Hardware ISP) Special Microcontroller Features - Power-on Reset and Programmable Brown-out Detection - Internal Calibrated RC Oscillator - 8 External Interrupt Sources - 5 Sleep Modes: Idle, ADC Noise Reduction, Power-save, Power-down & Standby - Software Selectable Clock Frequency - Global Pull-up Disable I/O and Packages - 53 Programmable I/O Lines - 64-lead TQFP and 64-lead QFN Operating Voltages: 2.7 - 5.5V Operating temperature: Industrial (-40C to +85C) Maximum Frequency: 8 MHz at 2.7V, 16 MHz at 4.5V Note: 1. Details on section 19.4.3 on page 242. 8-bit Microcontroller with 32K/64K/128K Bytes of ISP Flash and CAN Controller AT90CAN32 AT90CAN64 AT90CAN128 Rev. 7679H-CAN-08/08 1. Description 1.1 Comparison Between AT90CAN32, AT90CAN64 and AT90CAN128 AT90CAN32, AT90CAN64 and AT90CAN128 are hardware and software compatible. They differ only in memory sizes as shown in Table 1-1. 1.2 Table 1-1. Memory Size Summary Device Flash EEPROM RAM AT90CAN32 32K Bytes 1K Byte 2K Bytes AT90CAN64 64K Bytes 2K Bytes 4K Bytes AT90CAN128 128K Bytes 4K Byte 4K Bytes Part Description The AT90CAN32/64/128 is a low-power CMOS 8-bit microcontroller based on the AVR enhanced RISC architecture. By executing powerful instructions in a single clock cycle, the AT90CAN32/64/128 achieves throughputs approaching 1 MIPS per MHz allowing the system designer to optimize power consumption versus processing speed. The AVR core combines a rich instruction set with 32 general purpose working registers. All 32 registers are directly connected to the Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU), allowing two independent registers to be accessed in one single instruction executed in one clock cycle. The resulting architecture is more code efficient while achieving throughputs up to ten times faster than conventional CISC microcontrollers. The AT90CAN32/64/128 provides the following features: 32K/64K/128K bytes of In-System Programmable Flash with Read-While-Write capabilities, 1K/2K/4K bytes EEPROM, 2K/4K/4K bytes SRAM, 53 general purpose I/O lines, 32 general purpose working registers, a CAN controller, Real Time Counter (RTC), four flexible Timer/Counters with compare modes and PWM, 2 USARTs, a byte oriented Two-wire Serial Interface, an 8-channel 10-bit ADC with optional differential input stage with programmable gain, a programmable Watchdog Timer with Internal Oscillator, an SPI serial port, IEEE std. 1149.1 compliant JTAG test interface, also used for accessing the On-chip Debug system and programming and five software selectable power saving modes. The Idle mode stops the CPU while allowing the SRAM, Timer/Counters, SPI/CAN ports and interrupt system to continue functioning. The Power-down mode saves the register contents but freezes the Oscillator, disabling all other chip functions until the next interrupt or Hardware Reset. In Power-save mode, the asynchronous timer continues to run, allowing the user to maintain a timer base while the rest of the device is sleeping. The ADC Noise Reduction mode stops the CPU and all I/O modules except Asynchronous Timer and ADC, to minimize switching noise during ADC conversions. In Standby mode, the Crystal/Resonator Oscillator is running while the rest of the device is sleeping. This allows very fast start-up combined with low power consumption. The device is manufactured using Atmel's high-density nonvolatile memory technology. The Onchip ISP Flash allows the program memory to be reprogrammed in-system through an SPI serial interface, by a conventional nonvolatile memory programmer, or by an On-chip Boot program running on the AVR core. The boot program can use any interface to download the application program in the application Flash memory. Software in the Boot Flash section will continue to run while the Application Flash section is updated, providing true Read-While-Write operation. By 2 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 combining an 8-bit RISC CPU with In-System Self-Programmable Flash on a monolithic chip, the Atmel AT90CAN32/64/128 is a powerful microcontroller that provides a highly flexible and cost effective solution to many embedded control applications. The AT90CAN32/64/128 AVR is supported with a full suite of program and system development tools including: C compilers, macro assemblers, program debugger/simulators, in-circuit emulators, and evaluation kits. 1.3 Disclaimer Typical values contained in this datasheet are based on simulations and characterization of other AVR microcontrollers manufactured on the same process technology. Min and Max values will be available after the device is characterized. 3 7679H-CAN-08/08 Block Diagram PF7 - PF0 VCC PC7 - PC0 PA7 - PA0 PORTA DRIVERS PORTF DRIVERS RESET Block Diagram XTAL2 Figure 1-1. XTAL1 1.4 PORTC DRIVERS GND DATA DIR. REG. PORTF DATA REGISTER PORTF DATA DIR. REG. PORTA DATA REGISTER PORTA DATA REGISTER PORTC DATA DIR. REG. PORTC 8-BIT DATA BUS POR - BOD RESET AVCC INTERNAL OSCILLATOR CALIB. OSC ADC AGND AREF PROGRAM COUNTER STACK POINTER ON-CHIP DEBUG PROGRAM FLASH SRAM BOUNDARYSCAN INSTRUCTION REGISTER JTAG TAP OSCILLATOR WATCHDOG TIMER OSCILLATOR TIMING AND CONTROL MCU CONTROL REGISTER CAN CONTROLLER TIMER/ COUNTERS GENERAL PURPOSE REGISTERS X PROGRAMMING LOGIC INSTRUCTION DECODER Z INTERRUPT UNIT ALU EEPROM Y CONTROL LINES STATUS REGISTER + - ANALOG COMPARATOR USART0 SPI DATA REGISTER PORTE DATA DIR. REG. PORTE DATA REGISTER PORTB PORTE DRIVERS PE7 - PE0 4 DATA DIR. REG. PORTB PORTB DRIVERS PB7 - PB0 USART1 DATA REGISTER PORTD TWO-WIRE SERIAL INTERFACE DATA DIR. REG. PORTD DATA REG. PORTG DATA DIR. REG. PORTG PORTD DRIVERS PORTG DRIVERS PD7 - PD0 PG4 - PG0 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Pin Configurations GND AREF PF0 (ADC0) PF1 (ADC1) PF2 (ADC2) PF3 (ADC3) PF4 (ADC4 / TCK) PF5 (ADC5 / TMS) PF6 (ADC6 / TDO) PF7 (ADC7 / TDI) GND VCC PA0 (AD0) PA1 (AD1) PA2 (AD2) 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 Pinout AT90CAN32/64/128 - TQFP AVCC NC (1) 1 48 PA3 (AD3) (RXD0 / PDI) PE0 2 47 PA4 (AD4) (TXD0 / PDO) PE1 3 46 PA5 (AD5) (XCK0 / AIN0) PE2 4 45 PA6 (AD6) (OC3A / AIN1) PE3 5 44 PA7 (AD7) (OC3B / INT4) PE4 6 43 PG2 (ALE) (OC3C / INT5) PE5 7 42 PC7 (A15 / CLKO) (T3 / INT6) PE6 8 41 PC6 (A14) (ICP3 / INT7) PE7 9 40 PC5 (A13) (SS) PB0 10 39 PC4 (A12) (SCK) PB1 11 38 PC3 (A11) 12 37 PC2 (A10) (MISO) PB3 13 36 PC1 (A9) (OC2A) PB4 14 35 PC0 (A8) (OC1A) PB5 15 34 PG1 (RD) (OC1B) PB6 16 33 PG0 (WR) (1) NC = Do not connect (May be used in future devices) (2) Timer2 Oscillator (T0) PD7 32 (RXCAN / T1) PD6 31 (TXCAN / XCK1) PD5 30 (ICP1) PD4 29 (TXD1 / INT3) PD3 28 (RXD1 / INT2) PD2 27 (SDA / INT1) PD1 26 (SCL / INT0) PD0 25 XTAL1 24 XTAL2 23 GND 22 VCC 21 RESET 20 (2) (2) (TOSC1 ) PG4 19 (64-lead TQFP top view) (OC0A / OC1C) PB7 17 (MOSI) PB2 INDEX CORNER (TOSC2 ) PG3 18 Figure 1-2. 64 1.5 5 7679H-CAN-08/08 AVCC GND AREF PF0 (ADC0) PF1 (ADC1) PF2 (ADC2) PF3 (ADC3) PF4 (ADC4 / TCK) PF5 (ADC5 / TMS) PF6 (ADC6 / TDO) PF7 (ADC7 / TDI) GND VCC PA0 (AD0) PA1 (AD1) PA2 (AD2) 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 PA3 (AD3) 2 47 PA4 (AD4) (TXD0 / PDO) PE1 3 46 PA5 (AD5) (XCK0 / AIN0) PE2 4 45 PA6 (AD6) (OC3A / AIN1) PE3 5 44 PA7 (AD7) INDEX CORNER (OC3B / INT4) PE4 6 43 PG2 (ALE) (OC3C / INT5) PE5 7 42 PC7 (A15 / CLKO) (T3 / INT6) PE6 8 41 PC6 (A14) (ICP3 / INT7) PE7 9 40 PC5 (A13) (SS) PB0 10 39 PC4 (A12) (SCK) PB1 11 38 PC3 (A11) (MOSI) PB2 12 37 PC2 (A10) (MISO) PB3 13 36 PC1 (A9) (64-lead QFN top view) 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 VCC XTAL2 XTAL1 (SCL / INT0) PD0 (SDA / INT1) PD1 (RXD1 / INT2) PD2 (TXD1 / INT3) PD3 (ICP1) PD4 (TXCAN / XCK1) PD5 (RXCAN / T1) PD6 (T0) PD7 (2) (2) GND PG0 (WR) 20 33 RESET PG1 (RD) 16 19 34 (OC1B) PB6 (TOSC1 ) PG4 15 18 35 (OC1A) PB5 17 14 PC0 (A8) (TOSC2 ) PG3 (OC2A) PB4 (1) NC = Do not connect (May be used in future devices) (2) Timer2 Oscillator Note: 1.6.1 63 1 (RXD0 / PDI) PE0 NC 1.6 (1) 64 Pinout AT90CAN32/64/128 - QFN (OC0A / OC1C) PB7 Figure 1-3. The large center pad underneath the QFN package is made of metal and internally connected to GND. It should be soldered or glued to the board to ensure good mechanical stability. If the center pad is left unconnected, the package might loosen from the board. Pin Descriptions VCC Digital supply voltage. 1.6.2 GND Ground. 6 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 1.6.3 Port A (PA7..PA0) Port A is an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port A output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port A pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port A pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port A also serves the functions of various special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 74. 1.6.4 Port B (PB7..PB0) Port B is an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port B output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port B pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port B pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port B also serves the functions of various special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 76. 1.6.5 Port C (PC7..PC0) Port C is an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port C output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port C pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port C pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port C also serves the functions of special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 78. 1.6.6 Port D (PD7..PD0) Port D is an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port D output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port D pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port D pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port D also serves the functions of various special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 80. 1.6.7 Port E (PE7..PE0) Port E is an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port E output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port E pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port E pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port E also serves the functions of various special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 83. 1.6.8 Port F (PF7..PF0) Port F serves as the analog inputs to the A/D Converter. 7 7679H-CAN-08/08 Port F also serves as an 8-bit bi-directional I/O port, if the A/D Converter is not used. Port pins can provide internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port F output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port F pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port F pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port F also serves the functions of the JTAG interface. If the JTAG interface is enabled, the pullup resistors on pins PF7(TDI), PF5(TMS), and PF4(TCK) will be activated even if a reset occurs. 1.6.9 Port G (PG4..PG0) Port G is a 5-bit I/O port with internal pull-up resistors (selected for each bit). The Port G output buffers have symmetrical drive characteristics with both high sink and source capability. As inputs, Port G pins that are externally pulled low will source current if the pull-up resistors are activated. The Port G pins are tri-stated when a reset condition becomes active, even if the clock is not running. Port G also serves the functions of various special features of the AT90CAN32/64/128 as listed on page 88. 1.6.10 RESET Reset input. A low level on this pin for longer than the minimum pulse length will generate a reset. The minimum pulse length is given in characteristics. Shorter pulses are not guaranteed to generate a reset. The I/O ports of the AVR are immediately reset to their initial state even if the clock is not running. The clock is needed to reset the rest of the AT90CAN32/64/128. 1.6.11 XTAL1 Input to the inverting Oscillator amplifier and input to the internal clock operating circuit. 1.6.12 XTAL2 Output from the inverting Oscillator amplifier. 1.6.13 AVCC AVCC is the supply voltage pin for the A/D Converter on Port F. It should be externally connected to VCC, even if the ADC is not used. If the ADC is used, it should be connected to VCC through a low-pass filter. 1.6.14 AREF This is the analog reference pin for the A/D Converter. 2. About Code Examples This documentation contains simple code examples that briefly show how to use various parts of the device. These code examples assume that the part specific header file is included before compilation. Be aware that not all C compiler vendors include bit definitions in the header files and interrupt handling in C is compiler dependent. Please confirm with the C compiler documentation for more details. 8 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 3. AVR CPU Core 3.1 Introduction This section discusses the AVR core architecture in general. The main function of the CPU core is to ensure correct program execution. The CPU must therefore be able to access memories, perform calculations, control peripherals, and handle interrupts. 3.2 Architectural Overview Figure 3-1. Block Diagram of the AVR Architecture Data Bus 8-bit Flash Program Memory Program Counter Status and Control 32 x 8 General Purpose Registrers Control Lines Direct Addressing Instruction Decoder Indirect Addressing Instruction Register Interrupt Unit SPI Unit Watchdog Timer ALU Analog Comparator I/O Module1 Data SRAM I/O Module 2 I/O Module n EEPROM I/O Lines In order to maximize performance and parallelism, the AVR uses a Harvard architecture - with separate memories and buses for program and data. Instructions in the program memory are executed with a single level pipelining. While one instruction is being executed, the next instruction is pre-fetched from the program memory. This concept enables instructions to be executed in every clock cycle. The program memory is In-System Reprogrammable Flash memory. 9 7679H-CAN-08/08 The fast-access Register File contains 32 x 8-bit general purpose working registers with a single clock cycle access time. This allows single-cycle Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU) operation. In a typical ALU operation, two operands are output from the Register File, the operation is executed, and the result is stored back in the Register File - in one clock cycle. Six of the 32 registers can be used as three 16-bit indirect address register pointers for Data Space addressing - enabling efficient address calculations. One of the these address pointers can also be used as an address pointer for look up tables in Flash program memory. These added function registers are the 16-bit X-, Y-, and Z-register, described later in this section. The ALU supports arithmetic and logic operations between registers or between a constant and a register. Single register operations can also be executed in the ALU. After an arithmetic operation, the Status Register is updated to reflect information about the result of the operation. Program flow is provided by conditional and unconditional jump and call instructions, able to directly address the whole address space. Most AVR instructions have a single 16-bit word format. Every program memory address contains a 16- or 32-bit instruction. Program Flash memory space is divided in two sections, the Boot Program section and the Application Program section. Both sections have dedicated Lock bits for write and read/write protection. The SPM (Store Program Memory) instruction that writes into the Application Flash memory section must reside in the Boot Program section. During interrupts and subroutine calls, the return address Program Counter (PC) is stored on the Stack. The Stack is effectively allocated in the general data SRAM, and consequently the Stack size is only limited by the total SRAM size and the usage of the SRAM. All user programs must initialize the SP in the Reset routine (before subroutines or interrupts are executed). The Stack Pointer (SP) is read/write accessible in the I/O space. The data SRAM can easily be accessed through the five different addressing modes supported in the AVR architecture. The memory spaces in the AVR architecture are all linear and regular memory maps. A flexible interrupt module has its control registers in the I/O space with an additional Global Interrupt Enable bit in the Status Register. All interrupts have a separate Interrupt Vector in the Interrupt Vector table. The interrupts have priority in accordance with their Interrupt Vector position. The lower the Interrupt Vector address, the higher is the priority. The I/O memory space contains 64 addresses for CPU peripheral functions as Control Registers, SPI, and other I/O functions. The I/O Memory can be accessed directly, or as the Data Space locations following those of the Register File, 0x20 - 0x5F. In addition, the AT90CAN32/64/128 has Extended I/O space from 0x60 - 0xFF in SRAM where only the ST/STS/STD and LD/LDS/LDD instructions can be used. 3.3 ALU - Arithmetic Logic Unit The high-performance AVR ALU operates in direct connection with all the 32 general purpose working registers. Within a single clock cycle, arithmetic operations between general purpose registers or between a register and an immediate are executed. The ALU operations are divided into three main categories - arithmetic, logical, and bit-functions. Some implementations of the architecture also provide a powerful multiplier supporting both signed/unsigned multiplication and fractional format. See the "Instruction Set Summary" section for a detailed description. 10 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 3.4 Status Register The Status Register contains information about the result of the most recently executed arithmetic instruction. This information can be used for altering program flow in order to perform conditional operations. Note that the Status Register is updated after all ALU operations, as specified in the Instruction Set Reference. This will in many cases remove the need for using the dedicated compare instructions, resulting in faster and more compact code. The Status Register is not automatically stored when entering an interrupt routine and restored when returning from an interrupt. This must be handled by software. The AVR Status Register - SREG - is defined as: Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 I T H S V N Z C Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SREG * Bit 7 - I: Global Interrupt Enable The Global Interrupt Enable bit must be set to enabled the interrupts. The individual interrupt enable control is then performed in separate control registers. If the Global Interrupt Enable Register is cleared, none of the interrupts are enabled independent of the individual interrupt enable settings. The I-bit is cleared by hardware after an interrupt has occurred, and is set by the RETI instruction to enable subsequent interrupts. The I-bit can also be set and cleared by the application with the SEI and CLI instructions, as described in the instruction set reference. * Bit 6 - T: Bit Copy Storage The Bit Copy instructions BLD (Bit LoaD) and BST (Bit STore) use the T-bit as source or destination for the operated bit. A bit from a register in the Register File can be copied into T by the BST instruction, and a bit in T can be copied into a bit in a register in the Register File by the BLD instruction. * Bit 5 - H: Half Carry Flag The Half Carry Flag H indicates a Half Carry in some arithmetic operations. Half Carry Is useful in BCD arithmetic. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. * Bit 4 - S: Sign Bit, S = N V The S-bit is always an EXCLUSIVE OR between the negative flag N and the Two's Complement Overflow Flag V. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. * Bit 3 - V: Two's Complement Overflow Flag The Two's Complement Overflow Flag V supports two's complement arithmetics. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. * Bit 2 - N: Negative Flag The Negative Flag N indicates a negative result in an arithmetic or logic operation. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. * Bit 1 - Z: Zero Flag The Zero Flag Z indicates a zero result in an arithmetic or logic operation. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. 11 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bit 0 - C: Carry Flag The Carry Flag C indicates a carry in an arithmetic or logic operation. See the "Instruction Set Description" for detailed information. 3.5 General Purpose Register File The Register File is optimized for the AVR Enhanced RISC instruction set. In order to achieve the required performance and flexibility, the following input/output schemes are supported by the Register File: * One 8-bit output operand and one 8-bit result input * Two 8-bit output operands and one 8-bit result input * Two 8-bit output operands and one 16-bit result input * One 16-bit output operand and one 16-bit result input Figure 3-2 shows the structure of the 32 general purpose working registers in the CPU. Figure 3-2. AVR CPU General Purpose Working Registers 7 0 Addr. R0 0x00 R1 0x01 R2 0x02 ... R13 0x0D General R14 0x0E Purpose R15 0x0F Working R16 0x10 Registers R17 0x11 ... R26 0x1A X-register Low Byte R27 0x1B X-register High Byte R28 0x1C Y-register Low Byte R29 0x1D Y-register High Byte R30 0x1E Z-register Low Byte R31 0x1F Z-register High Byte Most of the instructions operating on the Register File have direct access to all registers, and most of them are single cycle instructions. As shown in Figure 3-2, each register is also assigned a data memory address, mapping them directly into the first 32 locations of the user Data Space. Although not being physically implemented as SRAM locations, this memory organization provides great flexibility in access of the registers, as the X-, Y- and Z-pointer registers can be set to index any register in the file. 3.5.1 12 The X-register, Y-register, and Z-register The registers R26..R31 have some added functions to their general purpose usage. These registers are 16-bit address pointers for indirect addressing of the data space. The three indirect address registers X, Y, and Z are defined as described in Figure 3-3. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 3-3. The X-, Y-, and Z-registers 15 X-register XH XL 7 0 R27 (0x1B) YH YL 7 0 R29 (0x1D) Z-register 0 R26 (0x1A) 15 Y-register 0 7 0 7 0 R28 (0x1C) 15 ZH 7 0 ZL 7 R31 (0x1F) 0 0 R30 (0x1E) In the different addressing modes these address registers have functions as fixed displacement, automatic increment, and automatic decrement (see the instruction set reference for details). 3.5.2 Extended Z-pointer Register for ELPM/SPM - RAMPZ Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - - RAMPZ0 Read/Write R R R R R R R R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 RAMPZ * Bits 7..1 - Res: Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use and will always read as zero. For compatibility with future devices, be sure to write to write them to zero. * Bit 0 - RAMPZ0: Extended RAM Page Z-pointer The RAMPZ Register is normally used to select which 64K RAM Page is accessed by the Zpointer. As the AT90CAN32/64/128 does not support more than 64K of SRAM memory, this register is used only to select which page in the program memory is accessed when the ELPM/SPM instruction is used. The different settings of the RAMPZ0 bit have the following effects: RAMPZ0 = 0: Program memory address 0x0000 - 0x7FFF (lower 64K bytes) is accessed by ELPM/SPM RAMPZ0 = 1: Program memory address 0x8000 - 0xFFFF (higher 64K bytes) is accessed by ELPM/SPM - AT90CAN32 and AT90CAN64: RAMPZ0 exists as register bit but it is not used for program memory addressing. - AT90CAN128: RAMPZ0 exists as register bit and it is used for program memory addressing. Figure 3-4. The Z-pointer used by ELPM and SPM Bit (Individually) 7 Bit (Z-pointer) 23 0 7 16 15 RAMPZ Note: 0 7 8 7 ZH 0 ZL 0 LPM (different of ELPM) is never affected by the RAMPZ setting. 13 7679H-CAN-08/08 3.6 Stack Pointer The Stack is mainly used for storing temporary data, for storing local variables and for storing return addresses after interrupts and subroutine calls. The Stack Pointer Register always points to the top of the Stack. Note that the Stack is implemented as growing from higher memory locations to lower memory locations. This implies that a Stack PUSH command decreases the Stack Pointer. The Stack Pointer points to the data SRAM Stack area where the Subroutine and Interrupt Stacks are located. This Stack space in the data SRAM must be defined by the program before any subroutine calls are executed or interrupts are enabled. The Stack Pointer must be set to point above 0xFF. The Stack Pointer is decremented by one when data is pushed onto the Stack with the PUSH instruction, and it is decremented by two when the return address is pushed onto the Stack with subroutine call or interrupt. The Stack Pointer is incremented by one when data is popped from the Stack with the POP instruction, and it is incremented by two when data is popped from the Stack with return from subroutine RET or return from interrupt RETI. The AVR Stack Pointer is implemented as two 8-bit registers in the I/O space. The number of bits actually used is implementation dependent. Note that the data space in some implementations of the AVR architecture is so small that only SPL is needed. In this case, the SPH Register will not be present. Bit Read/Write Initial Value 3.7 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 SP15 SP14 SP13 SP12 SP11 SP10 SP9 SP8 SPH SP7 SP6 SP5 SP4 SP3 SP2 SP1 SP0 SPL 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Instruction Execution Timing This section describes the general access timing concepts for instruction execution. The AVR CPU is driven by the CPU clock clkCPU, directly generated from the selected clock source for the chip. No internal clock division is used. Figure 3-5 shows the parallel instruction fetches and instruction executions enabled by the Harvard architecture and the fast-access Register File concept. This is the basic pipelining concept to obtain up to 1 MIPS per MHz with the corresponding unique results for functions per cost, functions per clocks, and functions per power-unit. Figure 3-5. The Parallel Instruction Fetches and Instruction Executions T1 T2 T3 T4 clkCPU 1st Instruction Fetch 1st Instruction Execute 2nd Instruction Fetch 2nd Instruction Execute 3rd Instruction Fetch 3rd Instruction Execute 4th Instruction Fetch 14 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 3-6 shows the internal timing concept for the Register File. In a single clock cycle an ALU operation using two register operands is executed, and the result is stored back to the destination register. Figure 3-6. Single Cycle ALU Operation T1 T2 T3 T4 clkCPU Total Execution T ime Register Operands Fetch ALU Operation Execute Result Write Back 3.8 Reset and Interrupt Handling The AVR provides several different interrupt sources. These interrupts and the separate Reset Vector each have a separate program vector in the program memory space. All interrupts are assigned individual enable bits which must be written logic one together with the Global Interrupt Enable bit in the Status Register in order to enable the interrupt. Depending on the Program Counter value, interrupts may be automatically disabled when Boot Lock bits BLB02 or BLB12 are programmed. This feature improves software security. See the section "Memory Programming" on page 336 for details. The lowest addresses in the program memory space are by default defined as the Reset and Interrupt Vectors. The complete list of vectors is shown in "Interrupts" on page 60. The list also determines the priority levels of the different interrupts. The lower the address the higher is the priority level. RESET has the highest priority, and next is INT0 - the External Interrupt Request 0. The Interrupt Vectors can be moved to the start of the Boot Flash section by setting the IVSEL bit in the MCU Control Register (MCUCR). Refer to "Interrupts" on page 60 for more information. The Reset Vector can also be moved to the start of the Boot Flash section by programming the BOOTRST Fuse, see "Boot Loader Support - Read-While-Write Self-Programming" on page 321. 3.8.1 Interrupt Behavior When an interrupt occurs, the Global Interrupt Enable I-bit is cleared and all interrupts are disabled. The user software can write logic one to the I-bit to enable nested interrupts. All enabled interrupts can then interrupt the current interrupt routine. The I-bit is automatically set when a Return from Interrupt instruction - RETI - is executed. There are basically two types of interrupts. The first type is triggered by an event that sets the interrupt flag. For these interrupts, the Program Counter is vectored to the actual Interrupt Vector in order to execute the interrupt handling routine, and hardware clears the corresponding interrupt flag. Interrupt flags can also be cleared by writing a logic one to the flag bit position(s) to be cleared. If an interrupt condition occurs while the corresponding interrupt enable bit is cleared, the interrupt flag will be set and remembered until the interrupt is enabled, or the flag is cleared by software. Similarly, if one or more interrupt conditions occur while the Global Interrupt Enable bit is cleared, the corresponding interrupt flag(s) will be set and remembered until the Global Interrupt Enable bit is set, and will then be executed by order of priority. 15 7679H-CAN-08/08 The second type of interrupts will trigger as long as the interrupt condition is present. These interrupts do not necessarily have interrupt flags. If the interrupt condition disappears before the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt will not be triggered. When the AVR exits from an interrupt, it will always return to the main program and execute one more instruction before any pending interrupt is served. Note that the Status Register is not automatically stored when entering an interrupt routine, nor restored when returning from an interrupt routine. This must be handled by software. When using the CLI instruction to disable interrupts, the interrupts will be immediately disabled. No interrupt will be executed after the CLI instruction, even if it occurs simultaneously with the CLI instruction. The following example shows how this can be used to avoid interrupts during the timed EEPROM write sequence. Assembly Code Example in r16, SREG ; store SREG value ; disable interrupts during timed sequence cli sbi EECR, EEMWE sbi EECR, EEWE out SREG, r16 ; start EEPROM write ; restore SREG value (I-bit) C Code Example char cSREG; cSREG = SREG; /* store SREG value */ /* disable interrupts during timed sequence */ _CLI(); EECR |= (1< * Bit 7 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. * Bits 6..0 - CAL6..0: Oscillator Calibration Value Writing the calibration byte to this address will trim the internal Oscillator to remove process variations from the Oscillator frequency. This is done automatically during Chip Reset. When OSCCAL is zero, the lowest available frequency is chosen. Writing non-zero values to this register will increase the frequency of the internal Oscillator. Writing 0x7F to the register gives the highest available frequency. The calibrated Oscillator is used to time EEPROM and Flash access. If EEPROM or Flash is written, do not calibrate to more than 10% above the nominal frequency. Otherwise, the EEPROM or Flash write may fail. Note that the Oscillator is intended for calibration to 8.0 MHz. Tuning to other values is not guaranteed, as indicated in Table 5-9. Table 5-9. 5.7 Internal RC Oscillator Frequency Range. OSCCAL Value Min Frequency in Percentage of Nominal Frequency Max Frequency in Percentage of Nominal Frequency 0x00 50% 100% 0x3F 75% 150% 0x7F 100% 200% External Clock To drive the device from an external clock source, XTAL1 should be driven as shown in Figure 5-4. To run the device on an external clock, the CKSEL Fuses must be programmed to "0000". 42 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 5-4. External Clock Drive Configuration NC XTAL2 External Clock Signal XTAL1 GND Table 5-10. External Clock Frequency CKSEL3..0 Frequency Range 0000 0 - 16 MHz When this clock source is selected, start-up times are determined by the SUT Fuses as shown in Table 5-11. Table 5-11. Start-up Times for the External Clock Selection SUT1..0 Start-up Time from Powerdown and Power-save Additional Delay from Reset (VCC = 5.0V) 00 6 CK 14 CK 01 6 CK 14 CK + 4.1 ms Fast rising power 10 6 CK 14 CK + 65 ms Slowly rising power 11 Recommended Usage BOD enabled Reserved When applying an external clock, it is required to avoid sudden changes in the applied clock frequency to ensure stable operation of the MCU. A variation in frequency of more than 2% from one clock cycle to the next can lead to unpredictable behavior. It is required to ensure that the MCU is kept in Reset during such changes in the clock frequency. Note that the System Clock Prescaler can be used to implement run-time changes of the internal clock frequency while still ensuring stable operation. Refer to "System Clock Prescaler" on page 44 for details. 5.8 Clock Output Buffer When the CKOUT Fuse is programmed, the system Clock will be output on CLKO. This mode is suitable when chip clock is used to drive other circuits on the system. The clock will be output also during reset and the normal operation of I/O pin will be overridden when the fuse is programmed. Any clock source, including internal RC Oscillator, can be selected when CLKO serves as clock output. If the System Clock Prescaler is used, it is the divided system clock that is output (CKOUT Fuse programmed). 5.9 Timer/Counter2 Oscillator For AVR microcontrollers with Timer/Counter2 Oscillator pins (TOSC1 and TOSC2), the crystal is connected directly between the pins. The Oscillator is optimized for use with a 32.768 kHz watch crystal. 12-22 pF capacitors may be necessary if the parasitic impedance (pads, wires & PCB) is very low. 43 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 share the Timer/Counter2 Oscillator Pins (TOSC1 and TOSC2) with PG4 and PG3. This means that both PG4 and PG3 can only be used when the Timer/Counter2 Oscillator is not enable. Applying an external clock source to TOSC1 can be done in asynchronous operation if EXTCLK in the ASSR Register is written to logic one. See "Asynchronous operation of the Timer/Counter2" on page 160 for further description on selecting external clock as input instead of a 32 kHz crystal. In this configuration, PG4 cannot be used but PG3 is available. 5.10 System Clock Prescaler The AT90CAN32/64/128 system clock can be divided by setting the Clock Prescaler Register - CLKPR. This feature can be used to decrease power consumption when the requirement for processing power is low. This can be used with all clock source options, and it will affect the clock frequency of the CPU and all synchronous peripherals. clkI/O, clkADC, clkCPU, and clkFLASH are divided by a factor as shown in Table 5-12. 5.10.1 Clock Prescaler Register - CLKPR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CLKPCE - - - CLKPS3 CLKPS2 CLKPS1 CLKPS0 Read/Write R/W R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 <----- See Bit Description CLKPR -----> * Bit 7 - CLKPCE: Clock Prescaler Change Enable The CLKPCE bit must be written to logic one to enable change of the CLKPS bits. The CLKPCE bit is only updated when the other bits in CLKPR are simultaneously written to zero. CLKPCE is cleared by hardware four cycles after it is written or when CLKPS bits are written. Rewriting the CLKPCE bit within this time-out period does neither extend the time-out period, nor clear the CLKPCE bit. * Bit 6..0 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bits 3..0 - CLKPS3..0: Clock Prescaler Select Bits 3 - 0 These bits define the division factor between the selected clock source and the internal system clock. These bits can be written run-time to vary the clock frequency to suit the application requirements. As the divider divides the master clock input to the MCU, the speed of all synchronous peripherals is reduced when a division factor is used. The division factors are given in Table 5-12. To avoid unintentional changes of clock frequency, a special write procedure must be followed to change the CLKPS bits: 1. Write the Clock Prescaler Change Enable (CLKPCE) bit to one and all other bits in CLKPR to zero. 2. Within four cycles, write the desired value to CLKPS while writing a zero to CLKPCE. Interrupts must be disabled when changing prescaler setting to make sure the write procedure is not interrupted. The CKDIV8 Fuse determines the initial value of the CLKPS bits. If CKDIV8 is unprogrammed, the CLKPS bits will be reset to "0000". If CKDIV8 is programmed, CLKPS bits are reset to 44 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 "0011", giving a division factor of 8 at start up. This feature should be used if the selected clock source has a higher frequency than the maximum frequency of the device at the present operating conditions. Note that any value can be written to the CLKPS bits regardless of the CKDIV8 Fuse setting. The Application software must ensure that a sufficient division factor is chosen if the selected clock source has a higher frequency than the maximum frequency of the device at the present operating conditions. The device is shipped with the CKDIV8 Fuse programmed. Table 5-12. Clock Prescaler Select CLKPS3 CLKPS2 CLKPS1 CLKPS0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 4 0 0 1 1 8 0 1 0 0 16 0 1 0 1 32 0 1 1 0 64 0 1 1 1 128 1 0 0 0 256 1 0 0 1 Reserved 1 0 1 0 Reserved 1 0 1 1 Reserved 1 1 0 0 Reserved 1 1 0 1 Reserved 1 1 1 0 Reserved 1 1 1 1 Reserved Note: Clock Division Factor The frequency of the asynchronous clock must be lower than 1/4th of the frequency of the scaled down Source clock. Otherwise, interrupts may be lost, and accessing the Timer/Counter2 registers may fail. 45 7679H-CAN-08/08 6. Power Management and Sleep Modes Sleep modes enable the application to shut down unused modules in the MCU, thereby saving power. The AVR provides various sleep modes allowing the user to tailor the power consumption to the application's requirements. To enter any of the five sleep modes, the SE bit in SMCR must be written to logic one and a SLEEP instruction must be executed. The SM2, SM1, and SM0 bits in the SMCR Register select which sleep mode (Idle, ADC Noise Reduction, Power-down, Power-save, or Standby) will be activated by the SLEEP instruction. See Table 6-1 for a summary. If an enabled interrupt occurs while the MCU is in a sleep mode, the MCU wakes up. The MCU is then halted for four cycles in addition to the start-up time, executes the interrupt routine, and resumes execution from the instruction following SLEEP. The contents of the register file and SRAM are unaltered when the device wakes up from sleep. If a reset occurs during sleep mode, the MCU wakes up and executes from the Reset Vector. Figure 5-1 on page 37 presents the different clock systems in the AT90CAN32/64/128, and their distribution. The figure is helpful in selecting an appropriate sleep mode. 6.0.1 Sleep Mode Control Register - SMCR The Sleep Mode Control Register contains control bits for power management. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - SM2 SM1 SM0 SE Read/Write R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SMCR * Bit 7..4 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bits 3..1 - SM2..0: Sleep Mode Select Bits 2, 1, and 0 These bits select between the five available sleep modes as shown in Table 6-1. Table 6-1. Note: Sleep Mode Select SM2 SM1 SM0 Sleep Mode 0 0 0 Idle 0 0 1 ADC Noise Reduction 0 1 0 Power-down 0 1 1 Power-save 1 0 0 Reserved 1 0 1 Reserved 1 1 0 Standby(1) 1 1 1 Reserved 1. Standby mode is only recommended for use with external crystals or resonators. * Bit 1 - SE: Sleep Enable The SE bit must be written to logic one to make the MCU enter the sleep mode when the SLEEP instruction is executed. To avoid the MCU entering the sleep mode unless it is the programmer's 46 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 purpose, it is recommended to write the Sleep Enable (SE) bit to one just before the execution of the SLEEP instruction and to clear it immediately after waking up. 6.1 Idle Mode When the SM2..0 bits are written to 000, the SLEEP instruction makes the MCU enter Idle mode, stopping the CPU but allowing SPI, CAN, USART, Analog Comparator, ADC, Two-wire Serial Interface, Timer/Counters, Watchdog, and the interrupt system to continue operating. This sleep mode basically halts clkCPU and clkFLASH, while allowing the other clocks to run. Idle mode enables the MCU to wake up from external triggered interrupts as well as internal ones like the Timer Overflow and USART Transmit Complete interrupts. If wake-up from the Analog Comparator interrupt is not required, the Analog Comparator can be powered down by setting the ACD bit in the Analog Comparator Control and Status Register - ACSR. This will reduce power consumption in Idle mode. If the ADC is enabled, a conversion starts automatically when this mode is entered. 6.2 ADC Noise Reduction Mode When the SM2..0 bits are written to 001, the SLEEP instruction makes the MCU enter ADC Noise Reduction mode, stopping the CPU but allowing the ADC, the External Interrupts, the Two-wire Serial Interface address watch, Timer/Counter2, CAN and the Watchdog to continue operating (if enabled). This sleep mode basically halts clkI/O, clkCPU, and clkFLASH, while allowing the other clocks to run. This improves the noise environment for the ADC, enabling higher resolution measurements. If the ADC is enabled, a conversion starts automatically when this mode is entered. Apart from the ADC Conversion Complete interrupt, only an External Reset, a Watchdog Reset, a Brown-out Reset, a Two-wire Serial Interface address match interrupt, a Timer/Counter2 interrupt, an SPM/EEPROM ready interrupt, an External Level Interrupt on INT7:4, or an External Interrupt on INT3:0 can wake up the MCU from ADC Noise Reduction mode. 6.3 Power-down Mode When the SM2..0 bits are written to 010, the SLEEP instruction makes the MCU enter Powerdown mode. In this mode, the External Oscillator is stopped, while the External Interrupts, the Two-wire Serial Interface address watch, and the Watchdog continue operating (if enabled). Only an External Reset, a Watchdog Reset, a Brown-out Reset, a Two-wire Serial Interface address match interrupt, an External Level Interrupt on INT7:4, or an External Interrupt on INT3:0 can wake up the MCU. This sleep mode basically halts all generated clocks, allowing operation of asynchronous modules only. Note that if a level triggered interrupt is used for wake-up from Power-down mode, the changed level must be held for some time to wake up the MCU. Refer to "External Interrupts" on page 93 for details. When waking up from Power-down mode, there is a delay from the wake-up condition occurs until the wake-up becomes effective. This allows the clock to restart and become stable after having been stopped. The wake-up period is defined by the same CKSEL fuses that define the Reset Time-out period, as described in "Clock Sources" on page 38. 6.4 Power-save Mode When the SM2..0 bits are written to 011, the SLEEP instruction makes the MCU enter Powersave mode. This mode is identical to Power-down, with one exception: 47 7679H-CAN-08/08 If Timer/Counter2 is clocked asynchronously, i.e., the AS2 bit in ASSR is set, Timer/Counter2 will run during sleep. The device can wake up from either Timer Overflow or Output Compare event from Timer/Counter2 if the corresponding Timer/Counter2 interrupt enable bits are set in TIMSK2, and the global interrupt enable bit in SREG is set. If the Asynchronous Timer is NOT clocked asynchronously, Power-down mode is recommended instead of Power-save mode because the contents of the registers in the asynchronous timer should be considered undefined after wake-up in Power-save mode if AS2 is 0. This sleep mode basically halts all clocks except clkASY, allowing operation only of asynchronous modules, including Timer/Counter2 if clocked asynchronously. 6.5 Standby Mode When the SM2..0 bits are 110 and an External Crystal/Resonator clock option is selected, the SLEEP instruction makes the MCU enter Standby mode. This mode is identical to Power-down with the exception that the Oscillator is kept running. From Standby mode, the device wakes up in 6 clock cycles. Table 6-2. Active Clock Domains and Wake-up Sources in the Different Sleep Modes. Active Clock Domains Sleep Mode clkCPU Idle clkFLASH Oscillators clkIO clkADC clkASY Main Clock Source Enabled Timer Osc. Enabled INT7:0 TWI Address Match Timer 2 SPM/ EEPROM Ready ADC Other I/O X X X X X(2) X X X X X X X X X X(2) X(3) X X(2) X X X(3) X X(3) X X(3) X ADC Noise Reduction Powerdown Powersave X(2) Standby(1) Notes: Wake-up Sources X(2) X X(2) 1. Only recommended with external crystal or resonator selected as clock source. 2. If AS2 bit in ASSR is set. 3. Only INT3:0 or level interrupt INT7:4. 6.6 Minimizing Power Consumption There are several issues to consider when trying to minimize the power consumption in an AVR controlled system. In general, sleep modes should be used as much as possible, and the sleep mode should be selected so that as few as possible of the device's functions are operating. All functions not needed should be disabled. In particular, the following modules may need special consideration when trying to achieve the lowest possible power consumption. 6.6.1 48 Analog to Digital Converter If enabled, the ADC will be enabled in all sleep modes. To save power, the ADC should be disabled before entering any sleep mode. When the ADC is turned off and on again, the next conversion will be an extended conversion. Refer to "Analog to Digital Converter - ADC" on page 273 for details on ADC operation. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 6.6.2 Analog Comparator When entering Idle mode, the Analog Comparator should be disabled if not used. When entering ADC Noise Reduction mode, the Analog Comparator should be disabled. In other sleep modes, the Analog Comparator is automatically disabled. However, if the Analog Comparator is set up to use the Internal Voltage Reference as input, the Analog Comparator should be disabled in all sleep modes. Otherwise, the Internal Voltage Reference will be enabled, independent of sleep mode. Refer to "Analog Comparator" on page 269 for details on how to configure the Analog Comparator. 6.6.3 Brown-out Detector If the Brown-out Detector is not needed by the application, this module should be turned off. If the Brown-out Detector is enabled by the BODLEVEL Fuses, it will be enabled in all sleep modes, and hence, always consume power. In the deeper sleep modes, this will contribute significantly to the total current consumption. Refer to "Brown-out Detection" on page 54 for details on how to configure the Brown-out Detector. 6.6.4 Internal Voltage Reference The Internal Voltage Reference will be enabled when needed by the Brown-out Detection, the Analog Comparator or the ADC. If these modules are disabled as described in the sections above, the internal voltage reference will be disabled and it will not be consuming power. When turned on again, the user must allow the reference to start up before the output is used. If the reference is kept on in sleep mode, the output can be used immediately. Refer to "Internal Voltage Reference" on page 56 for details on the start-up time. 6.6.5 Watchdog Timer If the Watchdog Timer is not needed in the application, the module should be turned off. If the Watchdog Timer is enabled, it will be enabled in all sleep modes, and hence, always consume power. In the deeper sleep modes, this will contribute significantly to the total current consumption. Refer to "Watchdog Timer" on page 57 for details on how to configure the Watchdog Timer. 6.6.6 Port Pins When entering a sleep mode, all port pins should be configured to use minimum power. The most important is then to ensure that no pins drive resistive loads. In sleep modes where both the I/O clock (clkI/O) and the ADC clock (clkADC) are stopped, the input buffers of the device will be disabled. This ensures that no power is consumed by the input logic when not needed. In some cases, the input logic is needed for detecting wake-up conditions, and it will then be enabled. Refer to the section "Digital Input Enable and Sleep Modes" on page 70 for details on which pins are enabled. If the input buffer is enabled and the input signal is left floating or have an analog signal level close to VCC/2, the input buffer will use excessive power. For analog input pins, the digital input buffer should be disabled at all times. An analog signal level close to VCC/2 on an input pin can cause significant current even in active mode. Digital input buffers can be disabled by writing to the Digital Input Disable Registers (DIDR1 and DIDR0). Refer to "Digital Input Disable Register 1 - DIDR1" on page 272 and "Digital Input Disable Register 0 - DIDR0" on page 292 for details. 6.6.7 JTAG Interface and On-chip Debug System If the On-chip debug system is enabled by OCDEN Fuse and the chip enter sleep mode, the main clock source is enabled, and hence, always consumes power. In the deeper sleep modes, 49 7679H-CAN-08/08 this will contribute significantly to the total current consumption. There are three alternative ways to avoid this: * Disable OCDEN Fuse. * Disable JTAGEN Fuse. * Write one to the JTD bit in MCUCR. The TDO pin is left floating when the JTAG interface is enabled while the JTAG TAP controller is not shifting data. If the hardware connected to the TDO pin does not pull up the logic level, power consumption will increase. Note that the TDI pin for the next device in the scan chain contains a pull-up that avoids this problem. Writing the JTD bit in the MCUCR register to one or leaving the JTAG fuse unprogrammed disables the JTAG interface. 50 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 7. System Control and Reset 7.1 7.1.1 Reset Resetting the AVR During reset, all I/O Registers are set to their initial values, and the program starts execution from the Reset Vector. The instruction placed at the Reset Vector must be a JMP - Absolute Jump - instruction to the reset handling routine. If the program never enables an interrupt source, the Interrupt Vectors are not used, and regular program code can be placed at these locations. This is also the case if the Reset Vector is in the Application section while the Interrupt Vectors are in the Boot section or vice versa. The circuit diagram in Figure 7-1 shows the reset logic. Table 7-1 defines the electrical parameters of the reset circuitry. The I/O ports of the AVR are immediately reset to their initial state when a reset source goes active. This does not require any clock source to be running. After all reset sources have gone inactive, a delay counter is invoked, stretching the internal reset. This allows the power to reach a stable level before normal operation starts. The time-out period of the delay counter is defined by the user through the SUT and CKSEL Fuses. The different selections for the delay period are presented in "Clock Sources" on page 38. 7.1.2 Reset Sources The AT90CAN32/64/128 has five sources of reset: * Power-on Reset. The MCU is reset when the supply voltage is below the Power-on Reset threshold (VPOT). * External Reset. The MCU is reset when a low level is present on the RESET pin for longer than the minimum pulse length. * Watchdog Reset. The MCU is reset when the Watchdog Timer period expires and the Watchdog is enabled. * Brown-out Reset. The MCU is reset when the supply voltage VCC is below the Brown-out Reset threshold (VBOT) and the Brown-out Detector is enabled. * JTAG AVR Reset. The MCU is reset as long as there is a logic one in the Reset Register, one of the scan chains of the JTAG system. Refer to the section "Boundary-scan IEEE 1149.1 (JTAG)" on page 300 for details. 51 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 7-1. Reset Logic DATA BUS PORF BORF EXTRF WDRF JTRF MCU Status Register (MCUSR) Power-on Reset Circuit Brown-out Reset Circuit BODLEVEL [2..0] Pull-up Resistor Spike Filter JTAG Reset Register Watchdog Oscillator Clock Generator CK Delay Counters TIMEOUT CKSEL[3:0] SUT[1:0] Table 7-1. Symbol Reset Characteristics Parameter Condition Min. Power-on Reset Threshold Voltage (rising) VPOT Power-on Reset Threshold Voltage (falling) (1) VPOR Vcc Start Voltage to ensure internal Power-on Reset signal - 0.05 VCCRR Vcc Rise Rate to ensure internal Power-on Reset signal 0.3 VRST RESET Pin Threshold Voltage 0.2 Vcc tRST Minimum pulse width on RESET Pin Note: 7.1.3 Vcc = 5 V, temperature = 25 C Typ. Max. Units 1.4 2.3 V 1.3 2.3 V GND + 0.05 V V/ms 0.85 Vcc 400 V ns 1. The Power-on Reset will not work unless the supply voltage has been below VPOT (falling) Power-on Reset A Power-on Reset (POR) pulse is generated by an On-chip detection circuit. The detection level is defined in Table 7-1. The POR is activated whenever VCC is below the detection level. The POR circuit can be used to trigger the start-up Reset, as well as to detect a failure in supply voltage. A Power-on Reset (POR) circuit ensures that the device is properly reset from Power-on if VCC started from VPOR with a rise rate upper than VCCRR. Reaching the Power-on Reset threshold voltage invokes the delay counter, which determines how long the device is kept in RESET after 52 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 VCC rise. The RESET signal is activated again, without any delay, when VCC decreases below the detection level. Figure 7-2. MCU Start-up, RESET Tied to VCC VCCRR VCC VPOR RESET VPOT VCCRR tTOUT TIME-OUT INTERNAL RESET Figure 7-3. MCU Start-up, RESET Extended Externally VCCRR VCC VPOR RESET TIME-OUT VRST tTOUT INTERNAL RESET Note: 7.1.4 If VPOR or VCCRR parameter range can not be followed, an External Reset is required. External Reset An External Reset is generated by a low level on the RESET pin. Reset pulses longer than the minimum pulse width (see Table 7-1) will generate a reset, even if the clock is not running. Shorter pulses are not guaranteed to generate a reset. When the applied signal reaches the Reset Threshold Voltage - VRST - on its positive edge, the delay counter starts the MCU after the Time-out period - tTOUT - has expired. 53 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 7-4. External Reset During Operation CC 7.1.5 Brown-out Detection AT90CAN32/64/128 has an On-chip Brown-out Detection (BOD) circuit for monitoring the VCC level during operation by comparing it to a fixed trigger level. The trigger level for the BOD can be selected by the BODLEVEL Fuses. The trigger level has a hysteresis to ensure spike free Brown-out Detection. The hysteresis on the detection level should be interpreted as V BOT+ = VBOT + VHYST/2 and VBOT- = VBOT - VHYST/2. Table 7-2. BODLEVEL Fuse Coding(1) BODLEVEL 2..0 Fuses Min VBOT 111 Note: Typ VBOT Max VBOT Units BOD Disabled 110 4.1 V 101 4.0 V 100 3.9 V 011 3.8 V 010 2.7 V 001 2.6 V 000 2.5 V 1. VBOT may be below nominal minimum operating voltage for some devices. For devices where this is the case, the device is tested down to VCC = VBOT during the production test. This guarantees that a Brown-Out Reset will occur before VCC drops to a voltage where correct operation of the microcontroller is no longer guaranteed. The test is performed using BODLEVEL = 010 for Low Operating Voltage and BODLEVEL = 101 for High Operating Voltage . Table 7-3. Brown-out Characteristics Symbol Parameter Min. Typ. Max. Units VHYST Brown-out Detector Hysteresis 70 mV tBOD Min Pulse Width on Brown-out Reset 2 s When the BOD is enabled, and VCC decreases to a value below the trigger level (VBOT- in Figure 7-5), the Brown-out Reset is immediately activated. When VCC increases above the trigger level 54 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 (VBOT+ in Figure 7-5), the delay counter starts the MCU after the Time-out period tTOUT has expired. The BOD circuit will only detect a drop in VCC if the voltage stays below the trigger level for longer than tBOD given in Table 7-3. Figure 7-5. Brown-out Reset During Operation VCC VBOT- VBOT+ RESET tTOUT TIME-OUT INTERNAL RESET 7.1.6 Watchdog Reset When the Watchdog times out, it will generate a short reset pulse of one CK cycle duration. On the falling edge of this pulse, the delay timer starts counting the Time-out period tTOUT. Refer to page 57 for details on operation of the Watchdog Timer. Figure 7-6. Watchdog Reset During Operation CC CK 55 7679H-CAN-08/08 7.1.7 MCU Status Register - MCUSR The MCU Status Register provides information on which reset source caused an MCU reset. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - JTRF WDRF BORF EXTRF PORF Read/Write R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 MCUSR See Bit Description * Bit 7..5 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 4 - JTRF: JTAG Reset Flag This bit is set if a reset is being caused by a logic one in the JTAG Reset Register selected by the JTAG instruction AVR_RESET. This bit is reset by a Power-on Reset, or by writing a logic zero to the flag. * Bit 3 - WDRF: Watchdog Reset Flag This bit is set if a Watchdog Reset occurs. The bit is reset by a Power-on Reset, or by writing a logic zero to the flag. * Bit 2 - BORF: Brown-out Reset Flag This bit is set if a Brown-out Reset occurs. The bit is reset by a Power-on Reset, or by writing a logic zero to the flag. * Bit 1 - EXTRF: External Reset Flag This bit is set if an External Reset occurs. The bit is reset by a Power-on Reset, or by writing a logic zero to the flag. * Bit 0 - PORF: Power-on Reset Flag This bit is set if a Power-on Reset occurs. The bit is reset only by writing a logic zero to the flag. To make use of the Reset flags to identify a reset condition, the user should read and then reset the MCUSR as early as possible in the program. If the register is cleared before another reset occurs, the source of the reset can be found by examining the reset flags. 7.2 Internal Voltage Reference AT90CAN32/64/128 features an internal bandgap reference. This reference is used for Brownout Detection, and it can be used as an input to the Analog Comparator or the ADC. 7.2.1 Voltage Reference Enable Signals and Start-up Time The voltage reference has a start-up time that may influence the way it should be used. The start-up time is given in Table 7-4. To save power, the reference is not always turned on. The reference is on during the following situations: 1. When the BOD is enabled (by programming the BODLEVEL [2..0] Fuse). 2. When the bandgap reference is connected to the Analog Comparator (by setting the ACBG bit in ACSR). 3. When the ADC is enabled. Thus, when the BOD is not enabled, after setting the ACBG bit or enabling the ADC, the user must always allow the reference to start up before the output from the Analog Comparator or 56 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 ADC is used. To reduce power consumption in Power-down mode, the user can avoid the three conditions above to ensure that the reference is turned off before entering Power-down mode. 7.2.2 Voltage Reference Characteristics Table 7-4. Symbol 7.3 Internal Voltage Reference Characteristics Parameter Condition Min. Typ. Max. Units 1.0 1.1 1.2 V 70 s VBG Bandgap reference voltage tBG Bandgap reference start-up time 40 IBG Bandgap reference current consumption 15 A Watchdog Timer The Watchdog Timer is clocked from a separate On-chip Oscillator which runs at 1 MHz. This is the typical value at VCC = 5V. See characterization data for typical values at other VCC levels. By controlling the Watchdog Timer prescaler, the Watchdog Reset interval can be adjusted as shown in Table 7-6 on page 58. The WDR - Watchdog Reset - instruction resets the Watchdog Timer. The Watchdog Timer is also reset when it is disabled and when a Chip Reset occurs. Eight different clock cycle periods can be selected to determine the reset period. If the reset period expires without another Watchdog Reset, the AT90CAN32/64/128 resets and executes from the Reset Vector. For timing details on the Watchdog Reset, refer to Table 7-6 on page 58. To prevent unintentional disabling of the Watchdog or unintentional change of time-out period, two different safety levels are selected by the fuse WDTON as shown in Table 7-5. Refer to "Timed Sequences for Changing the Configuration of the Watchdog Timer" on page 59 for details. Table 7-5. WDT Configuration as a Function of the Fuse Settings of WDTON Safety Level WDTON WDT Initial State How to Disable the WDT How to Change Time-out Unprogrammed 1 Disabled Timed sequence Timed sequence Programmed 2 Enabled Always enabled Timed sequence Figure 7-7. Watchdog Timer WATCHDOG OSCILLATOR ~1 MHz 57 7679H-CAN-08/08 7.3.1 Watchdog Timer Control Register - WDTCR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - WDCE WDE WDP2 WDP1 WDP0 Read/Write R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 WDTCR * Bits 7..5 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved bits for future use. * Bit 4 - WDCE: Watchdog Change Enable This bit must be set when the WDE bit is written to logic zero. Otherwise, the Watchdog will not be disabled. Once written to one, hardware will clear this bit after four clock cycles. Refer to the description of the WDE bit for a Watchdog disable procedure. This bit must also be set when changing the prescaler bits. See "Timed Sequences for Changing the Configuration of the Watchdog Timer" on page 59. * Bit 3 - WDE: Watchdog Enable When the WDE is written to logic one, the Watchdog Timer is enabled, and if the WDE is written to logic zero, the Watchdog Timer function is disabled. WDE can only be cleared if the WDCE bit has logic level one. To disable an enabled Watchdog Timer, the following procedure must be followed: 1. In the same operation, write a logic one to WDCE and WDE. A logic one must be written to WDE even though it is set to one before the disable operation starts. 2. Within the next four clock cycles, write a logic 0 to WDE. This disables the Watchdog. In safety level 2, it is not possible to disable the Watchdog Timer, even with the algorithm described above. See "Timed Sequences for Changing the Configuration of the Watchdog Timer" on page 59. * Bits 2..0 - WDP2, WDP1, WDP0: Watchdog Timer Prescaler 2, 1, and 0 The WDP2, WDP1, and WDP0 bits determine the Watchdog Timer prescaling when the Watchdog Timer is enabled. The different prescaling values and their corresponding Timeout Periods are shown in Table 7-6. Table 7-6. 58 Watchdog Timer Prescale Select WDP2 WDP1 WDP0 Number of WDT Oscillator Cycles Typical Time-out at VCC = 3.0V Typical Time-out at VCC = 5.0V 0 0 0 16K cycles 17.1 ms 16.3 ms 0 0 1 32K cycles 34.3 ms 32.5 ms 0 1 0 64K cycles 68.5 ms 65 ms 0 1 1 32/64K cycles 0.14 s 0.13 s 1 0 0 256K cycles 0.27 s 0.26 s 1 0 1 512K cycles 0.55 s 0.52 s 1 1 0 1,024K cycles 1.1 s 1.0 s 1 1 1 2,048K cycles 2.2 s 2.1 s AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The following code example shows one assembly and one C function for turning off the WDT. The example assumes that interrupts are controlled (e.g. by disabling interrupts globally) so that no interrupts will occur during execution of these functions. Assembly Code Example(1) WDT_off: ; Write logical one to WDCE and WDE ldi r16, (1< ... ... ... r16, high(RAMEND) ; Main program start ;Set Stack Pointer to top of RAM ; Enable interrupts xxx ... When the BOOTRST Fuse is unprogrammed, the Boot section size set to 8K bytes and the IVSEL bit in the MCUCR Register is set before any interrupts are enabled, the most typical and general program setup for the Reset and Interrupt Vector Addresses is: ;Address Labels 62 Code 0x0000 RESET: ldi 0x0001 out SPH,r16 0x0002 ldi r16,low(RAMEND) 0x0003 out SPL,r16 Comments r16,high(RAMEND) ; Main program start ; Set Stack Pointer to top of RAM AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 0x0004 sei 0x0005 ; Enable interrupts xxx ; .org (BootResetAdd + 0x0002) 0x..02 jmp EXT_INT0 ; IRQ0 Handler 0x..04 jmp PCINT0 ; PCINT0 Handler ... ... ... ; 0x..0C jmp SPM_RDY ; Store Program Memory Ready Handler When the BOOTRST Fuse is programmed and the Boot section size set to 8K bytes, the most typical and general program setup for the Reset and Interrupt Vector Addresses is: ;Address Labels Code Comments .org 0x0002 0x0002 jmp EXT_INT0 ; IRQ0 Handler 0x0004 jmp PCINT0 ; PCINT0 Handler ... ... ... ; 0x002C jmp SPM_RDY ; Store Program Memory Ready Handler ; .org (BootResetAdd) 0x..00 RESET: ldi r16,high(RAMEND) ; Main program start 0x..01 out SPH,r16 0x..02 ldi r16,low(RAMEND) 0x..03 out SPL,r16 0x..04 sei 0x..05 ; Set Stack Pointer to top of RAM ; Enable interrupts xxx When the BOOTRST Fuse is programmed, the Boot section size set to 8K bytes and the IVSEL bit in the MCUCR Register is set before any interrupts are enabled, the most typical and general program setup for the Reset and Interrupt Vector Addresses is: ;Address Labels Code Comments ; .org (BootResetAdd) 0x..00 jmp RESET ; Reset handler 0x0002 jmp EXT_INT0 ; IRQ0 Handler 0x..04 jmp PCINT0 ; PCINT0 Handler ... ... ... ; 0x..44 jmp SPM_RDY ; Store Program Memory Ready Handler ; 0x..46 RESET: ldi r16,high(RAMEND) ; Main program start 0x..47 out SPH,r16 0x..48 ldi r16,low(RAMEND) 0x..49 out SPL,r16 0x..4A sei 0x..4B ; Set Stack Pointer to top of RAM ; Enable interrupts xxx 63 7679H-CAN-08/08 8.2 Moving Interrupts Between Application and Boot Space The General Interrupt Control Register controls the placement of the Interrupt Vector table. 8.2.1 MCU Control Register - MCUCR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 JTD - - PUD - - IVSEL IVCE Read/Write R/W R R R/W R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MCUCR * Bit 1 - IVSEL: Interrupt Vector Select When the IVSEL bit is cleared (zero), the Interrupt Vectors are placed at the start of the Flash memory. When this bit is set (one), the Interrupt Vectors are moved to the beginning of the Boot Loader section of the Flash. The actual address of the start of the Boot Flash Section is determined by the BOOTSZ Fuses. Refer to the section "Boot Loader Support - Read-While-Write SelfProgramming" on page 321 for details. To avoid unintentional changes of Interrupt Vector tables, a special write procedure must be followed to change the IVSEL bit: 1. Write the Interrupt Vector Change Enable (IVCE) bit to one. 2. Within four cycles, write the desired value to IVSEL while writing a zero to IVCE. Interrupts will automatically be disabled while this sequence is executed. Interrupts are disabled in the cycle IVCE is set, and they remain disabled until after the instruction following the write to IVSEL. If IVSEL is not written, interrupts remain disabled for four cycles. The I-bit in the Status Register is unaffected by the automatic disabling. Note: 64 If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Boot Loader section and Boot Lock bit BLB02 is programmed, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Application section. If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Application section and Boot Lock bit BLB12 is programed, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Boot Loader section. Refer to the section "Boot Loader Support - Read-While-Write Self-Programming" on page 321 for details on Boot Lock bits. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 0 - IVCE: Interrupt Vector Change Enable The IVCE bit must be written to logic one to enable change of the IVSEL bit. IVCE is cleared by hardware four cycles after it is written or when IVSEL is written. Setting the IVCE bit will disable interrupts, as explained in the IVSEL description above. See Code Example below. Assembly Code Example Move_interrupts: ; Get MCUCR in r16, MCUCR mov r17, r16 ; Enable change of Interrupt Vectors ori r16, (1< CSn2:0 > 1). The number of system clock cycles from when the timer is enabled to the first count occurs can be from 1 to N+1 system clock cycles, where N equals the prescaler divisor (8, 64, 256, or 1024). It is possible to use the prescaler reset for synchronizing the Timer/Counter to program execution. However, care must be taken if the other Timer/Counter that shares the same prescaler also uses prescaling. A prescaler reset will affect the prescaler period for all Timer/Counters it is connected to. 11.1.3 External Clock Source An external clock source applied to the T3/T1/T0 pin can be used as Timer/Counter clock (clkT3/clkT1/clkT0). The T3/T1/T0 pin is sampled once every system clock cycle by the pin synchronization logic. The synchronized (sampled) signal is then passed through the edge detector. Figure 11-1 shows a functional equivalent block diagram of the T3/T1/T0 synchronization and edge detector logic. The registers are clocked at the positive edge of the internal system clock (clkI/O). The latch is transparent in the high period of the internal system clock. The edge detector generates one clkT3/clkT1/clkT0 pulse for each positive (CSn2:0 = 7) or negative (CSn2:0 = 6) edge it detects. 96 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 11-1. T3/T1/T0 Pin Sampling D Tn Q D Q D Tn_sync (To Clock Select Logic) Q LE clk I/O Synchronization Edge Detector The synchronization and edge detector logic introduces a delay of 2.5 to 3.5 system clock cycles from an edge has been applied to the T3/T1/T0 pin to the counter is updated. Enabling and disabling of the clock input must be done when T3/T1/T0 has been stable for at least one system clock cycle, otherwise it is a risk that a false Timer/Counter clock pulse is generated. Each half period of the external clock applied must be longer than one system clock cycle to ensure correct sampling. The external clock must be guaranteed to have less than half the system clock frequency (fExtClk < fclk_I/O/2) given a 50/50 % duty cycle. Since the edge detector uses sampling, the maximum frequency of an external clock it can detect is half the sampling frequency (Nyquist sampling theorem). However, due to variation of the system clock frequency and duty cycle caused by Oscillator source (crystal, resonator, and capacitors) tolerances, it is recommended that maximum frequency of an external clock source is less than fclk_I/O/2.5. An external clock source can not be prescaled. Figure 11-2. Prescaler for Timer/Counter3, Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter0 (1) CK T3 Synchronization T1 Synchronization T0 Synchronization 0 0 0 CS00 CS10 CS30 CS01 CS11 CS31 CS02 CS12 CS32 TIMER/COUNTER0 CLOCK SOURCE clkT0 Note: CK/1024 PSR310 CK/256 CK/8 CK/64 10-BIT T/C PRESCALER Clear TIMER/COUNTER1 CLOCK SOURCE clkT1 TIMER/COUNTER3 CLOCK SOURCE clkT3 1. The synchronization logic on the input pins (T0/T1/T3) is shown in Figure 11-1. 97 7679H-CAN-08/08 11.2 11.2.1 Timer/Counter0/1/3 Prescalers Register Description General Timer/Counter Control Register - GTCCR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TSM - - - - - PSR2 PSR310 Read/Write R/W R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 GTCCR * Bit 7 - TSM: Timer/Counter Synchronization Mode Writing the TSM bit to one activates the Timer/Counter Synchronization mode. In this mode, the value that is written to the PSR2 and PSR310 bits is kept, hence keeping the corresponding prescaler reset signals asserted. This ensures that the corresponding Timer/Counters are halted and can be configured to the same value without the risk of one of them advancing during configuration. When the TSM bit is written to zero, the PSR2 and PSR310 bits are cleared by hardware, and the Timer/Counters start counting simultaneously. * Bit 0 - PSR310: Prescaler Reset Timer/Counter3, Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter0 When this bit is one, Timer/Counter3, Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter0 prescaler will be Reset. This bit is normally cleared immediately by hardware, except if the TSM bit is set. Note that Timer/Counter3, Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter0 share the same prescaler and a reset of this prescaler will affect these three timers. 98 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 12. 8-bit Timer/Counter0 with PWM Timer/Counter0 is a general purpose, single channel, 8-bit Timer/Counter module. The main features are: 12.1 Features * * * * * * * 12.2 Single Channel Counter Clear Timer on Compare Match (Auto Reload) Glitch-free, Phase Correct Pulse Width Modulator (PWM) Frequency Generator External Event Counter 10-bit Clock Prescaler Overflow and Compare Match Interrupt Sources (TOV0 and OCF0A) Overview Many register and bit references in this section are written in general form. * A lower case "n" replaces the Timer/Counter number, in this case 0. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., TCNT0 for accessing Timer/Counter0 counter value and so on. * A lower case "x" replaces the Output Compare unit channel, in this case A. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., OCR0A for accessing Timer/Counter0 output compare channel A value and so on. A simplified block diagram of the 8-bit Timer/Counter is shown in Figure 12-1. For the actual placement of I/O pins, refer to "Pin Configurations" on page 5. CPU accessible I/O Registers, including I/O bits and I/O pins, are shown in bold. The device-specific I/O Register and bit locations are listed in the "8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 109. Figure 12-1. 8-bit Timer/Counter Block Diagram TCCRn count TOVn (Int.Req.) clear Control Logic direction clk Tn Clock Select Edge Detector DATA BUS BOTTOM Tn TOP ( From Prescaler ) Timer/Counter TCNTn = =0 = 0xFF OCn (Int.Req.) Waveform Generation OCnx OCRnx 99 7679H-CAN-08/08 12.2.1 Registers The Timer/Counter (TCNT0) and Output Compare Register (OCR0A) are 8-bit registers. Interrupt request (abbreviated to Int.Req. in the figure) signals are all visible in the Timer Interrupt Flag Register (TIFR0). All interrupts are individually masked with the Timer Interrupt Mask Register (TIMSK0). TIFR0 and TIMSK0 are not shown in the figure. The Timer/Counter can be clocked internally, via the prescaler, or by an external clock source on the T0 pin. The Clock Select logic block controls which clock source and edge the Timer/Counter uses to increment (or decrement) its value. The Timer/Counter is inactive when no clock source is selected. The output from the Clock Select logic is referred to as the timer clock (clkT0). The double buffered Output Compare Register (OCR0A) is compared with the Timer/Counter value at all times. The result of the compare can be used by the Waveform Generator to generate a PWM or variable frequency output on the Output Compare pin (OC0A). See "Output Compare Unit" on page 101. for details. The compare match event will also set the Compare Flag (OCF0A) which can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt request. 12.2.2 Definitions The following definitions are used extensively throughout the section: 12.3 BOTTOM The counter reaches the BOTTOM when it becomes 0x00. MAX The counter reaches its MAXimum when it becomes 0xFF (decimal 255). TOP The counter reaches the TOP when it becomes equal to the highest value in the count sequence. The TOP value can be assigned to be the fixed value 0xFF (MAX) or the value stored in the OCR0A Register. The assignment is dependent on the mode of operation. Timer/Counter Clock Sources The Timer/Counter can be clocked by an internal or an external clock source. The clock source is selected by the Clock Select logic which is controlled by the Clock Select (CS02:0) bits located in the Timer/Counter Control Register (TCCR0A). For details on clock sources and prescaler, see "Timer/Counter3/1/0 Prescalers" on page 96. 12.4 Counter Unit The main part of the 8-bit Timer/Counter is the programmable bi-directional counter unit. Figure 12-2 shows a block diagram of the counter and its surroundings. Figure 12-2. Counter Unit Block Diagram TOVn (Int.Req.) DATA BUS Clock Select count TCNTn clear Control Logic clkTn Edge Detector Tn direction ( From Prescaler ) bottom 100 top AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Signal description (internal signals): count Increment or decrement TCNT0 by 1. direction Select between increment and decrement. clear Clear TCNT0 (set all bits to zero). clkTn Timer/Counter clock, referred to as clkT0 in the following. top Signalize that TCNT0 has reached maximum value. bottom Signalize that TCNT0 has reached minimum value (zero). Depending of the mode of operation used, the counter is cleared, incremented, or decremented at each timer clock (clkT0). clkT0 can be generated from an external or internal clock source, selected by the Clock Select bits (CS02:0). When no clock source is selected (CS02:0 = 0) the timer is stopped. However, the TCNT0 value can be accessed by the CPU, regardless of whether clkT0 is present or not. A CPU write overrides (has priority over) all counter clear or count operations. The counting sequence is determined by the setting of the WGM01 and WGM00 bits located in the Timer/Counter Control Register (TCCR0A). There are close connections between how the counter behaves (counts) and how waveforms are generated on the Output Compare output OC0A. For more details about advanced counting sequences and waveform generation, see "Modes of Operation" on page 104. The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV0) is set according to the mode of operation selected by the WGM01:0 bits. TOV0 can be used for generating a CPU interrupt. 12.5 Output Compare Unit The 8-bit comparator continuously compares TCNT0 with the Output Compare Register (OCR0A). Whenever TCNT0 equals OCR0A, the comparator signals a match. A match will set the Output Compare Flag (OCF0A) at the next timer clock cycle. If enabled (OCIE0A = 1 and Global Interrupt Flag in SREG is set), the Output Compare Flag generates an Output Compare interrupt. The OCF0A flag is automatically cleared when the interrupt is executed. Alternatively, the OCF0A flag can be cleared by software by writing a logical one to its I/O bit location. The Waveform Generator uses the match signal to generate an output according to operating mode set by the WGM01:0 bits and Compare Output mode (COM0A1:0) bits. The max and bottom signals are used by the Waveform Generator for handling the special cases of the extreme values in some modes of operation (See "Modes of Operation" on page 104.). 101 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 12-3 shows a block diagram of the Output Compare unit. Figure 12-3. Output Compare Unit, Block Diagram DATA BUS OCRnx TCNTn = (8-bit Comparator ) OCFnx (Int.Req.) top bottom Waveform Generator OCnx FOCn WGMn1:0 COMnX1:0 The OCR0A Register is double buffered when using any of the Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. For the normal and Clear Timer on Compare (CTC) modes of operation, the double buffering is disabled. The double buffering synchronizes the update of the OCR0A Compare Register to either top or bottom of the counting sequence. The synchronization prevents the occurrence of odd-length, non-symmetrical PWM pulses, thereby making the output glitch-free. The OCR0A Register access may seem complex, but this is not case. When the double buffering is enabled, the CPU has access to the OCR0A Buffer Register, and if double buffering is disabled the CPU will access the OCR0A directly. 12.5.1 Force Output Compare In non-PWM waveform generation modes, the match output of the comparator can be forced by writing a one to the Force Output Compare (FOC0A) bit. Forcing compare match will not set the OCF0A flag or reload/clear the timer, but the OC0A pin will be updated as if a real compare match had occurred (the COM0A1:0 bits settings define whether the OC0A pin is set, cleared or toggled). 12.5.2 Compare Match Blocking by TCNT0 Write All CPU write operations to the TCNT0 Register will block any compare match that occur in the next timer clock cycle, even when the timer is stopped. This feature allows OCR0A to be initialized to the same value as TCNT0 without triggering an interrupt when the Timer/Counter clock is enabled. 12.5.3 Using the Output Compare Unit Since writing TCNT0 in any mode of operation will block all compare matches for one timer clock cycle, there are risks involved when changing TCNT0 when using the Output Compare channel, independently of whether the Timer/Counter is running or not. If the value written to TCNT0 equals the OCR0A value, the compare match will be missed, resulting in incorrect waveform 102 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 generation. Similarly, do not write the TCNT0 value equal to BOTTOM when the counter is downcounting. The setup of the OC0A should be performed before setting the Data Direction Register for the port pin to output. The easiest way of setting the OC0A value is to use the Force Output Compare (FOC0A) strobe bits in Normal mode. The OC0A Register keeps its value even when changing between Waveform Generation modes. Be aware that the COM0A1:0 bits are not double buffered together with the compare value. Changing the COM0A1:0 bits will take effect immediately. 12.6 Compare Match Output Unit The Compare Output mode (COM0A1:0) bits have two functions. The Waveform Generator uses the COM0A1:0 bits for defining the Output Compare (OC0A) state at the next compare match. Also, the COM0A1:0 bits control the OC0A pin output source. Figure 12-4 shows a simplified schematic of the logic affected by the COM0A1:0 bit setting. The I/O Registers, I/O bits, and I/O pins in the figure are shown in bold. Only the parts of the general I/O port control registers (DDR and PORT) that are affected by the COM0A1:0 bits are shown. When referring to the OC0A state, the reference is for the internal OC0A Register, not the OC0A pin. If a system reset occur, the OC0A Register is reset to "0". Figure 12-4. Compare Match Output Unit, Schematic COMnx1 COMnx0 FOCnx Waveform Generator D Q 1 OCnx DATA BUS D 0 OCnx Pin Q PORT D Q DDR clk I/O 12.6.1 Compare Output Function The general I/O port function is overridden by the Output Compare (OC0A) from the Waveform Generator if either of the COM0A1:0 bits are set. However, the OC0A pin direction (input or output) is still controlled by the Data Direction Register (DDR) for the port pin. The Data Direction Register bit for the OC0A pin (DDR_OC0A) must be set as output before the OC0A value is visible on the pin. The port override function is independent of the Waveform Generation mode. The design of the Output Compare pin logic allows initialization of the OC0A state before the output is enabled. Note that some COM0A1:0 bit settings are reserved for certain modes of operation. See "8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 109. 103 7679H-CAN-08/08 12.6.2 Compare Output Mode and Waveform Generation The Waveform Generator uses the COM0A1:0 bits differently in Normal, CTC, and PWM modes. For all modes, setting the COM0A1:0 = 0 tells the Waveform Generator that no action on the OC0A Register is to be performed on the next compare match. For compare output actions in the non-PWM modes refer to Table 12-2 on page 110. For fast PWM mode, refer to Table 123 on page 110, and for phase correct PWM refer to Table 12-4 on page 111. A change of the COM0A1:0 bits state will have effect at the first compare match after the bits are written. For non-PWM modes, the action can be forced to have immediate effect by using the FOC0A strobe bits. 12.7 Modes of Operation The mode of operation, i.e., the behavior of the Timer/Counter and the Output Compare pins, is defined by the combination of the Waveform Generation mode (WGM01:0) and Compare Output mode (COM0A1:0) bits. The Compare Output mode bits do not affect the counting sequence, while the Waveform Generation mode bits do. The COM0A1:0 bits control whether the PWM output generated should be inverted or not (inverted or non-inverted PWM). For non-PWM modes the COM0A1:0 bits control whether the output should be set, cleared, or toggled at a compare match (See "Compare Match Output Unit" on page 103.). For detailed timing information refer to Figure 12-8, Figure 12-9, Figure 12-10 and Figure 12-11 in "Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams" on page 108. 12.7.1 Normal Mode The simplest mode of operation is the Normal mode (WGM01:0 = 0). In this mode the counting direction is always up (incrementing), and no counter clear is performed. The counter simply overruns when it passes its maximum 8-bit value (TOP = 0xFF) and then restarts from the bottom (0x00). In normal operation the Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV0) will be set in the same timer clock cycle as the TCNT0 becomes zero. The TOV0 flag in this case behaves like a ninth bit, except that it is only set, not cleared. However, combined with the timer overflow interrupt that automatically clears the TOV0 flag, the timer resolution can be increased by software. There are no special cases to consider in the Normal mode, a new counter value can be written anytime. The Output Compare unit can be used to generate interrupts at some given time. Using the Output Compare to generate waveforms in Normal mode is not recommended, since this will occupy too much of the CPU time. 12.7.2 Clear Timer on Compare Match (CTC) Mode In Clear Timer on Compare or CTC mode (WGM01:0 = 2), the OCR0A Register is used to manipulate the counter resolution. In CTC mode the counter is cleared to zero when the counter value (TCNT0) matches the OCR0A. The OCR0A defines the top value for the counter, hence also its resolution. This mode allows greater control of the compare match output frequency. It also simplifies the operation of counting external events. The timing diagram for the CTC mode is shown in Figure 12-5. The counter value (TCNT0) increases until a compare match occurs between TCNT0 and OCR0A, and then counter (TCNT0) is cleared. 104 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 12-5. CTC Mode, Timing Diagram OCnx Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (Toggle) Period (COMnx1:0 = 1) 1 2 3 4 An interrupt can be generated each time the counter value reaches the TOP value by using the OCF0A flag. If the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the TOP value. However, changing TOP to a value close to BOTTOM when the counter is running with none or a low prescaler value must be done with care since the CTC mode does not have the double buffering feature. If the new value written to OCR0A is lower than the current value of TCNT0, the counter will miss the compare match. The counter will then have to count to its maximum value (0xFF) and wrap around starting at 0x00 before the compare match can occur. For generating a waveform output in CTC mode, the OC0A output can be set to toggle its logical level on each compare match by setting the Compare Output mode bits to toggle mode (COM0A1:0 = 1). The OC0A value will not be visible on the port pin unless the data direction for the pin is set to output. The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of fOC0A = fclk_I/O/2 when OCR0A is set to zero (0x00). The waveform frequency is defined by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnx = -------------------------------------------------2 N ( 1 + OCRnx ) The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). As for the Normal mode of operation, the TOV0 flag is set in the same timer clock cycle that the counter counts from MAX to 0x00. 12.7.3 Fast PWM Mode The fast Pulse Width Modulation or fast PWM mode (WGM01:0 = 3) provides a high frequency PWM waveform generation option. The fast PWM differs from the other PWM option by its single-slope operation. The counter counts from BOTTOM to MAX then restarts from BOTTOM. In non-inverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OC0A) is cleared on the compare match between TCNT0 and OCR0A, and set at BOTTOM. In inverting Compare Output mode, the output is set on compare match and cleared at BOTTOM. Due to the single-slope operation, the operating frequency of the fast PWM mode can be twice as high as the phase correct PWM mode that use dual-slope operation. This high frequency makes the fast PWM mode well suited for power regulation, rectification, and DAC applications. High frequency allows physically small sized external components (coils, capacitors), and therefore reduces total system cost. In fast PWM mode, the counter is incremented until the counter value matches the MAX value. The counter is then cleared at the following timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the fast PWM mode is shown in Figure 12-6. The TCNT0 value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the single-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and 105 7679H-CAN-08/08 inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNT0 slopes represent compare matches between OCR0A and TCNT0. Figure 12-6. Fast PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCRnx Interrupt Flag Set OCRnx Update and TOVn Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV0) is set each time the counter reaches MAX. If the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the compare value. In fast PWM mode, the compare unit allows generation of PWM waveforms on the OC0A pin. Setting the COM0A1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM and an inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COM0A1:0 to three (See Table 12-3 on page 110). The actual OC0A value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output. The PWM waveform is generated by setting (or clearing) the OC0A Register at the compare match between OCR0A and TCNT0, and clearing (or setting) the OC0A Register at the timer clock cycle the counter is cleared (changes from MAX to BOTTOM). The PWM frequency for the output can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPWM = -----------------N 256 The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCR0A Register represents special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the fast PWM mode. If the OCR0A is set equal to BOTTOM, the output will be a narrow spike for each MAX+1 timer clock cycle. Setting the OCR0A equal to MAX will result in a constantly high or low output (depending on the polarity of the output set by the COM0A1:0 bits.) A frequency (with 50% duty cycle) waveform output in fast PWM mode can be achieved by setting OC0A to toggle its logical level on each compare match (COM0A1:0 = 1). The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of fOC0A = fclk_I/O/2 when OCR0A is set to zero. This feature is similar to the OC0A toggle in CTC mode, except the double buffer feature of the Output Compare unit is enabled in the fast PWM mode. 106 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 12.7.4 Phase Correct PWM Mode The phase correct PWM mode (WGM01:0 = 1) provides a high resolution phase correct PWM waveform generation option. The phase correct PWM mode is based on a dual-slope operation. The counter counts repeatedly from BOTTOM to MAX and then from MAX to BOTTOM. In noninverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OC0A) is cleared on the compare match between TCNT0 and OCR0A while upcounting, and set on the compare match while downcounting. In inverting Output Compare mode, the operation is inverted. The dual-slope operation has lower maximum operation frequency than single slope operation. However, due to the symmetric feature of the dual-slope PWM modes, these modes are preferred for motor control applications. The PWM resolution for the phase correct PWM mode is fixed to eight bits. In phase correct PWM mode the counter is incremented until the counter value matches MAX. When the counter reaches MAX, it changes the count direction. The TCNT0 value will be equal to MAX for one timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the phase correct PWM mode is shown on Figure 12-7. The TCNT0 value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the dual-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNT0 slopes represent compare matches between OCR0A and TCNT0. Figure 12-7. Phase Correct PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCnx Interrupt Flag Set OCRnx Update TOVn Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV0) is set each time the counter reaches BOTTOM. The interrupt flag can be used to generate an interrupt each time the counter reaches the BOTTOM value. In phase correct PWM mode, the compare unit allows generation of PWM waveforms on the OC0A pin. Setting the COM0A1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM. An inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COM0A1:0 to three (See Table 12-4 on page 111). The actual OC0A value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output. The PWM waveform is generated by clearing (or setting) the OC0A Register at the compare match between OCR0A and TCNT0 when the counter increments, and setting (or clearing) the OC0A Register at compare match between OCR0A and TCNT0 when the counter 107 7679H-CAN-08/08 decrements. The PWM frequency for the output when using phase correct PWM can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPCPWM = -----------------N 510 The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCR0A Register represent special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the phase correct PWM mode. If the OCR0A is set equal to BOTTOM, the output will be continuously low and if set equal to MAX the output will be continuously high for non-inverted PWM mode. For inverted PWM the output will have the opposite logic values. 12.8 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams The Timer/Counter is a synchronous design and the timer clock (clkT0) is therefore shown as a clock enable signal in the following figures. The figures include information on when interrupt flags are set. Figure 12-8 contains timing data for basic Timer/Counter operation. The figure shows the count sequence close to the MAX value in all modes other than phase correct PWM mode. Figure 12-8. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, no Prescaling clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /1) TCNTn MAX - 1 MAX BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOVn Figure 12-9 shows the same timing data, but with the prescaler enabled. Figure 12-9. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn MAX - 1 MAX BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOVn 108 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 12-10 shows the setting of OCF0A in all modes except CTC mode. Figure 12-10. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Setting of OCF0A, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn OCRnx - 1 OCRnx OCRnx OCRnx + 1 OCRnx + 2 OCRnx Value OCFnx Figure 12-11 shows the setting of OCF0A and the clearing of TCNT0 in CTC mode. Figure 12-11. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Clear Timer on Compare Match mode, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn (CTC) TOP - 1 TOP OCRnx BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOP OCFnx 12.9 12.9.1 8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description Timer/Counter0 Control Register A - TCCR0A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FOC0A WGM00 COM0A1 COM0A0 WGM01 CS02 CS01 CS00 Read/Write W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR0A * Bit 7 - FOC0A: Force Output Compare A The FOC0A bit is only active when the WGM00 bit specifies a non-PWM mode. However, for ensuring compatibility with future devices, this bit must be set to zero when TCCR0A is written when operating in PWM mode. When writing a logical one to the FOC0A bit, an immediate compare match is forced on the Waveform Generation unit. The OC0A output is changed according to its COM0A1:0 bits setting. Note that the FOC0A bit is implemented as a strobe. Therefore it is the value present in the COM0A1:0 bits that determines the effect of the forced compare. A FOC0A strobe will not generate any interrupt, nor will it clear the timer in CTC mode using OCR0A as TOP. The FOC0A bit is always read as zero. 109 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bit 6, 3 - WGM01:0: Waveform Generation Mode These bits control the counting sequence of the counter, the source for the maximum (TOP) counter value, and what type of waveform generation to be used. Modes of operation supported by the Timer/Counter unit are: Normal mode, Clear Timer on Compare match (CTC) mode, and two types of Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. See Table 12-1 and "Modes of Operation" on page 104. Table 12-1. Waveform Generation Mode Bit Description(1) Mode WGM01 (CTC0) WGM00 (PWM0) Timer/Counter Mode of Operation TOP Update of OCR0A at TOV0 Flag Set on 0 0 0 Normal 0xFF Immediate MAX 1 0 1 PWM, Phase Correct 0xFF TOP BOTTOM 2 1 0 CTC OCR0A Immediate MAX 3 1 1 Fast PWM 0xFF TOP MAX Note: 1. The CTC0 and PWM0 bit definition names are now obsolete. Use the WGM01:0 definitions. However, the functionality and location of these bits are compatible with previous versions of the timer. * Bit 5:4 - COM01:0: Compare Match Output Mode These bits control the Output Compare pin (OC0A) behavior. If one or both of the COM0A1:0 bits are set, the OC0A output overrides the normal port functionality of the I/O pin it is connected to. However, note that the Data Direction Register (DDR) bit corresponding to the OC0A pin must be set in order to enable the output driver. When OC0A is connected to the pin, the function of the COM0A1:0 bits depends on the WGM01:0 bit setting. Table 12-2 shows the COM0A1:0 bit functionality when the WGM01:0 bits are set to a normal or CTC mode (non-PWM). Table 12-2. Compare Output Mode, non-PWM Mode COM0A1 COM0A0 Description 0 0 Normal port operation, OC0A disconnected. 0 1 Toggle OC0A on compare match 1 0 Clear OC0A on compare match 1 1 Set OC0A on compare match Table 12-3 shows the COM0A1:0 bit functionality when the WGM01:0 bits are set to fast PWM mode. Table 12-3. 110 Compare Output Mode, Fast PWM Mode(1) COM0A1 COM0A0 Description 0 0 Normal port operation, OC0A disconnected. 0 1 Reserved 1 0 Clear OC0A on compare match. Set OC0A at TOP 1 1 Set OC0A on compare match. Clear OC0A at TOP AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Note: 1. A special case occurs when OCR0A equals TOP and COM0A1 is set. In this case, the compare match is ignored, but the set or clear is done at TOP. See "Fast PWM Mode" on page 105 for more details. Table 12-4 shows the COM0A1:0 bit functionality when the WGM01:0 bits are set to phase correct PWM mode. Compare Output Mode, Phase Correct PWM Mode(1) Table 12-4. COM0A1 COM0A0 0 0 Normal port operation, OC0A disconnected. 0 1 Reserved 1 0 Clear OC0A on compare match when up-counting. Set OC0A on compare match when downcounting. 1 1 Set OC0A on compare match when up-counting. Clear OC0A on compare match when downcounting. Note: Description 1. A special case occurs when OCR0A equals TOP and COM0A1 is set. In this case, the compare match is ignored, but the set or clear is done at TOP. See "Phase Correct PWM Mode" on page 107 for more details. * Bit 2:0 - CS02:0: Clock Select The three Clock Select bits select the clock source to be used by the Timer/Counter. Table 12-5. Clock Select Bit Description CS02 CS01 CS00 Description 0 0 0 No clock source (Timer/Counter stopped) 0 0 1 clkI/O/(No prescaling) 0 1 0 clkI/O/8 (From prescaler) 0 1 1 clkI/O/64 (From prescaler) 1 0 0 clkI/O/256 (From prescaler) 1 0 1 clkI/O/1024 (From prescaler) 1 1 0 External clock source on T0 pin. Clock on falling edge. 1 1 1 External clock source on T0 pin. Clock on rising edge. If external pin modes are used for the Timer/Counter0, transitions on the T0 pin will clock the counter even if the pin is configured as an output. This feature allows software control of the counting. 12.9.2 Timer/Counter0 Register - TCNT0 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TCNT0[7:0] TCNT0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Timer/Counter Register gives direct access, both for read and write operations, to the Timer/Counter unit 8-bit counter. Writing to the TCNT0 Register blocks (removes) the compare match on the following timer clock. Modifying the counter (TCNT0) while the counter is running, introduces a risk of missing a compare match between TCNT0 and the OCR0A Register. 111 7679H-CAN-08/08 12.9.3 Output Compare Register A - OCR0A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OCR0A[7:0] OCR0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Output Compare Register A contains an 8-bit value that is continuously compared with the counter value (TCNT0). A match can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt, or to generate a waveform output on the OC0A pin. 12.9.4 Timer/Counter0 Interrupt Mask Register - TIMSK0 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - OCIE0A TOIE0 Read/Write R R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIMSK0 * Bit 7..2 - Reserved Bits These are reserved bits for future use. * Bit 1 - OCIE0A: Timer/Counter0 Output Compare Match A Interrupt Enable When the OCIE0A bit is written to one, and the I-bit in the Status Register is set (one), the Timer/Counter0 Compare Match A interrupt is enabled. The corresponding interrupt is executed if a compare match in Timer/Counter0 occurs, i.e., when the OCF0A bit is set in the Timer/Counter 0 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR0. * Bit 0 - TOIE0: Timer/Counter0 Overflow Interrupt Enable When the TOIE0 bit is written to one, and the I-bit in the Status Register is set (one), the Timer/Counter0 Overflow interrupt is enabled. The corresponding interrupt is executed if an overflow in Timer/Counter0 occurs, i.e., when the TOV0 bit is set in the Timer/Counter 0 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR0. 12.9.5 Timer/Counter0 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR0 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - OCF0A TOV0 Read/Write R R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIFR0 * Bit 1 - OCF0A: Output Compare Flag 0 A The OCF0A bit is set (one) when a compare match occurs between the Timer/Counter0 and the data in OCR0A - Output Compare Register0. OCF0A is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, OCF0A is cleared by writing a logic one to the flag. When the I-bit in SREG, OCIE0A (Timer/Counter0 Compare match Interrupt Enable), and OCF0A are set (one), the Timer/Counter0 Compare match Interrupt is executed. * Bit 0 - TOV0: Timer/Counter0 Overflow Flag The bit TOV0 is set (one) when an overflow occurs in Timer/Counter0. TOV0 is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, TOV0 is cleared by writing a logic one to the flag. When the SREG I-bit, TOIE0 (Timer/Counter0 Overflow Interrupt Enable), and TOV0 are set (one), the Timer/Counter0 Overflow interrupt is executed. In phase correct PWM mode, this bit is set when Timer/Counter0 changes counting direction at 0x00. 112 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 13. 16-bit Timer/Counter (Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter3) The 16-bit Timer/Counter unit allows accurate program execution timing (event management), wave generation, and signal timing measurement. The main features are: 13.1 Features * * * * * * * * * * * 13.2 True 16-bit Design (i.e., Allows 16-bit PWM) Three independent Output Compare Units Double Buffered Output Compare Registers One Input Capture Unit Input Capture Noise Canceler Clear Timer on Compare Match (Auto Reload) Glitch-free, Phase Correct Pulse Width Modulator (PWM) Variable PWM Period Frequency Generator External Event Counter Four independent interrupt Sources (TOV1, OCF1A, OCF1B, and ICF1 for Timer/Counter1 - TOV3, OCF3A, OCF3B, and ICF3 for Timer/Counter3) Overview Many register and bit references in this section are written in general form. * A lower case "n" replaces the Timer/Counter number, in this case 1 or 3. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., TCNT1 for accessing Timer/Counter1 counter value and so on. * A lower case "x" replaces the Output Compare unit channel, in this case A, B or C. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., OCRnA for accessing Timer/Countern output compare channel A value and so on. A simplified block diagram of the 16-bit Timer/Counter is shown in Figure 13-1. For the actual placement of I/O pins, refer to "Pin Configurations" on page 5. CPU accessible I/O Registers, including I/O bits and I/O pins, are shown in bold. The device-specific I/O Register and bit locations are listed in the "16-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 135. 113 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 13-1. 16-bit Timer/Counter Block Diagram(1) Count Clear Direction TOVn (Int.Req.) Control Logic clk Tn Clock Select Edge Detector TOP Tn BOTTOM ( From Prescaler ) Timer/Counter TCNTn = =0 OCFnA (Int.Req.) Waveform Generation = OCnA OCRnA OCFnB (Int.Req.) Fixed TOP Values Waveform Generation DATABUS = OCnB OCRnB OCFnC (Int.Req.) Waveform Generation = OCRnC OCnC ( From Analog Comparator Ouput ) ICFn (Int.Req.) Edge Detector ICRn Noise Canceler ICPn TCCRnA Note: 13.2.1 TCCRnB TCCRnC 1. Refer to Figure 1-2 on page 5 or Figure 1-3 on page 6, Table 9-6 on page 76, and Table 9-15 on page 83 for Timer/Counter1 and 3 pin placement and description. Registers The Timer/Counter (TCNTn), Output Compare Registers (OCRnx), and Input Capture Register (ICRn) are all 16-bit registers. Special procedures must be followed when accessing the 16-bit registers. These procedures are described in the section "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. The Timer/Counter Control Registers (TCCRnx) are 8-bit registers and have no CPU access restrictions. Interrupt requests (abbreviated to Int.Req. in the figure) signals are all visible in the Timer Interrupt Flag Register (TIFRn). All interrupts are individually masked with the Timer Interrupt Mask Register (TIMSKn). TIFRn and TIMSKn are not shown in the figure. The Timer/Counter can be clocked internally, via the prescaler, or by an external clock source on the Tn pin. The Clock Select logic block controls which clock source and edge the Timer/Counter 114 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 uses to increment (or decrement) its value. The Timer/Counter is inactive when no clock source is selected. The output from the Clock Select logic is referred to as the timer clock (clkTn). The double buffered Output Compare Registers (OCRnx) are compared with the Timer/Counter value at all time. The result of the compare can be used by the Waveform Generator to generate a PWM or variable frequency output on the Output Compare pin (OCnx). See "Output Compare Units" on page 123.. The compare match event will also set the Compare Match Flag (OCFnx) which can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt request. The Input Capture Register can capture the Timer/Counter value at a given external (edge triggered) event on either the Input Capture pin (ICPn) or on the Analog Comparator pins (See "Analog Comparator" on page 269.) The Input Capture unit includes a digital filtering unit (Noise Canceler) for reducing the chance of capturing noise spikes. The TOP value, or maximum Timer/Counter value, can in some modes of operation be defined by either the OCRnA Register, the ICRn Register, or by a set of fixed values. When using OCRnA as TOP value in a PWM mode, the OCRnA Register can not be used for generating a PWM output. However, the TOP value will in this case be double buffered allowing the TOP value to be changed in run time. If a fixed TOP value is required, the ICRn Register can be used as an alternative, freeing the OCRnA to be used as PWM output. 13.2.2 Definitions The following definitions are used extensively throughout the section: 13.2.3 BOTTOM The counter reaches the BOTTOM when it becomes 0x0000. MAX The counter reaches its MAXimum when it becomes 0xFFFF (decimal 65,535). TOP The counter reaches the TOP when it becomes equal to the highest value in the count sequence. The TOP value can be assigned to be one of the fixed values: 0x00FF, 0x01FF, or 0x03FF, or to the value stored in the OCRnA or ICRn Register. The assignment is dependent of the mode of operation. Compatibility The 16-bit Timer/Counter has been updated and improved from previous versions of the 16-bit AVR Timer/Counter. This 16-bit Timer/Counter is fully compatible with the earlier version regarding: * All 16-bit Timer/Counter related I/O Register address locations, including Timer Interrupt Registers. * Bit locations inside all 16-bit Timer/Counter Registers, including Timer Interrupt Registers. * Interrupt Vectors. The following control bits have changed name, but have same functionality and register location: * PWMn0 is changed to WGMn0. * PWMn1 is changed to WGMn1. * CTCn is changed to WGMn2. The following registers are added to the 16-bit Timer/Counter: * Timer/Counter Control Register C (TCCRnC). * Output Compare Register C, OCRnCH and OCRnCL, combined OCRnC. 115 7679H-CAN-08/08 The 16-bit Timer/Counter has improvements that will affect the compatibility in some special cases. The following bits are added to the 16-bit Timer/Counter Control Registers: * COMnC1:0 are added to TCCRnA. * FOCnA, FOCnB and FOCnC are added to TCCRnC. * WGMn3 is added to TCCRnB. Interrupt flag and mask bits for output compare unit C are added. The 16-bit Timer/Counter has improvements that will affect the compatibility in some special cases. 13.3 Accessing 16-bit Registers The TCNTn, OCRnx, and ICRn are 16-bit registers that can be accessed by the AVR CPU via the 8-bit data bus. The 16-bit register must be byte accessed using two read or write operations. Each 16-bit timer has a single 8-bit register for temporary storing of the high byte of the 16-bit access. The same temporary register is shared between all 16-bit registers within each 16-bit timer. Accessing the low byte triggers the 16-bit read or write operation. When the low byte of a 16-bit register is written by the CPU, the high byte stored in the temporary register, and the low byte written are both copied into the 16-bit register in the same clock cycle. When the low byte of a 16-bit register is read by the CPU, the high byte of the 16-bit register is copied into the temporary register in the same clock cycle as the low byte is read. Not all 16-bit accesses uses the temporary register for the high byte. Reading the OCRnx 16-bit registers does not involve using the temporary register. To do a 16-bit write, the high byte must be written before the low byte. For a 16-bit read, the low byte must be read before the high byte. 116 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 13.3.1 Code Examples The following code examples show how to access the 16-bit timer registers assuming that no interrupts updates the temporary register. The same principle can be used directly for accessing the OCRnx and ICRn Registers. Note that when using "C", the compiler handles the 16-bit access. Assembly Code Examples(1) ... ; Set TCNTn to 0x01FF ldi r17,0x01 ldi r16,0xFF sts TCNTnH,r17 sts TCNTnL,r16 ; Read TCNTn into r17:r16 lds r16,TCNTnL lds r17,TCNTnH ... C Code Examples(1) unsigned int i; ... /* Set TCNTn to 0x01FF */ TCNTn = 0x1FF; /* Read TCNTn into i */ i = TCNTn; ... Note: 1. The example code assumes that the part specific header file is included. The assembly code example returns the TCNTn value in the r17:r16 register pair. It is important to notice that accessing 16-bit registers are atomic operations. If an interrupt occurs between the two instructions accessing the 16-bit register, and the interrupt code updates the temporary register by accessing the same or any other of the 16-bit timer registers, then the result of the access outside the interrupt will be corrupted. Therefore, when both the main code and the interrupt code update the temporary register, the main code must disable the interrupts during the 16-bit access. 117 7679H-CAN-08/08 The following code examples show how to do an atomic read of the TCNTn Register contents. Reading any of the OCRnx or ICRn Registers can be done by using the same principle. Assembly Code Example(1) TIM16_ReadTCNTn: ; Save global interrupt flag in r18,SREG ; Disable interrupts cli ; Read TCNTn into r17:r16 lds r16,TCNTnL lds r17,TCNTnH ; Restore global interrupt flag out SREG,r18 ret C Code Example(1) unsigned int TIM16_ReadTCNTn(void) { unsigned char sreg; unsigned int i; /* Save global interrupt flag */ sreg = SREG; /* Disable interrupts */ _CLI(); /* Read TCNTn into i */ i = TCNTn; /* Restore global interrupt flag */ SREG = sreg; return i; } Note: 1. The example code assumes that the part specific header file is included. The assembly code example returns the TCNTn value in the r17:r16 register pair. 118 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The following code examples show how to do an atomic write of the TCNTn Register contents. Writing any of the OCRnx or ICRn Registers can be done by using the same principle. Assembly Code Example(1) TIM16_WriteTCNTn: ; Save global interrupt flag in r18,SREG ; Disable interrupts cli ; Set TCNTn to r17:r16 sts TCNTnH,r17 sts TCNTnL,r16 ; Restore global interrupt flag out SREG,r18 ret C Code Example(1) void TIM16_WriteTCNTn(unsigned int i) { unsigned char sreg; unsigned int i; /* Save global interrupt flag */ sreg = SREG; /* Disable interrupts */ _CLI(); /* Set TCNTn to i */ TCNTn = i; /* Restore global interrupt flag */ SREG = sreg; } Note: 1. The example code assumes that the part specific header file is included. The assembly code example requires that the r17:r16 register pair contains the value to be written to TCNTn. 13.3.2 13.4 Reusing the Temporary High Byte Register If writing to more than one 16-bit register where the high byte is the same for all registers written, then the high byte only needs to be written once. However, note that the same rule of atomic operation described previously also applies in this case. Timer/Counter Clock Sources The Timer/Counter can be clocked by an internal or an external clock source. The clock source is selected by the Clock Select logic which is controlled by the Clock Select (CSn2:0) bits located in the Timer/Counter control Register B (TCCRnB). For details on clock sources and prescaler, see "Timer/Counter3/1/0 Prescalers" on page 96. 119 7679H-CAN-08/08 13.5 Counter Unit The main part of the 16-bit Timer/Counter is the programmable 16-bit bi-directional counter unit. Figure 13-2 shows a block diagram of the counter and its surroundings. Figure 13-2. Counter Unit Block Diagram DATA BUS (8-bit) TOVn (Int.Req.) TEMP (8-bit) Clock Select Count TCNTnH (8-bit) TCNTnL (8-bit) TCNTn (16-bit Counter) Clear Direction Control Logic clkTn Edge Detector Tn ( From Prescaler ) TOP BOTTOM Signal description (internal signals): Count Increment or decrement TCNTn by 1. Direction Select between increment and decrement. Clear Clear TCNTn (set all bits to zero). clkTn Timer/Counter clock. TOP Signalize that TCNTn has reached maximum value. BOTTOM Signalize that TCNTn has reached minimum value (zero). The 16-bit counter is mapped into two 8-bit I/O memory locations: Counter High (TCNTnH) containing the upper eight bits of the counter, and Counter Low (TCNTnL) containing the lower eight bits. The TCNTnH Register can only be indirectly accessed by the CPU. When the CPU does an access to the TCNTnH I/O location, the CPU accesses the high byte temporary register (TEMP). The temporary register is updated with the TCNTnH value when the TCNTnL is read, and TCNTnH is updated with the temporary register value when TCNTnL is written. This allows the CPU to read or write the entire 16-bit counter value within one clock cycle via the 8-bit data bus. It is important to notice that there are special cases of writing to the TCNTn Register when the counter is counting that will give unpredictable results. The special cases are described in the sections where they are of importance. Depending on the mode of operation used, the counter is cleared, incremented, or decremented at each timer clock (clkTn). The clkTn can be generated from an external or internal clock source, selected by the Clock Select bits (CSn2:0). When no clock source is selected (CSn2:0 = 0) the timer is stopped. However, the TCNTn value can be accessed by the CPU, independent of whether clkTn is present or not. A CPU write overrides (has priority over) all counter clear or count operations. The counting sequence is determined by the setting of the Waveform Generation mode bits (WGMn3:0) located in the Timer/Counter Control Registers A and B (TCCRnA and TCCRnB). There are close connections between how the counter behaves (counts) and how waveforms are generated on the Output Compare outputs OCnx. For more details about advanced counting sequences and waveform generation, see "Modes of Operation" on page 126. 120 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) is set according to the mode of operation selected by the WGMn3:0 bits. TOVn can be used for generating a CPU interrupt. 13.6 Input Capture Unit The Timer/Counter incorporates an Input Capture unit that can capture external events and give them a time-stamp indicating time of occurrence. The external signal indicating an event, or multiple events, can be applied via the ICPn pin or alternatively, via the analog-comparator unit. The time-stamps can then be used to calculate frequency, duty-cycle, and other features of the signal applied. Alternatively the time-stamps can be used for creating a log of the events. The Input Capture unit is illustrated by the block diagram shown in Figure 13-3. The elements of the block diagram that are not directly a part of the Input Capture unit are gray shaded. Figure 13-3. Input Capture Unit Block Diagram DATA BUS (8-bit) TEMP (8-bit) ICRnH (8-bit) WRITE ICRnL (8-bit) TCNTnH (8-bit) ICRn (16-bit Register) ICP3 ACIC* TCNTnL (8-bit) TCNTn (16-bit Counter) ICNC3 ICES3 Noise Canceler Edge Detector ICNC1 ICES1 Noise Canceler Edge Detector ICF3 (Int.Req.) ICP1 ICF1 (Int.Req.) ACO* Analog Comparator Note: The Analog Comparator Output (ACO) can only trigger the Timer/Counter1 IC Unit- not Timer/Counter3. When a change of the logic level (an event) occurs on the Input Capture pin (ICPn), alternatively on the Analog Comparator output (ACO), and this change confirms to the setting of the edge detector, a capture will be triggered. When a capture is triggered, the 16-bit value of the counter (TCNTn) is written to the Input Capture Register (ICRn). The Input Capture Flag (ICFn) is set at the same system clock as the TCNTn value is copied into ICRn Register. If enabled (ICIEn = 1), the Input Capture Flag generates an Input Capture interrupt. The ICFn flag is automatically 121 7679H-CAN-08/08 cleared when the interrupt is executed. Alternatively the ICFn flag can be cleared by software by writing a logical one to its I/O bit location. Reading the 16-bit value in the Input Capture Register (ICRn) is done by first reading the low byte (ICRnL) and then the high byte (ICRnH). When the low byte is read the high byte is copied into the high byte temporary register (TEMP). When the CPU reads the ICRnH I/O location it will access the TEMP Register. The ICRn Register can only be written when using a Waveform Generation mode that utilizes the ICRn Register for defining the counter's TOP value. In these cases the Waveform Generation mode (WGMn3:0) bits must be set before the TOP value can be written to the ICRn Register. When writing the ICRn Register the high byte must be written to the ICRnH I/O location before the low byte is written to ICRnL. For more information on how to access the 16-bit registers refer to "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. 13.6.1 Input Capture Trigger Source The main trigger source for the Input Capture unit is the Input Capture pin (ICPn). Only Timer/Counter1 can alternatively use the Analog Comparator output as trigger source for the Input Capture unit. The Analog Comparator is selected as trigger source by setting the Analog Comparator Input Capture (ACIC) bit in the Analog Comparator Control and Status Register (ACSR). Be aware that changing trigger source can trigger a capture. The Input Capture Flag must therefore be cleared after the change. Both the Input Capture pin (ICPn) and the Analog Comparator output (ACO) inputs are sampled using the same technique as for the Tn pin (Figure 11-1 on page 97). The edge detector is also identical. However, when the noise canceler is enabled, additional logic is inserted before the edge detector, which increases the delay by four system clock cycles. Note that the input of the noise canceler and edge detector is always enabled unless the Timer/Counter is set in a Waveform Generation mode that uses ICRn to define TOP. An Input Capture can be triggered by software by controlling the port of the ICPn pin. 13.6.2 Noise Canceler The noise canceler improves noise immunity by using a simple digital filtering scheme. The noise canceler input is monitored over four samples, and all four must be equal for changing the output that in turn is used by the edge detector. The noise canceler is enabled by setting the Input Capture Noise Canceler (ICNCn) bit in Timer/Counter Control Register B (TCCRnB). When enabled the noise canceler introduces additional four system clock cycles of delay from a change applied to the input, to the update of the ICRn Register. The noise canceler uses the system clock and is therefore not affected by the prescaler. 13.6.3 Using the Input Capture Unit The main challenge when using the Input Capture unit is to assign enough processor capacity for handling the incoming events. The time between two events is critical. If the processor has not read the captured value in the ICRn Register before the next event occurs, the ICRn will be overwritten with a new value. In this case the result of the capture will be incorrect. When using the Input Capture interrupt, the ICRn Register should be read as early in the interrupt handler routine as possible. Even though the Input Capture interrupt has relatively high 122 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 priority, the maximum interrupt response time is dependent on the maximum number of clock cycles it takes to handle any of the other interrupt requests. Using the Input Capture unit in any mode of operation when the TOP value (resolution) is actively changed during operation, is not recommended. Measurement of an external signal's duty cycle requires that the trigger edge is changed after each capture. Changing the edge sensing must be done as early as possible after the ICRn Register has been read. After a change of the edge, the Input Capture Flag (ICFn) must be cleared by software (writing a logical one to the I/O bit location). For measuring frequency only, the clearing of the ICFn flag is not required (if an interrupt handler is used). 13.7 Output Compare Units The 16-bit comparator continuously compares TCNTn with the Output Compare Register (OCRnx). If TCNT equals OCRnx the comparator signals a match. A match will set the Output Compare Flag (OCFnx) at the next timer clock cycle. If enabled (OCIEnx = 1), the Output Compare Flag generates an Output Compare interrupt. The OCFnx flag is automatically cleared when the interrupt is executed. Alternatively the OCFnx flag can be cleared by software by writing a logical one to its I/O bit location. The Waveform Generator uses the match signal to generate an output according to operating mode set by the Waveform Generation mode (WGMn3:0) bits and Compare Output mode (COMnx1:0) bits. The TOP and BOTTOM signals are used by the Waveform Generator for handling the special cases of the extreme values in some modes of operation (See "Modes of Operation" on page 126.) A special feature of Output Compare unit A allows it to define the Timer/Counter TOP value (i.e., counter resolution). In addition to the counter resolution, the TOP value defines the period time for waveforms generated by the Waveform Generator. Figure 13-4 shows a block diagram of the Output Compare unit. The elements of the block diagram that are not directly a part of the Output Compare unit are gray shaded. 123 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 13-4. Output Compare Unit, Block Diagram DATA BUS (8-bit) TEMP (8-bit) OCRnxH Buf.(8-bit) OCRnxL Buf.(8-bit) TCNTnH (8-bit) OCRnx Buffer (16-bit Register) OCRnxH (8-bit) TCNTnL (8-bit) TCNTn (16-bit Counter) OCRnxL (8-bit) OCRnx (16-bit Register) = (16-bit Comparator ) OCFnx TOP BOTTOM Waveform Generator WGMn3:0 (Int.Req.) OCnx COMnx1:0 The OCRnx Register is double buffered when using any of the twelve Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. For the Normal and Clear Timer on Compare (CTC) modes of operation, the double buffering is disabled. The double buffering synchronizes the update of the OCRnx Compare Register to either TOP or BOTTOM of the counting sequence. The synchronization prevents the occurrence of odd-length, non-symmetrical PWM pulses, thereby making the output glitch-free. The OCRnx Register access may seem complex, but this is not case. When the double buffering is enabled, the CPU has access to the OCRnx Buffer Register, and if double buffering is disabled the CPU will access the OCRnx directly. The content of the OCRnx (Buffer or Compare) Register is only changed by a write operation (the Timer/Counter does not update this register automatically as the TCNT1 and ICRn Register). Therefore OCRnx is not read via the high byte temporary register (TEMP). However, it is a good practice to read the low byte first as when accessing other 16-bit registers. Writing the OCRnx Registers must be done via the TEMP Register since the compare of all 16 bits is done continuously. The high byte (OCRnxH) has to be written first. When the high byte I/O location is written by the CPU, the TEMP Register will be updated by the value written. Then when the low byte (OCRnxL) is written to the lower eight bits, the high byte will be copied into the upper 8-bits of either the OCRnx buffer or OCRnx Compare Register in the same system clock cycle. For more information of how to access the 16-bit registers refer to "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. 13.7.1 124 Force Output Compare In non-PWM Waveform Generation modes, the match output of the comparator can be forced by writing a one to the Force Output Compare (FOCnx) bit. Forcing compare match will not set the OCFnx flag or reload/clear the timer, but the OCnx pin will be updated as if a real compare AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 match had occurred (the COMnx1:0 bits settings define whether the OCnx pin is set, cleared or toggled). 13.7.2 Compare Match Blocking by TCNTn Write All CPU writes to the TCNTn Register will block any compare match that occurs in the next timer clock cycle, even when the timer is stopped. This feature allows OCRnx to be initialized to the same value as TCNTn without triggering an interrupt when the Timer/Counter clock is enabled. 13.7.3 Using the Output Compare Unit Since writing TCNTn in any mode of operation will block all compare matches for one timer clock cycle, there are risks involved when changing TCNTn when using any of the Output Compare channels, independent of whether the Timer/Counter is running or not. If the value written to TCNTn equals the OCRnx value, the compare match will be missed, resulting in incorrect waveform generation. Do not write the TCNTn equal to TOP in PWM modes with variable TOP values. The compare match for the TOP will be ignored and the counter will continue to 0xFFFF. Similarly, do not write the TCNTn value equal to BOTTOM when the counter is downcounting. The setup of the OCnx should be performed before setting the Data Direction Register for the port pin to output. The easiest way of setting the OCnx value is to use the Force Output Compare (FOCnx) strobe bits in Normal mode. The OCnx Register keeps its value even when changing between Waveform Generation modes. Be aware that the COMnx1:0 bits are not double buffered together with the compare value. Changing the COMnx1:0 bits will take effect immediately. 13.8 Compare Match Output Unit The Compare Output mode (COMnx1:0) bits have two functions. The Waveform Generator uses the COMnx1:0 bits for defining the Output Compare (OCnx) state at the next compare match. Secondly the COMnx1:0 bits control the OCnx pin output source. Figure 13-5 shows a simplified schematic of the logic affected by the COMnx1:0 bit setting. The I/O Registers, I/O bits, and I/O pins in the figure are shown in bold. Only the parts of the general I/O port control registers (DDR and PORT) that are affected by the COMnx1:0 bits are shown. When referring to the OCnx state, the reference is for the internal OCnx Register, not the OCnx pin. If a system reset occur, the OCnx Register is reset to "0". 125 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 13-5. Compare Match Output Unit, Schematic COMnx1 COMnx0 FOCnx Waveform Generator D Q 1 OCnx DATA BUS D 0 OCnx Pin Q PORT D Q DDR clk I/O 13.8.1 Compare Output Function The general I/O port function is overridden by the Output Compare (OCnx) from the Waveform Generator if either of the COMnx1:0 bits are set. However, the OCnx pin direction (input or output) is still controlled by the Data Direction Register (DDR) for the port pin. The Data Direction Register bit for the OCnx pin (DDR_OCnx) must be set as output before the OCnx value is visible on the pin. The port override function is generally independent of the Waveform Generation mode, but there are some exceptions. Refer to Table 13-1, Table 13-2 and Table 13-3 for details. The design of the Output Compare pin logic allows initialization of the OCnx state before the output is enabled. Note that some COMnx1:0 bit settings are reserved for certain modes of operation. See "16-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 135. The COMnx1:0 bits have no effect on the Input Capture unit. 13.8.2 Compare Output Mode and Waveform Generation The Waveform Generator uses the COMnx1:0 bits differently in normal, CTC, and PWM modes. For all modes, setting the COMnx1:0 = 0 tells the Waveform Generator that no action on the OCnx Register is to be performed on the next compare match. For compare output actions in the non-PWM modes refer to Table 13-1 on page 136. For fast PWM mode refer to Table 13-2 on page 136, and for phase correct and phase and frequency correct PWM refer to Table 13-3 on page 137. A change of the COMnx1:0 bits state will have effect at the first compare match after the bits are written. For non-PWM modes, the action can be forced to have immediate effect by using the FOCnx strobe bits. 13.9 Modes of Operation The mode of operation, i.e., the behavior of the Timer/Counter and the Output Compare pins, is defined by the combination of the Waveform Generation mode (WGMn3:0) and Compare Output mode (COMnx1:0) bits. The Compare Output mode bits do not affect the counting sequence, 126 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 while the Waveform Generation mode bits do. The COMnx1:0 bits control whether the PWM output generated should be inverted or not (inverted or non-inverted PWM). For non-PWM modes the COMnx1:0 bits control whether the output should be set, cleared or toggle at a compare match (See "Compare Match Output Unit" on page 125.) For detailed timing information refer to "Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams" on page 134. 13.9.1 Normal Mode The simplest mode of operation is the Normal mode (WGMn3:0 = 0). In this mode the counting direction is always up (incrementing), and no counter clear is performed. The counter simply overruns when it passes its maximum 16-bit value (MAX = 0xFFFF) and then restarts from the BOTTOM (0x0000). In normal operation the Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) will be set in the same timer clock cycle as the TCNTn becomes zero. The TOVn flag in this case behaves like a 17th bit, except that it is only set, not cleared. However, combined with the timer overflow interrupt that automatically clears the TOVn flag, the timer resolution can be increased by software. There are no special cases to consider in the Normal mode, a new counter value can be written anytime. The Input Capture unit is easy to use in Normal mode. However, observe that the maximum interval between the external events must not exceed the resolution of the counter. If the interval between events are too long, the timer overflow interrupt or the prescaler must be used to extend the resolution for the capture unit. The Output Compare units can be used to generate interrupts at some given time. Using the Output Compare to generate waveforms in Normal mode is not recommended, since this will occupy too much of the CPU time. 13.9.2 Clear Timer on Compare Match (CTC) Mode In Clear Timer on Compare or CTC mode (WGMn3:0 = 4 or 12), the OCRnA or ICRn Register are used to manipulate the counter resolution. In CTC mode the counter is cleared to zero when the counter value (TCNTn) matches either the OCRnA (WGMn3:0 = 4) or the ICRn (WGMn3:0 = 12). The OCRnA or ICRn define the top value for the counter, hence also its resolution. This mode allows greater control of the compare match output frequency. It also simplifies the operation of counting external events. The timing diagram for the CTC mode is shown in Figure 13-6. The counter value (TCNTn) increases until a compare match occurs with either OCRnA or ICRn, and then counter (TCNTn) is cleared. Figure 13-6. CTC Mode, Timing Diagram OCnA Interrupt Flag Set or ICFn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on TOP) TCNTn OCnA (Toggle) Period (COMnA1:0 = 1) 1 2 3 4 127 7679H-CAN-08/08 An interrupt can be generated at each time the counter value reaches the TOP value by either using the OCFnA or ICFn flag according to the register used to define the TOP value. If the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the TOP value. However, changing the TOP to a value close to BOTTOM when the counter is running with none or a low prescaler value must be done with care since the CTC mode does not have the double buffering feature. If the new value written to OCRnA or ICRn is lower than the current value of TCNTn, the counter will miss the compare match. The counter will then have to count to its maximum value (0xFFFF) and wrap around starting at 0x0000 before the compare match can occur. In many cases this feature is not desirable. An alternative will then be to use the fast PWM mode using OCRnA for defining TOP (WGMn3:0 = 15) since the OCRnA then will be double buffered. For generating a waveform output in CTC mode, the OCnA output can be set to toggle its logical level on each compare match by setting the Compare Output mode bits to toggle mode (COMnA1:0 = 1). The OCnA value will not be visible on the port pin unless the data direction for the pin is set to output (DDR_OCnA = 1). The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of fOCnA = fclk_I/O/2 when OCRnA is set to zero (0x0000). The waveform frequency is defined by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnA = --------------------------------------------------2 N ( 1 + OCRnA ) The N variable represents the prescaler factor (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). As for the Normal mode of operation, the TOVn flag is set in the same timer clock cycle that the counter counts from MAX to 0x0000. 13.9.3 Fast PWM Mode The fast Pulse Width Modulation or fast PWM mode (WGMn3:0 = 5, 6, 7, 14, or 15) provides a high frequency PWM waveform generation option. The fast PWM differs from the other PWM options by its single-slope operation. The counter counts from BOTTOM to TOP then restarts from BOTTOM. In non-inverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OCnx) is set on the compare match between TCNTn and OCRnx, and cleared at TOP. In inverting Compare Output mode output is cleared on compare match and set at TOP. Due to the single-slope operation, the operating frequency of the fast PWM mode can be twice as high as the phase correct and phase and frequency correct PWM modes that use dual-slope operation. This high frequency makes the fast PWM mode well suited for power regulation, rectification, and DAC applications. High frequency allows physically small sized external components (coils, capacitors), hence reduces total system cost. The PWM resolution for fast PWM can be fixed to 8-, 9-, or 10-bit, or defined by either ICRn or OCRnA. The minimum resolution allowed is 2-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to 0x0003), and the maximum resolution is 16-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to MAX). The PWM resolution in bits can be calculated by using the following equation: log ( TOP + 1 ) R FPWM = ----------------------------------log ( 2 ) In fast PWM mode the counter is incremented until the counter value matches either one of the fixed values 0x00FF, 0x01FF, or 0x03FF (WGMn3:0 = 5, 6, or 7), the value in ICRn (WGMn3:0 = 14), or the value in OCRnA (WGMn3:0 = 15). The counter is then cleared at the following timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the fast PWM mode is shown in Figure 13-7. The figure 128 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 shows fast PWM mode when OCRnA or ICRn is used to define TOP. The TCNTn value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the single-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNTn slopes represent compare matches between OCRnx and TCNTn. The OCnx interrupt flag will be set when a compare match occurs. Figure 13-7. Fast PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCRnx/TOP Update and TOVn Interrupt Flag Set and OCnA Interrupt Flag Set or ICFn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on TOP) TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) is set each time the counter reaches TOP. In addition the OCnA or ICFn flag is set at the same timer clock cycle as TOVn is set when either OCRnA or ICRn is used for defining the TOP value. If one of the interrupts are enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the TOP and compare values. When changing the TOP value the program must ensure that the new TOP value is higher or equal to the value of all of the Compare Registers. If the TOP value is lower than any of the Compare Registers, a compare match will never occur between the TCNTn and the OCRnx. Note that when using fixed TOP values the unused bits are masked to zero when any of the OCRnx Registers are written. The procedure for updating ICRn differs from updating OCRnA when used for defining the TOP value. The ICRn Register is not double buffered. This means that if ICRn is changed to a low value when the counter is running with none or a low prescaler value, there is a risk that the new ICRn value written is lower than the current value of TCNTn. The result will then be that the counter will miss the compare match at the TOP value. The counter will then have to count to the MAX value (0xFFFF) and wrap around starting at 0x0000 before the compare match can occur. The OCRnA Register however, is double buffered. This feature allows the OCRnA I/O location to be written anytime. When the OCRnA I/O location is written the value written will be put into the OCRnA Buffer Register. The OCRnA Compare Register will then be updated with the value in the Buffer Register at the next timer clock cycle the TCNTn matches TOP. The update is done at the same timer clock cycle as the TCNTn is cleared and the TOVn flag is set. Using the ICRn Register for defining TOP works well when using fixed TOP values. By using ICRn, the OCRnA Register is free to be used for generating a PWM output on OCnA. However, if the base PWM frequency is actively changed (by changing the TOP value), using the OCRnA as TOP is clearly a better choice due to its double buffer feature. 129 7679H-CAN-08/08 In fast PWM mode, the compare units allow generation of PWM waveforms on the OCnx pins. Setting the COMnx1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM and an inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COMnx1:0 to three (see Table on page 136). The actual OCnx value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output (DDR_OCnx). The PWM waveform is generated by setting (or clearing) the OCnx Register at the compare match between OCRnx and TCNTn, and clearing (or setting) the OCnx Register at the timer clock cycle the counter is cleared (changes from TOP to BOTTOM). The PWM frequency for the output can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPWM = ----------------------------------N ( 1 + TOP ) The N variable represents the prescaler divider (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCRnx Register represents special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the fast PWM mode. If the OCRnx is set equal to BOTTOM (0x0000) the output will be a narrow spike for each TOP+1 timer clock cycle. Setting the OCRnx equal to TOP will result in a constant high or low output (depending on the polarity of the output set by the COMnx1:0 bits.) A frequency (with 50% duty cycle) waveform output in fast PWM mode can be achieved by setting OCnA to toggle its logical level on each compare match (COMnA1:0 = 1). The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of f OC n A = fclk_I/O /2 when OCRnA is set to zero (0x0000). This feature is similar to the OCnA toggle in CTC mode, except the double buffer feature of the Output Compare unit is enabled in the fast PWM mode. 13.9.4 Phase Correct PWM Mode The phase correct Pulse Width Modulation or phase correct PWM mode (WGMn3:0 = 1, 2, 3, 10, or 11) provides a high resolution phase correct PWM waveform generation option. The phase correct PWM mode is, like the phase and frequency correct PWM mode, based on a dualslope operation. The counter counts repeatedly from BOTTOM (0x0000) to TOP and then from TOP to BOTTOM. In non-inverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OCnx) is cleared on the compare match between TCNTn and OCRnx while upcounting, and set on the compare match while downcounting. In inverting Output Compare mode, the operation is inverted. The dual-slope operation has lower maximum operation frequency than single slope operation. However, due to the symmetric feature of the dual-slope PWM modes, these modes are preferred for motor control applications. The PWM resolution for the phase correct PWM mode can be fixed to 8-, 9-, or 10-bit, or defined by either ICRn or OCRnA. The minimum resolution allowed is 2-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to 0x0003), and the maximum resolution is 16-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to MAX). The PWM resolution in bits can be calculated by using the following equation: log ( TOP + 1 ) R PCPWM = ----------------------------------log ( 2 ) In phase correct PWM mode the counter is incremented until the counter value matches either one of the fixed values 0x00FF, 0x01FF, or 0x03FF (WGMn3:0 = 1, 2, or 3), the value in ICRn (WGMn3:0 = 10), or the value in OCRnA (WGMn3:0 = 11). The counter has then reached the TOP and changes the count direction. The TCNTn value will be equal to TOP for one timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the phase correct PWM mode is shown on Figure 13-8. The figure shows phase correct PWM mode when OCRnA or ICRn is used to define TOP. The TCNTn 130 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the dual-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNTn slopes represent compare matches between OCRnx and TCNTn. The OCnx interrupt flag will be set when a compare match occurs. Figure 13-8. Phase Correct PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCRnx/TOP Update and OCnA Interrupt Flag Set or ICFn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on TOP) TOVn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on Bottom) TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 4 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) is set each time the counter reaches BOTTOM. When either OCRnA or ICRn is used for defining the TOP value, the OCnA or ICFn flag is set accordingly at the same timer clock cycle as the OCRnx Registers are updated with the double buffer value (at TOP). The interrupt flags can be used to generate an interrupt each time the counter reaches the TOP or BOTTOM value. When changing the TOP value the program must ensure that the new TOP value is higher or equal to the value of all of the Compare Registers. If the TOP value is lower than any of the Compare Registers, a compare match will never occur between the TCNTn and the OCRnx. Note that when using fixed TOP values, the unused bits are masked to zero when any of the OCRnx Registers are written. As the third period shown in Figure 13-8 illustrates, changing the TOP actively while the Timer/Counter is running in the phase correct mode can result in an unsymmetrical output. The reason for this can be found in the time of update of the OCRnx Register. Since the OCRnx update occurs at TOP, the PWM period starts and ends at TOP. This implies that the length of the falling slope is determined by the previous TOP value, while the length of the rising slope is determined by the new TOP value. When these two values differ the two slopes of the period will differ in length. The difference in length gives the unsymmetrical result on the output. It is recommended to use the phase and frequency correct mode instead of the phase correct mode when changing the TOP value while the Timer/Counter is running. When using a static TOP value there are practically no differences between the two modes of operation. In phase correct PWM mode, the compare units allow generation of PWM waveforms on the OCnx pins. Setting the COMnx1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM and an inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COMnx1:0 to three (See Table on page 137). The actual OCnx value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as 131 7679H-CAN-08/08 output (DDR_OCnx). The PWM waveform is generated by setting (or clearing) the OCnx Register at the compare match between OCRnx and TCNTn when the counter increments, and clearing (or setting) the OCnx Register at compare match between OCRnx and TCNTn when the counter decrements. The PWM frequency for the output when using phase correct PWM can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPCPWM = ---------------------------2 N TOP The N variable represents the prescaler divider (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCRnx Register represent special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the phase correct PWM mode. If the OCRnx is set equal to BOTTOM the output will be continuously low and if set equal to TOP the output will be continuously high for non-inverted PWM mode. For inverted PWM the output will have the opposite logic values. 13.9.5 Phase and Frequency Correct PWM Mode The phase and frequency correct Pulse Width Modulation, or phase and frequency correct PWM mode (WGMn3:0 = 8 or 9) provides a high resolution phase and frequency correct PWM waveform generation option. The phase and frequency correct PWM mode is, like the phase correct PWM mode, based on a dual-slope operation. The counter counts repeatedly from BOTTOM (0x0000) to TOP and then from TOP to BOTTOM. In non-inverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OCnx) is cleared on the compare match between TCNTn and OCRnx while upcounting, and set on the compare match while downcounting. In inverting Compare Output mode, the operation is inverted. The dual-slope operation gives a lower maximum operation frequency compared to the single-slope operation. However, due to the symmetric feature of the dual-slope PWM modes, these modes are preferred for motor control applications. The main difference between the phase correct, and the phase and frequency correct PWM mode is the time the OCRnx Register is updated by the OCRnx Buffer Register, (see Figure 138 and Figure 13-9). The PWM resolution for the phase and frequency correct PWM mode can be defined by either ICRn or OCRnA. The minimum resolution allowed is 2-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to 0x0003), and the maximum resolution is 16-bit (ICRn or OCRnA set to MAX). The PWM resolution in bits can be calculated using the following equation: log ( TOP + 1 ) R PFCPWM = ----------------------------------log ( 2 ) In phase and frequency correct PWM mode the counter is incremented until the counter value matches either the value in ICRn (WGMn3:0 = 8), or the value in OCRnA (WGMn3:0 = 9). The counter has then reached the TOP and changes the count direction. The TCNTn value will be equal to TOP for one timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the phase correct and frequency correct PWM mode is shown on Figure 13-9. The figure shows phase and frequency correct PWM mode when OCRnA or ICRn is used to define TOP. The TCNTn value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the dual-slope operation. The diagram includes noninverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNTn slopes represent compare matches between OCRnx and TCNTn. The OCnx interrupt flag will be set when a compare match occurs. 132 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 13-9. Phase and Frequency Correct PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCnA Interrupt Flag Set or ICFn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on TOP) OCRnx/TOP Update and TOVn Interrupt Flag Set (Interrupt on Bottom) TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 4 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) is set at the same timer clock cycle as the OCRnx Registers are updated with the double buffer value (at BOTTOM). When either OCRnA or ICRn is used for defining the TOP value, the OCnA or ICFn flag set when TCNTn has reached TOP. The interrupt flags can then be used to generate an interrupt each time the counter reaches the TOP or BOTTOM value. When changing the TOP value the program must ensure that the new TOP value is higher or equal to the value of all of the Compare Registers. If the TOP value is lower than any of the Compare Registers, a compare match will never occur between the TCNTn and the OCRnx. As Figure 13-9 shows the output generated is, in contrast to the phase correct mode, symmetrical in all periods. Since the OCRnx Registers are updated at BOTTOM, the length of the rising and the falling slopes will always be equal. This gives symmetrical output pulses and is therefore frequency correct. Using the ICRn Register for defining TOP works well when using fixed TOP values. By using ICRn, the OCRnA Register is free to be used for generating a PWM output on OCnA. However, if the base PWM frequency is actively changed by changing the TOP value, using the OCRnA as TOP is clearly a better choice due to its double buffer feature. In phase and frequency correct PWM mode, the compare units allow generation of PWM waveforms on the OCnx pins. Setting the COMnx1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM and an inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COMnx1:0 to three (See Table on page 137). The actual OCnx value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output (DDR_OCnx). The PWM waveform is generated by setting (or clearing) the OCnx Register at the compare match between OCRnx and TCNTn when the counter increments, and clearing (or setting) the OCnx Register at compare match between OCRnx and TCNTn when the counter decrements. The PWM frequency for the output when using phase and frequency correct PWM can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPFCPWM = ---------------------------2 N TOP 133 7679H-CAN-08/08 The N variable represents the prescaler divider (1, 8, 64, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCRnx Register represents special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the phase correct PWM mode. If the OCRnx is set equal to BOTTOM the output will be continuously low and if set equal to TOP the output will be set to high for noninverted PWM mode. For inverted PWM the output will have the opposite logic values. 13.10 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams The Timer/Counter is a synchronous design and the timer clock (clkTn) is therefore shown as a clock enable signal in the following figures. The figures include information on when interrupt flags are set, and when the OCRnx Register is updated with the OCRnx buffer value (only for modes utilizing double buffering). Figure 13-10 shows a timing diagram for the setting of OCFnx. Figure 13-10. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Setting of OCFnx, no Prescaling clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /1) TCNTn OCRnx - 1 OCRnx OCRnx OCRnx + 1 OCRnx + 2 OCRnx Value OCFnx Figure 13-11 shows the same timing data, but with the prescaler enabled. Figure 13-11. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Setting of OCFnx, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn OCRnx OCRnx - 1 OCRnx OCRnx + 1 OCRnx + 2 OCRnx Value OCFnx Figure 13-12 shows the count sequence close to TOP in various modes. When using phase and frequency correct PWM mode the OCRnx Register is updated at BOTTOM. The timing diagrams will be the same, but TOP should be replaced by BOTTOM, TOP-1 by BOTTOM+1 and so on. The same renaming applies for modes that set the TOVn flag at BOTTOM. 134 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 13-12. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, no Prescaling clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /1) TCNTn (CTC and FPWM) TCNTn (PC and PFC PWM) TOP - 1 TOP BOTTOM TOP - 1 TOP TOP - 1 BOTTOM + 1 TOP - 2 TOVn (FPWM) and ICFn (if used as TOP) OCRnx New OCRnx Value Old OCRnx Value (Update at TOP) Figure 13-13 shows the same timing data, but with the prescaler enabled. Figure 13-13. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clk /8) I/O TCNTn (CTC and FPWM) TCNTn (PC and PFC PWM) TOP - 1 TOP BOTTOM TOP - 1 TOP TOP - 1 BOTTOM + 1 TOP - 2 TOVn(FPWM) and ICFn(if used as TOP) OCRnx Old OCRnx Value (Update at TOP) New OCRnx Value 13.11 16-bit Timer/Counter Register Description 13.11.1 Timer/Counter1 Control Register A - TCCR1A Bit 13.11.2 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 COM1A1 COM1A0 COM1B1 COM1B0 COM1C1 COM1C0 WGM11 WGM10 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR1A Timer/Counter3 Control Register A - TCCR3A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 COM3A1 COM3A0 COM3B1 COM3B0 COM3C1 COM3C0 WGM31 WGM30 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR3A 135 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bit 7:6 - COMnA1:0: Compare Output Mode for Channel A * Bit 5:4 - COMnB1:0: Compare Output Mode for Channel B * Bit 3:2 - COMnC1:0: Compare Output Mode for Channel C The COMnA1:0, COMnB1:0 and COMnC1:0 control the Output Compare pins (OCnA, OCnB and OCnC respectively) behavior. If one or both of the COMnA1:0 bits are written to one, the OCnA output overrides the normal port functionality of the I/O pin it is connected to. If one or both of the COMnB1:0 bit are written to one, the OCnB output overrides the normal port functionality of the I/O pin it is connected to. If one or both of the COMnC1:0 bit are written to one, the OCnC output overrides the normal port functionality of the I/O pin it is connected to. However, note that the Data Direction Register (DDR) bit corresponding to the OCnA, OCnB or OCnC pin must be set in order to enable the output driver. When the OCnA, OCnB or OCnC is connected to the pin, the function of the COMnx1:0 bits is dependent of the WGMn3:0 bits setting. Table 13-1 shows the COMnx1:0 bit functionality when the WGMn3:0 bits are set to a Normal or a CTC mode (non-PWM). Table 13-1. Compare Output Mode, non-PWM COMnA1/COMnB1/ COMnC1 COMnA0/COMnB0/ COMnC0 0 0 Normal port operation, OCnA/OCnB/OCnC disconnected. 0 1 Toggle OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match. 1 0 Clear OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match (Set output to low level). 1 1 Set OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match (Set output to high level). Description Table 13-2 shows the COMnx1:0 bit functionality when the WGMn3:0 bits are set to the fast PWM mode. Table 13-2. COMnA1/COMnB1/ COMnC1 COMnA0/COMnB0/ COMnC0 0 0 Normal port operation, OCnA/OCnB/OCnC disconnected. 0 1 WGMn3=0: Normal port operation, OCnA/OCnB/OCnC disconnected. WGMn3=1: Toggle OCnA on Compare Match, OCnB/OCnC reserved. 1 0 Clear OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match Set OCnA/OCnB/OCnC at TOP 1 1 Set OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match Clear OCnA/OCnB/OCnC at TOP Note: 136 Compare Output Mode, Fast PWM (1) Description 1. A special case occurs when OCRnA/OCRnB/OCRnC equals TOP and COMnA1/COMnB1/COMnC1 is set. In this case the compare match is ignored, but the set or clear is done at TOP. See "Fast PWM Mode" on page 128. for more details. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 13-3 shows the COMnx1:0 bit functionality when the WGMn3:0 bits are set to the phase correct or the phase and frequency correct, PWM mode. Table 13-3. Compare Output Mode, Phase Correct and Phase and Frequency Correct PWM(1) COMnA1/COMnB1/ COMnC1 COMnA0/COMnB0/ COMnC0 0 0 Normal port operation, OCnA/OCnB/OCnC disconnected. 1 WGMn3=0: Normal port operation, OCnA/OCnB/OCnC disconnected. WGMn3=1: Toggle OCnA on Compare Match, OCnB/OCnC reserved. 0 Clear OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match when up-counting. Set OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match when downcounting. 1 Set OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match when upcounting. Clear OCnA/OCnB/OCnC on Compare Match when downcounting. 0 1 1 Note: Description 1. A special case occurs when OCnA/OCnB/OCnC equals TOP and COMnA1/COMnB1/COMnC1 is set. See "Phase Correct PWM Mode" on page 130. for more details. * Bit 1:0 - WGMn1:0: Waveform Generation Mode Combined with the WGMn3:2 bits found in the TCCRnB Register, these bits control the counting sequence of the counter, the source for maximum (TOP) counter value, and what type of waveform generation to be used, see Table 13-4. Modes of operation supported by the Timer/Counter unit are: Normal mode (counter), Clear Timer on Compare match (CTC) mode, and three types of Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. (See "Modes of Operation" on page 126.). 137 7679H-CAN-08/08 Waveform Generation Mode Bit Description (1) Table 13-4. Mode WGMn3 WGMn2 (CTCn) WGMn1 (PWMn1) WGMn0 (PWMn0) Timer/Counter Mode of Operation TOP Update of OCRnx at TOVn Flag Set on 0 0 0 0 0 Normal 0xFFFF Immediate MAX 1 0 0 0 1 PWM, Phase Correct, 8-bit 0x00FF TOP BOTTOM 2 0 0 1 0 PWM, Phase Correct, 9-bit 0x01FF TOP BOTTOM 3 0 0 1 1 PWM, Phase Correct, 10bit 0x03FF TOP BOTTOM 4 0 1 0 0 CTC OCRnA Immediate MAX 5 0 1 0 1 Fast PWM, 8-bit 0x00FF TOP TOP 6 0 1 1 0 Fast PWM, 9-bit 0x01FF TOP TOP 7 0 1 1 1 Fast PWM, 10-bit 0x03FF TOP TOP 8 1 0 0 0 PWM, Phase and Frequency Correct ICRn BOTTOM BOTTOM 9 1 0 0 1 PWM, Phase and Frequency Correct OCRnA BOTTOM BOTTOM 10 1 0 1 0 PWM, Phase Correct ICRn TOP BOTTOM 11 1 0 1 1 PWM, Phase Correct OCRnA TOP BOTTOM 12 1 1 0 0 CTC ICRn Immediate MAX 13 1 1 0 1 (Reserved) - - - 14 1 1 1 0 Fast PWM ICRn TOP TOP 1 1 1 1 Fast PWM OCRnA TOP TOP 15 Note: 13.11.3 1. The CTCn and PWMn1:0 bit definition names are obsolete. Use the WGMn2:0 definitions. However, the functionality and location of these bits are compatible with previous versions of the timer. Timer/Counter1 Control Register B - TCCR1B Bit 13.11.4 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ICNC1 ICES1 - WGM13 WGM12 CS12 CS11 CS10 Read/Write R/W R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR1B Timer/Counter3 Control Register B - TCCR3B Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ICNC3 ICES3 - WGM33 WGM32 CS32 CS31 CS30 Read/Write R/W R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR3B * Bit 7 - ICNCn: Input Capture Noise Canceler Setting this bit (to one) activates the Input Capture Noise Canceler. When the noise canceler is activated, the input from the Input Capture pin (ICPn) is filtered. The filter function requires four successive equal valued samples of the ICPn pin for changing its output. The Input Capture is therefore delayed by four Oscillator cycles when the noise canceler is enabled. * Bit 6 - ICESn: Input Capture Edge Select 138 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 This bit selects which edge on the Input Capture pin (ICPn) that is used to trigger a capture event. When the ICESn bit is written to zero, a falling (negative) edge is used as trigger, and when the ICESn bit is written to one, a rising (positive) edge will trigger the capture. When a capture is triggered according to the ICESn setting, the counter value is copied into the Input Capture Register (ICRn). The event will also set the Input Capture Flag (ICFn), and this can be used to cause an Input Capture Interrupt, if this interrupt is enabled. When the ICRn is used as TOP value (see description of the WGMn3:0 bits located in the TCCRnA and the TCCRnB Register), the ICPn is disconnected and consequently the Input Capture function is disabled. * Bit 5 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For ensuring compatibility with future devices, this bit must be written to zero when TCCRnB is written. * Bit 4:3 - WGMn3:2: Waveform Generation Mode See TCCRnA Register description. * Bit 2:0 - CSn2:0: Clock Select The three Clock Select bits select the clock source to be used by the Timer/Counter, see Figure 13-10 and Figure 13-11. Table 13-5. Clock Select Bit Description CSn2 CSn1 CSn0 Description 0 0 0 No clock source (Timer/Counter stopped). 0 0 1 clkI/O/1 (No prescaling) 0 1 0 clkI/O/8 (From prescaler) 0 1 1 clkI/O/64 (From prescaler) 1 0 0 clkI/O/256 (From prescaler) 1 0 1 clkI/O/1024 (From prescaler) 1 1 0 External clock source on Tn pin. Clock on falling edge. 1 1 1 External clock source on Tn pin. Clock on rising edge. If external pin modes are used for the Timer/Countern, transitions on the Tn pin will clock the counter even if the pin is configured as an output. This feature allows software control of the counting. 13.11.5 Timer/Counter1 Control Register C - TCCR1C Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FOC1A FOC1B FOC1C - - - - - Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR1C 139 7679H-CAN-08/08 13.11.6 Timer/Counter3 Control Register C - TCCR3C Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FOC3A FOC3B FOC3C - - - - - Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR3C * Bit 7 - FOCnA: Force Output Compare for Channel A * Bit 6 - FOCnB: Force Output Compare for Channel B * Bit 5 - FOCnC: Force Output Compare for Channel C The FOCnA/FOCnB/FOCnC bits are only active when the WGMn3:0 bits specifies a non-PWM mode. However, for ensuring compatibility with future devices, these bits must be set to zero when TCCRnA is written when operating in a PWM mode. When writing a logical one to the FOCnA/FOCnB/FOCnC bit, an immediate compare match is forced on the Waveform Generation unit. The OCnA/OCnB/OCnC output is changed according to its COMnx1:0 bits setting. Note that the FOCnA/FOCnB/FOCnC bits are implemented as strobes. Therefore it is the value present in the COMnx1:0 bits that determine the effect of the forced compare. A FOCnA/FOCnB/FOCnC strobe will not generate any interrupt nor will it clear the timer in Clear Timer on Compare match (CTC) mode using OCRnA as TOP. The FOCnA/FOCnB/FOCnC bits are always read as zero. 13.11.7 Timer/Counter1 - TCNT1H and TCNT1L Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TCNT1[15:8] TCNT1H TCNT1[7:0] 13.11.8 TCNT1L Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 Timer/Counter3 - TCNT3H and TCNT3L Bit 7 6 5 TCNT3[15:8] TCNT3H TCNT3[7:0] TCNT3L Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The two Timer/Counter I/O locations (TCNTnH and TCNTnL, combined TCNTn) give direct access, both for read and for write operations, to the Timer/Counter unit 16-bit counter. To ensure that both the high and low bytes are read and written simultaneously when the CPU accesses these registers, the access is performed using an 8-bit temporary high byte register (TEMP). This temporary register is shared by all the other 16-bit registers. See "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. Modifying the counter (TCNTn) while the counter is running introduces a risk of missing a compare match between TCNTn and one of the OCRnx Registers. Writing to the TCNTn Register blocks (removes) the compare match on the following timer clock for all compare units. 140 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 13.11.9 Output Compare Register A - OCR1AH and OCR1AL Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OCR1A[15:8] OCR1AH OCR1A[7:0] OCR1AL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.10 Output Compare Register B - OCR1BH and OCR1BL Bit 7 6 5 OCR1B[15:8] OCR1BH OCR1B[7:0] OCR1BL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.11 Output Compare Register C - OCR1CH and OCR1CL Bit 7 6 5 OCR1C[15:8] OCR1CH OCR1C[7:0] OCR1CL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.12 Output Compare Register A - OCR3AH and OCR3AL Bit 7 6 5 OCR3A[15:8] OCR3AH OCR3A[7:0] OCR3AL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.13 Output Compare Register B - OCR3BH and OCR3BL Bit 7 6 5 OCR3B[15:8] OCR3BH OCR3B[7:0] OCR3BL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.14 Output Compare Register C - OCR3CH and OCR3CL Bit 7 6 5 OCR3C[15:8] OCR3CH OCR3C[7:0] OCR3CL Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Output Compare Registers contain a 16-bit value that is continuously compared with the counter value (TCNTn). A match can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt, or to generate a waveform output on the OCnx pin. The Output Compare Registers are 16-bit in size. To ensure that both the high and low bytes are written simultaneously when the CPU writes to these registers, the access is performed using an 8-bit temporary high byte register (TEMP). This temporary register is shared by all the other 16bit registers. See "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. 141 7679H-CAN-08/08 13.11.15 Input Capture Register - ICR1H and ICR1L Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ICR1[15:8] ICR1H ICR1[7:0] ICR1L Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 3 2 1 0 13.11.16 Input Capture Register - ICR3H and ICR3L Bit 7 6 ICR3[15:8] ICR3H ICR3[7:0] ICR3L Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Input Capture is updated with the counter (TCNTn) value each time an event occurs on the ICPn pin (or optionally on the Analog Comparator output for Timer/Counter1). The Input Capture can be used for defining the counter TOP value. The Input Capture Register is 16-bit in size. To ensure that both the high and low bytes are read simultaneously when the CPU accesses these registers, the access is performed using an 8-bit temporary high byte register (TEMP). This temporary register is shared by all the other 16-bit registers. See "Accessing 16-bit Registers" on page 116. 13.11.17 Timer/Counter1 Interrupt Mask Register - TIMSK1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - ICIE1 - OCIE1C OCIE1B OCIE1A TOIE1 Read/Write R R R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIMSK1 13.11.18 Timer/Counter3 Interrupt Mask Register - TIMSK3 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - ICIE3 - OCIE3C OCIE3B OCIE3A TOIE3 Read/Write R R R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIMSK3 * Bit 7..6 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 5 - ICIEn: Input Capture Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one, and the I-flag in the Status Register is set (interrupts globally enabled), the Timer/Countern Input Capture interrupt is enabled. The corresponding Interrupt Vector (See "Interrupts" on page 60.) is executed when the ICFn flag, located in TIFRn, is set. * Bit 4 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. * Bit 3 - OCIEnC: Output Compare C Match Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one, and the I-flag in the Status Register is set (interrupts globally enabled), the Timer/Countern Output Compare C Match interrupt is enabled. The corresponding Interrupt Vector (See "Interrupts" on page 60.) is executed when the OCFnC flag, located in TIFRn, is set. 142 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 2 - OCIEnB: Output Compare B Match Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one, and the I-flag in the Status Register is set (interrupts globally enabled), the Timer/Countern Output Compare B Match interrupt is enabled. The corresponding Interrupt Vector (See "Interrupts" on page 60.) is executed when the OCFnB flag, located in TIFRn, is set. * Bit 1 - OCIEnA: Output Compare A Match Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one, and the I-flag in the Status Register is set (interrupts globally enabled), the Timer/Countern Output Compare A Match interrupt is enabled. The corresponding Interrupt Vector (See "Interrupts" on page 60.) is executed when the OCFnA flag, located in TIFRn, is set. * Bit 0 - TOIEn: Timer/Counter Overflow Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one, and the I-flag in the Status Register is set (interrupts globally enabled), the Timer/Countern Overflow interrupt is enabled. The corresponding Interrupt Vector (See "Interrupts" on page 60.) is executed when the TOVn flag, located in TIFRn, is set. 13.11.19 Timer/Counter1 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - ICF1 - OCF1C OCF1B OCF1A TOV1 Read/Write R R R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIFR1 13.11.20 Timer/Counter3 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR3 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - ICF3 - OCF3C OCF3B OCF3A TOV3 Read/Write R R R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIFR3 * Bit 7..6 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 5 - ICFn: Input Capture Flag This flag is set when a capture event occurs on the ICPn pin. When the Input Capture Register (ICRn) is set by the WGMn3:0 to be used as the TOP value, the ICFn flag is set when the counter reaches the TOP value. ICFn is automatically cleared when the Input Capture Interrupt Vector is executed. Alternatively, ICFn can be cleared by writing a logic one to its bit location. * Bit 4 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. * Bit 3 - OCFnC: Output Compare C Match Flag This flag is set in the timer clock cycle after the counter (TCNTn) value matches the Output Compare Register C (OCRnC). Note that a Forced Output Compare (FOCnC) strobe will not set the OCFnC flag. OCFnC is automatically cleared when the Output Compare Match C Interrupt Vector is executed. Alternatively, OCFnC can be cleared by writing a logic one to its bit location. 143 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bit 2 - OCFnB: Output Compare B Match Flag This flag is set in the timer clock cycle after the counter (TCNTn) value matches the Output Compare Register B (OCRnB). Note that a Forced Output Compare (FOCnB) strobe will not set the OCFnB flag. OCFnB is automatically cleared when the Output Compare Match B Interrupt Vector is executed. Alternatively, OCFnB can be cleared by writing a logic one to its bit location. * Bit 1 - OCFnA: Output Compare A Match Flag This flag is set in the timer clock cycle after the counter (TCNTn) value matches the Output Compare Register A (OCRnA). Note that a Forced Output Compare (FOCnA) strobe will not set the OCFnA flag. OCFnA is automatically cleared when the Output Compare Match A Interrupt Vector is executed. Alternatively, OCFnA can be cleared by writing a logic one to its bit location. * Bit 0 - TOVn: Timer/Counter Overflow Flag The setting of this flag is dependent of the WGMn3:0 bits setting. In Normal and CTC modes, the TOVn flag is set when the timer overflows. Refer to Table 13-4 on page 138 for the TOVn flag behavior when using another WGMn3:0 bit setting. TOVn is automatically cleared when the Timer/Countern Overflow Interrupt Vector is executed. Alternatively, TOVn can be cleared by writing a logic one to its bit location. 144 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 14. 8-bit Timer/Counter2 with PWM and Asynchronous Operation Timer/Counter2 is a general purpose, single channel, 8-bit Timer/Counter module. The main features are: 14.1 Features * * * * * * * 14.2 Single Channel Counter Clear Timer on Compare Match (Auto Reload) Glitch-free, Phase Correct Pulse Width Modulator (PWM) Frequency Generator 10-bit Clock Prescaler Overflow and Compare Match Interrupt Sources (TOV2 and OCF2A) Allows Clocking from External 32 kHz Watch Crystal Independent of the I/O Clock Overview Many register and bit references in this section are written in general form. * A lower case "n" replaces the Timer/Counter number, in this case 2. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., TCNT2 for accessing Timer/Counter2 counter value and so on. * A lower case "x" replaces the Output Compare unit channel, in this case A. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., OCR2A for accessing Timer/Counter2 output compare channel A value and so on. A simplified block diagram of the 8-bit Timer/Counter is shown in Figure 14-1. For the actual placement of I/O pins, refer to Figure 1-2 on page 5 or Figure 1-3 on page 6. CPU accessible I/O Registers, including I/O bits and I/O pins, are shown in bold. The device-specific I/O Register and bit locations are listed in the "8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 157. 145 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 14-1. 8-bit Timer/Counter2 Block Diagram TCCRnx count TOVn (Int.Req.) clear Control Logic direction clkTn TOSC2 BOTTOM TOP Prescaler T/C Oscillator TOSC1 Timer/Counter TCNTn =0 = 0xFF DATA BUS OCnx (Int.Req.) Waveform Generation = clk I/O OCnx OCRnx Synchronized Status flags clk I/O Synchronization Unit clk ASY Status flags ASSRn asynchronous mode select (ASn) The Timer/Counter (TCNT2) and Output Compare Register (OCR2A) are 8-bit registers. Interrupt request (shorten as Int.Req.) signals are all visible in the Timer Interrupt Flag Register (TIFR2). All interrupts are individually masked with the Timer Interrupt Mask Register (TIMSK2). TIFR2 and TIMSK2 are not shown in the figure. The Timer/Counter can be clocked internally, via the prescaler, or asynchronously clocked from the TOSC1/2 pins, as detailed later in this section. The asynchronous operation is controlled by the Asynchronous Status Register (ASSR). The Clock Select logic block controls which clock source the Timer/Counter uses to increment (or decrement) its value. The Timer/Counter is inactive when no clock source is selected. The output from the Clock Select logic is referred to as the timer clock (clkT2). The double buffered Output Compare Register (OCR2A) is compared with the Timer/Counter value at all times. The result of the compare can be used by the Waveform Generator to generate a PWM or variable frequency output on the Output Compare pin (OC2A). See "Output Compare Unit" on page 148. for details. The compare match event will also set the compare flag (OCF2A) which can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt request. 146 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 14.2.1 Definitions The following definitions are used extensively throughout the section: 14.3 BOTTOM The counter reaches the BOTTOM when it becomes zero (0x00). MAX The counter reaches its MAXimum when it becomes 0xFF (decimal 255). TOP The counter reaches the TOP when it becomes equal to the highest value in the count sequence. The TOP value can be assigned to be the fixed value 0xFF (MAX) or the value stored in the OCR2A Register. The assignment is dependent on the mode of operation. Timer/Counter Clock Sources The Timer/Counter can be clocked by an internal synchronous or an external asynchronous clock source. The clock source is selected by the clock select logic which is controlled by the clock select (CS22:0) bits located in the Timer/Counter control register (TCCR2).The clock source clkT2 is by default equal to the MCU clock, clkI/O. When the AS2 bit in the ASSR Register is written to logic one, the clock source is taken from the Timer/Counter Oscillator connected to TOSC1 and TOSC2 or directly from TOSC1. For details on asynchronous operation, see "Asynchronous Status Register - ASSR" on page 160. For details on clock sources and prescaler, see "Timer/Counter2 Prescaler" on page 163. 14.4 Counter Unit The main part of the 8-bit Timer/Counter is the programmable bi-directional counter unit. Figure 14-2 shows a block diagram of the counter and its surrounding environment. Figure 14-2. Counter Unit Block Diagram TOVn (Int.Req.) DATA BUS TOSC2 count clear TCNTn clk Tn Control Logic Prescaler clk TnS T/C Oscillator direction bottom TOSC1 top clkI/O Figure 14-3. Signal description (internal signals): count Increment or decrement TCNT2 by 1. direction Selects between increment and decrement. clear Clear TCNT2 (set all bits to zero). clkT2 Timer/Counter clock. top Signalizes that TCNT2 has reached maximum value. bottom Signalizes that TCNT2 has reached minimum value (zero). 147 7679H-CAN-08/08 Depending on the mode of operation used, the counter is cleared, incremented, or decremented at each timer clock (clkT2). clkT2 can be generated from an external or internal clock source, selected by the Clock Select bits (CS22:0). When no clock source is selected (CS22:0 = 0) the timer is stopped. However, the TCNT2 value can be accessed by the CPU, regardless of whether clkT2 is present or not. A CPU write overrides (has priority over) all counter clear or count operations. The counting sequence is determined by the setting of the WGM21 and WGM20 bits located in the Timer/Counter Control Register (TCCR2A). There are close connections between how the counter behaves (counts) and how waveforms are generated on the Output Compare output OC2A. For more details about advanced counting sequences and waveform generation, see "Modes of Operation" on page 150. The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV2) is set according to the mode of operation selected by the WGM21:0 bits. TOV2 can be used for generating a CPU interrupt. 14.5 Output Compare Unit The 8-bit comparator continuously compares TCNT2 with the Output Compare Register (OCR2A). Whenever TCNT2 equals OCR2A, the comparator signals a match. A match will set the Output Compare Flag (OCF2A) at the next timer clock cycle. If enabled (OCIE2A = 1), the Output Compare Flag generates an Output Compare interrupt. The OCF2A flag is automatically cleared when the interrupt is executed. Alternatively, the OCF2A flag can be cleared by software by writing a logical one to its I/O bit location. The Waveform Generator uses the match signal to generate an output according to operating mode set by the WGM21:0 bits and Compare Output mode (COM2A1:0) bits. The max and bottom signals are used by the Waveform Generator for handling the special cases of the extreme values in some modes of operation ("Modes of Operation" on page 150). Figure 14-4 shows a block diagram of the Output Compare unit. Figure 14-4. Output Compare Unit, Block Diagram DATA BUS OCRnx TCNTn = (8-bit Comparator ) OCFnx (Int.Req.) top bottom Waveform Generator OCnx FOCn WGMn1:0 COMnX1:0 The OCR2A Register is double buffered when using any of the Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. For the Normal and Clear Timer on Compare (CTC) modes of operation, the double buffering is disabled. The double buffering synchronizes the update of the OCR2A Compare 148 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Register to either top or bottom of the counting sequence. The synchronization prevents the occurrence of odd-length, non-symmetrical PWM pulses, thereby making the output glitch-free. The OCR2A Register access may seem complex, but this is not case. When the double buffering is enabled, the CPU has access to the OCR2A Buffer Register, and if double buffering is disabled the CPU will access the OCR2A directly. 14.5.1 Force Output Compare In non-PWM waveform generation modes, the match output of the comparator can be forced by writing a one to the Force Output Compare (FOC2A) bit. Forcing compare match will not set the OCF2A flag or reload/clear the timer, but the OC2A pin will be updated as if a real compare match had occurred (the COM2A1:0 bits settings define whether the OC2A pin is set, cleared or toggled). 14.5.2 Compare Match Blocking by TCNT2 Write All CPU write operations to the TCNT2 Register will block any compare match that occurs in the next timer clock cycle, even when the timer is stopped. This feature allows OCR2A to be initialized to the same value as TCNT2 without triggering an interrupt when the Timer/Counter clock is enabled. 14.5.3 Using the Output Compare Unit Since writing TCNT2 in any mode of operation will block all compare matches for one timer clock cycle, there are risks involved when changing TCNT2 when using the Output Compare channel, independently of whether the Timer/Counter is running or not. If the value written to TCNT2 equals the OCR2A value, the compare match will be missed, resulting in incorrect waveform generation. Similarly, do not write the TCNT2 value equal to BOTTOM when the counter is downcounting. The setup of the OC2A should be performed before setting the Data Direction Register for the port pin to output. The easiest way of setting the OC2A value is to use the Force Output Compare (FOC2A) strobe bit in Normal mode. The OC2A Register keeps its value even when changing between Waveform Generation modes. Be aware that the COM2A1:0 bits are not double buffered together with the compare value. Changing the COM2A1:0 bits will take effect immediately. 14.6 Compare Match Output Unit The Compare Output mode (COM2A1:0) bits have two functions. The Waveform Generator uses the COM2A1:0 bits for defining the Output Compare (OC2A) state at the next compare match. Also, the COM2A1:0 bits control the OC2A pin output source. Figure 14-5 shows a simplified schematic of the logic affected by the COM2A1:0 bit setting. The I/O Registers, I/O bits, and I/O pins in the figure are shown in bold. Only the parts of the general I/O port control registers (DDR and PORT) that are affected by the COM2A1:0 bits are shown. When referring to the OC2A state, the reference is for the internal OC2A Register, not the OC2A pin. 149 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 14-5. Compare Match Output Unit, Schematic COMnx1 COMnx0 FOCnx Waveform Generator D Q 1 OCnx DATA BUS D 0 OCnx Pin Q PORT D Q DDR clk I/O 14.6.1 Compare Output Function The general I/O port function is overridden by the Output Compare (OC2A) from the Waveform Generator if either of the COM2A1:0 bits are set. However, the OC2A pin direction (input or output) is still controlled by the Data Direction Register (DDR) for the port pin. The Data Direction Register bit for the OC2A pin (DDR_OC2A) must be set as output before the OC2A value is visible on the pin. The port override function is independent of the Waveform Generation mode. The design of the Output Compare pin logic allows initialization of the OC2A state before the output is enabled. Note that some COM2A1:0 bit settings are reserved for certain modes of operation. See "8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description" on page 157. 14.6.2 Compare Output Mode and Waveform Generation The Waveform Generator uses the COM2A1:0 bits differently in normal, CTC, and PWM modes. For all modes, setting the COM2A1:0 = 0 tells the Waveform Generator that no action on the OC2A Register is to be performed on the next compare match. For compare output actions in the non-PWM modes refer to Table 14-2 on page 158. For fast PWM mode, refer to Table 14-3 on page 158, and for phase correct PWM refer to Table 14-4 on page 159. A change of the COM2A1:0 bits state will have effect at the first compare match after the bits are written. For non-PWM modes, the action can be forced to have immediate effect by using the FOC2A strobe bits. 14.7 Modes of Operation The mode of operation, i.e., the behavior of the Timer/Counter and the Output Compare pins, is defined by the combination of the Waveform Generation mode (WGM21:0) and Compare Output mode (COM2A1:0) bits. The Compare Output mode bits do not affect the counting sequence, while the Waveform Generation mode bits do. The COM2A1:0 bits control whether the PWM output generated should be inverted or not (inverted or non-inverted PWM). For non-PWM modes the COM2A1:0 bits control whether the output should be set, cleared, or toggled at a compare match (See "Compare Match Output Unit" on page 149.). 150 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 For detailed timing information refer to "Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams" on page 155. 14.7.1 Normal Mode The simplest mode of operation is the Normal mode (WGM21:0 = 0). In this mode the counting direction is always up (incrementing), and no counter clear is performed. The counter simply overruns when it passes its maximum 8-bit value (TOP = 0xFF) and then restarts from the bottom (0x00). In normal operation the Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV2) will be set in the same timer clock cycle as the TCNT2 becomes zero. The TOV2 flag in this case behaves like a ninth bit, except that it is only set, not cleared. However, combined with the timer overflow interrupt that automatically clears the TOV2 flag, the timer resolution can be increased by software. There are no special cases to consider in the Normal mode, a new counter value can be written anytime. The Output Compare unit can be used to generate interrupts at some given time. Using the Output Compare to generate waveforms in Normal mode is not recommended, since this will occupy too much of the CPU time. 14.7.2 Clear Timer on Compare Match (CTC) Mode In Clear Timer on Compare or CTC mode (WGM21:0 = 2), the OCR2A Register is used to manipulate the counter resolution. In CTC mode the counter is cleared to zero when the counter value (TCNT2) matches the OCR2A. The OCR2A defines the top value for the counter, hence also its resolution. This mode allows greater control of the compare match output frequency. It also simplifies the operation of counting external events. The timing diagram for the CTC mode is shown in Figure 14-6. The counter value (TCNT2) increases until a compare match occurs between TCNT2 and OCR2A, and then counter (TCNT2) is cleared. Figure 14-6. CTC Mode, Timing Diagram OCnx Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (Toggle) Period (COMnx1:0 = 1) 1 2 3 4 An interrupt can be generated each time the counter value reaches the TOP value by using the OCF2A flag. If the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the TOP value. However, changing the TOP to a value close to BOTTOM when the counter is running with none or a low prescaler value must be done with care since the CTC mode does not have the double buffering feature. If the new value written to OCR2A is lower than the current value of TCNT2, the counter will miss the compare match. The counter will then have to count to its maximum value (0xFF) and wrap around starting at 0x00 before the compare match can occur. 151 7679H-CAN-08/08 For generating a waveform output in CTC mode, the OC2A output can be set to toggle its logical level on each compare match by setting the Compare Output mode bits to toggle mode (COM2A1:0 = 1). The OC2A value will not be visible on the port pin unless the data direction for the pin is set to output. The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of fOC2A = fclk_I/O/2 when OCR2A is set to zero (0x00). The waveform frequency is defined by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnx = -------------------------------------------------2 N ( 1 + OCRnx ) The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 32, 64, 128, 256, or 1024). As for the Normal mode of operation, the TOV2 flag is set in the same timer clock cycle that the counter counts from MAX to 0x00. 14.7.3 Fast PWM Mode The fast Pulse Width Modulation or fast PWM mode (WGM21:0 = 3) provides a high frequency PWM waveform generation option. The fast PWM differs from the other PWM option by its single-slope operation. The counter counts from BOTTOM to MAX then restarts from BOTTOM. In non-inverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OC2A) is cleared on the compare match between TCNT2 and OCR2A, and set at BOTTOM. In inverting Compare Output mode, the output is set on compare match and cleared at BOTTOM. Due to the single-slope operation, the operating frequency of the fast PWM mode can be twice as high as the phase correct PWM mode that uses dual-slope operation. This high frequency makes the fast PWM mode well suited for power regulation, rectification, and DAC applications. High frequency allows physically small sized external components (coils, capacitors), and therefore reduces total system cost. In fast PWM mode, the counter is incremented until the counter value matches the MAX value. The counter is then cleared at the following timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the fast PWM mode is shown in Figure 14-7. The TCNT2 value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the single-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNT2 slopes represent compare matches between OCR2A and TCNT2. Figure 14-7. Fast PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCRnx Interrupt Flag Set OCRnx Update and TOVn Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 152 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV2) is set each time the counter reaches MAX. If the interrupt is enabled, the interrupt handler routine can be used for updating the compare value. In fast PWM mode, the compare unit allows generation of PWM waveforms on the OC2A pin. Setting the COM2A1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM and an inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COM2A1:0 to three (See Table 14-3 on page 158). The actual OC2A value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output. The PWM waveform is generated by setting (or clearing) the OC2A Register at the compare match between OCR2A and TCNT2, and clearing (or setting) the OC2A Register at the timer clock cycle the counter is cleared (changes from MAX to BOTTOM). The PWM frequency for the output can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPWM = -----------------N 256 The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 32, 64, 128, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCR2A Register represent special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the fast PWM mode. If the OCR2A is set equal to BOTTOM, the output will be a narrow spike for each MAX+1 timer clock cycle. Setting the OCR2A equal to MAX will result in a constantly high or low output (depending on the polarity of the output set by the COM2A1:0 bits.) A frequency (with 50% duty cycle) waveform output in fast PWM mode can be achieved by setting OC2A to toggle its logical level on each compare match (COM2A1:0 = 1). The waveform generated will have a maximum frequency of foc2A = fclk_I/O/2 when OCR2A is set to zero. This feature is similar to the OC2A toggle in CTC mode, except the double buffer feature of the Output Compare unit is enabled in the fast PWM mode. 14.7.4 Phase Correct PWM Mode The phase correct PWM mode (WGM21:0 = 1) provides a high resolution phase correct PWM waveform generation option. The phase correct PWM mode is based on a dual-slope operation. The counter counts repeatedly from BOTTOM to MAX and then from MAX to BOTTOM. In noninverting Compare Output mode, the Output Compare (OC2A) is cleared on the compare match between TCNT2 and OCR2A while upcounting, and set on the compare match while downcounting. In inverting Output Compare mode, the operation is inverted. The dual-slope operation has lower maximum operation frequency than single slope operation. However, due to the symmetric feature of the dual-slope PWM modes, these modes are preferred for motor control applications. The PWM resolution for the phase correct PWM mode is fixed to eight bits. In phase correct PWM mode the counter is incremented until the counter value matches MAX. When the counter reaches MAX, it changes the count direction. The TCNT2 value will be equal to MAX for one timer clock cycle. The timing diagram for the phase correct PWM mode is shown on Figure 14-8. The TCNT2 value is in the timing diagram shown as a histogram for illustrating the dual-slope operation. The diagram includes non-inverted and inverted PWM outputs. The small horizontal line marks on the TCNT2 slopes represent compare matches between OCR2A and TCNT2. 153 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 14-8. Phase Correct PWM Mode, Timing Diagram OCnx Interrupt Flag Set OCRnx Update TOVn Interrupt Flag Set TCNTn OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 2) OCnx (COMnx1:0 = 3) Period 1 2 3 The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOV2) is set each time the counter reaches BOTTOM. The interrupt flag can be used to generate an interrupt each time the counter reaches the BOTTOM value. In phase correct PWM mode, the compare unit allows generation of PWM waveforms on the OC2A pin. Setting the COM2A1:0 bits to two will produce a non-inverted PWM. An inverted PWM output can be generated by setting the COM2A1:0 to three (See Table 14-4 on page 159). The actual OC2A value will only be visible on the port pin if the data direction for the port pin is set as output. The PWM waveform is generated by clearing (or setting) the OC2A Register at the compare match between OCR2A and TCNT2 when the counter increments, and setting (or clearing) the OC2A Register at compare match between OCR2A and TCNT2 when the counter decrements. The PWM frequency for the output when using phase correct PWM can be calculated by the following equation: f clk_I/O f OCnxPCPWM = -----------------N 510 The N variable represents the prescale factor (1, 8, 32, 64, 128, 256, or 1024). The extreme values for the OCR2A Register represent special cases when generating a PWM waveform output in the phase correct PWM mode. If the OCR2A is set equal to BOTTOM, the output will be continuously low and if set equal to MAX the output will be continuously high for non-inverted PWM mode. For inverted PWM the output will have the opposite logic values. At the very start of period 2 in Figure 14-8 on page 154 OCnx has a transition from high to low even though there is no Compare Match. The point of this transition is to guarantee symmetry around BOTTOM. There are two cases that give a transition without Compare Match. * OCR2A changes its value from MAX, like in Figure 14-8 on page 154. When the OCR2A value is MAX the OCn pin value is the same as the result of a down-counting compare 154 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 match. To ensure symmetry around BOTTOM the OCn value at MAX must correspond to the result of an up-counting Compare Match. * The timer starts counting from a value higher than the one in OCR2A, and for that reason misses the Compare Match and hence the OCn change that would have happened on the way up. 14.8 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams The following figures show the Timer/Counter in synchronous mode, and the timer clock (clkT2) is therefore shown as a clock enable signal. In asynchronous mode, clkI/O should be replaced by the Timer/Counter Oscillator clock. The figures include information on when interrupt flags are set. Figure 14-9 contains timing data for basic Timer/Counter operation. The figure shows the count sequence close to the MAX value in all modes other than phase correct PWM mode. Figure 14-9. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, no Prescaling clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /1) TCNTn MAX - 1 MAX BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOVn Figure 14-10 shows the same timing data, but with the prescaler enabled. Figure 14-10. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn MAX - 1 MAX BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOVn Figure 14-11 shows the setting of OCF2A in all modes except CTC mode. 155 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 14-11. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Setting of OCF2A, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn OCRnx OCRnx - 1 OCRnx OCRnx + 1 OCRnx + 2 OCRnx Value OCFnx 156 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 14-12 shows the setting of OCF2A and the clearing of TCNT2 in CTC mode. Figure 14-12. Timer/Counter Timing Diagram, Clear Timer on Compare Match mode, with Prescaler (fclk_I/O/8) clkI/O clkTn (clkI/O /8) TCNTn (CTC) TOP - 1 TOP OCRnx BOTTOM BOTTOM + 1 TOP OCFnx 14.9 8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description 14.9.1 Timer/Counter2 Control Register A- TCCR2A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FOC2A WGM20 COM2A1 COM2A0 WGM21 CS22 CS21 CS20 Read/Write W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TCCR2A * Bit 7 - FOC2A: Force Output Compare A The FOC2A bit is only active when the WGM bits specify a non-PWM mode. However, for ensuring compatibility with future devices, this bit must be set to zero when TCCR2A is written when operating in PWM mode. When writing a logical one to the FOC2A bit, an immediate compare match is forced on the Waveform Generation unit. The OC2A output is changed according to its COM2A1:0 bits setting. Note that the FOC2A bit is implemented as a strobe. Therefore it is the value present in the COM2A1:0 bits that determines the effect of the forced compare. A FOC2A strobe will not generate any interrupt, nor will it clear the timer in CTC mode using OCR2A as TOP. The FOC2A bit is always read as zero. * Bit 6, 3 - WGM21:0: Waveform Generation Mode These bits control the counting sequence of the counter, the source for the maximum (TOP) counter value, and what type of waveform generation to be used. Modes of operation supported by the Timer/Counter unit are: Normal mode, Clear Timer on Compare match (CTC) mode, and 157 7679H-CAN-08/08 two types of Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) modes. See Table 14-1 and "Modes of Operation" on page 150. Table 14-1. Waveform Generation Mode Bit Description(1) Mode WGM21 (CTC2) WGM20 (PWM2) Timer/Counter Mode of Operation TOP Update of OCR2A at TOV2 Flag Set on 0 0 0 Normal 0xFF Immediate MAX 1 0 1 PWM, Phase Correct 0xFF TOP BOTTOM 2 1 0 CTC OCR2A Immediate MAX 3 1 1 Fast PWM 0xFF TOP MAX Note: 1. The CTC2 and PWM2 bit definition names are now obsolete. Use the WGM21:0 definitions. However, the functionality and location of these bits are compatible with previous versions of the timer. * Bit 5:4 - COM2A1:0: Compare Match Output Mode A These bits control the Output Compare pin (OC2A) behavior. If one or both of the COM2A1:0 bits are set, the OC2A output overrides the normal port functionality of the I/O pin it is connected to. However, note that the Data Direction Register (DDR) bit corresponding to OC2A pin must be set in order to enable the output driver. When OC2A is connected to the pin, the function of the COM2A1:0 bits depends on the WGM21:0 bit setting. Table 14-2 shows the COM2A1:0 bit functionality when the WGM21:0 bits are set to a normal or CTC mode (non-PWM). Table 14-2. Compare Output Mode, non-PWM Mode COM2A1 COM2A0 Description 0 0 Normal port operation, OC2A disconnected. 0 1 Toggle OC2A on compare match. 1 0 Clear OC2A on compare match. 1 1 Set OC2A on compare match. Table 14-3 shows the COM2A1:0 bit functionality when the WGM21:0 bits are set to fast PWM mode. Table 14-3. COM2A1 COM2A0 0 0 Normal port operation, OC2A disconnected. 0 1 Reserved 1 0 Clear OC2A on compare match. Set OC2A at TOP. 1 1 Set OC2A on compare match. Clear OC2A at TOP. Note: 158 Compare Output Mode, Fast PWM Mode(1) Description 1. A special case occurs when OCR2A equals TOP and COM2A1 is set. In this case, the compare match is ignored, but the set or clear is done at TOP. See "Fast PWM Mode" on page 152 for more details. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 14-4 shows the COM21:0 bit functionality when the WGM21:0 bits are set to phase correct PWM mode. Table 14-4. Compare Output Mode, Phase Correct PWM Mode(1) COM2A1 COM2A0 0 0 Normal port operation, OC2A disconnected. 0 1 Reserved 1 0 Clear OC2A on compare match when up-counting. Set OC2A on compare match when downcounting. 1 1 Set OC2A on compare match when up-counting. Clear OC2A on compare match when downcounting. Note: Description 1. A special case occurs when OCR2A equals TOP and COM2A1 is set. In this case, the compare match is ignored, but the set or clear is done at TOP. See "Phase Correct PWM Mode" on page 153 for more details. * Bit 2:0 - CS22:0: Clock Select The three Clock Select bits select the clock source to be used by the Timer/Counter, see Table 14-5. Table 14-5. 14.9.2 Clock Select Bit Description CS22 CS21 CS20 Description 0 0 0 No clock source (Timer/Counter stopped). 0 0 1 clkT2S/(No prescaling) 0 1 0 clkT2S/8 (From prescaler) 0 1 1 clkT2S/32 (From prescaler) 1 0 0 clkT2S/64 (From prescaler) 1 0 1 clkT2S/128 (From prescaler) 1 1 0 clkT2S/256 (From prescaler) 1 1 1 clkT2S/1024 (From prescaler) Timer/Counter2 Register - TCNT2 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TCNT2[7:0] TCNT2 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Timer/Counter Register gives direct access, both for read and write operations, to the Timer/Counter unit 8-bit counter. Writing to the TCNT2 Register blocks (removes) the compare match on the following timer clock. Modifying the counter (TCNT2) while the counter is running, introduces a risk of missing a compare match between TCNT2 and the OCR2A Register. 14.9.3 Output Compare Register A - OCR2A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OCR2A[7:0] OCR2A Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 159 7679H-CAN-08/08 The Output Compare Register A contains an 8-bit value that is continuously compared with the counter value (TCNT2). A match can be used to generate an Output Compare interrupt, or to generate a waveform output on the OC2A pin. 14.10 Asynchronous operation of the Timer/Counter2 14.10.1 Asynchronous Status Register - ASSR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - EXCLK AS2 TCN2UB OCR2UB TCR2UB Read/Write R R R R/W R/W R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ASSR * Bit 7..5 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 4 - EXCLK: Enable External Clock Input When EXCLK is written to one, and asynchronous clock is selected, the external clock input buffer is enabled and an external clock can be input on Timer Oscillator 1 (TOSC1) pin instead of a 32 kHz crystal. Writing to EXCLK should be done before asynchronous operation is selected. Note that the crystal Oscillator will only run when this bit is zero. * Bit 3 - AS2: Asynchronous Timer/Counter2 When AS2 is written to zero, Timer/Counter2 is clocked from the I/O clock, clkI/O and the crystal Oscillator connected to the Timer/Counter2 Oscillator (TOSC) does nor run. When AS2 is written to one, Timer/Counter2 is clocked from a crystal Oscillator connected to the Timer/Counter2 Oscillator (TOSC) or from external clock on TOSC1 depending on EXCLK setting. When the value of AS2 is changed, the contents of TCNT2, OCR2A, and TCCR2A might be corrupted. * Bit 2 - TCN2UB: Timer/Counter2 Update Busy When Timer/Counter2 operates asynchronously and TCNT2 is written, this bit becomes set. When TCNT2 has been updated from the temporary storage register, this bit is cleared by hardware. A logical zero in this bit indicates that TCNT2 is ready to be updated with a new value. * Bit 1 - OCR2UB: Output Compare Register2 Update Busy When Timer/Counter2 operates asynchronously and OCR2A is written, this bit becomes set. When OCR2A has been updated from the temporary storage register, this bit is cleared by hardware. A logical zero in this bit indicates that OCR2A is ready to be updated with a new value. * Bit 0 - TCR2UB: Timer/Counter Control Register2 Update Busy When Timer/Counter2 operates asynchronously and TCCR2A is written, this bit becomes set. When TCCR2A has been updated from the temporary storage register, this bit is cleared by hardware. A logical zero in this bit indicates that TCCR2A is ready to be updated with a new value. If a write is performed to any of the three Timer/Counter2 Registers while its update busy flag is set, the updated value might get corrupted and cause an unintentional interrupt to occur. The mechanisms for reading TCNT2, OCR2A, and TCCR2A are different. When reading TCNT2, the actual timer value is read. When reading OCR2A or TCCR2A, the value in the temporary storage register is read. 160 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 14.10.2 Asynchronous Operation of Timer/Counter2 When Timer/Counter2 operates asynchronously, some considerations must be taken. * Warning: When switching between asynchronous and synchronous clocking of Timer/Counter2, the timer registers TCNT2, OCR2A, and TCCR2A might be corrupted. A safe procedure for switching clock source is: a. Disable the Timer/Counter2 interrupts by clearing OCIE2A and TOIE2. b. Select clock source by setting AS2 and EXCLK as appropriate. c. Write new values to TCNT2, OCR2A, and TCCR2A. d. To switch to asynchronous operation: Wait for TCN2UB, OCR2UB, and TCR2UB. e. Clear the Timer/Counter2 interrupt flags. f. Enable interrupts, if needed. * The Oscillator is optimized for use with a 32.768 kHz watch crystal. The CPU main clock frequency must be more than four times the Oscillator or external clock frequency. * When writing to one of the registers TCNT2, OCR2A, or TCCR2A, the value is transferred to a temporary register, and latched after two positive edges on TOSC1. The user should not write a new value before the contents of the temporary register have been transferred to its destination. Each of the three mentioned registers have their individual temporary register, which means that e.g. writing to TCNT2 does not disturb an OCR2A write in progress. To detect that a transfer to the destination register has taken place, the Asynchronous Status Register - ASSR has been implemented. * When entering Power-save or Extended Standby mode after having written to TCNT2, OCR2A, or TCCR2A, the user must wait until the written register has been updated if Timer/Counter2 is used to wake up the device. Otherwise, the MCU will enter sleep mode before the changes are effective. This is particularly important if the Output Compare2 interrupt is used to wake up the device, since the Output Compare function is disabled during writing to OCR2A or TCNT2. If the write cycle is not finished, and the MCU enters sleep mode before the OCR2UB bit returns to zero, the device will never receive a compare match interrupt, and the MCU will not wake up. * If Timer/Counter2 is used to wake the device up from Power-save or Extended Standby mode, precautions must be taken if the user wants to re-enter one of these modes: The interrupt logic needs one TOSC1 cycle to be reset. If the time between wake-up and reentering sleep mode is less than one TOSC1 cycle, the interrupt will not occur, and the device will fail to wake up. If the user is in doubt whether the time before re-entering Powersave mode is sufficient, the following algorithm can be used to ensure that one TOSC1 cycle has elapsed: a. Write a value to TCCR2A, TCNT2, or OCR2A. b. Wait until the corresponding Update Busy flag in ASSR returns to zero. c. Enter Power-save or ADC Noise Reduction mode. * When the asynchronous operation is selected, the 32.768 kHz Oscillator for Timer/Counter2 is always running, except in Power-down and Standby modes. After a Power-up Reset or wake-up from Power-down or Standby mode, the user should be aware of the fact that this Oscillator might take as long as one second to stabilize. The user is advised to wait for at least one second before using Timer/Counter2 after power-up or wake-up from Power-down or Standby mode. The contents of all Timer/Counter2 Registers must be considered lost after a wake-up from Power-down or Standby mode due to unstable clock signal upon start-up, no matter whether the Oscillator is in use or a clock signal is applied to the TOSC1 pin. 161 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Description of wake up from Power-save mode when the timer is clocked asynchronously: When the interrupt condition is met, the wake up process is started on the following cycle of the timer clock, that is, the timer is always advanced by at least one before the processor can read the counter value. After wake-up, the MCU is halted for four cycles, it executes the interrupt routine, and resumes execution from the instruction following SLEEP. * Reading of the TCNT2 Register shortly after wake-up from Power-save may give an incorrect result. Since TCNT2 is clocked on the asynchronous TOSC clock, reading TCNT2 must be done through a register synchronized to the internal I/O clock domain. Synchronization takes place for every rising TOSC1 edge. When waking up from Power-save mode, and the I/O clock (clkI/O) again becomes active, TCNT2 will read as the previous value (before entering sleep) until the next rising TOSC1 edge. The phase of the TOSC clock after waking up from Power-save mode is essentially unpredictable, as it depends on the wake-up time. The recommended procedure for reading TCNT2 is thus as follows: a. Write any value to either of the registers OCR2A or TCCR2A. b. Wait for the corresponding Update Busy Flag to be cleared. c. Read TCNT2. * During asynchronous operation, the synchronization of the interrupt flags for the asynchronous timer takes 3 processor cycles plus one timer cycle. The timer is therefore advanced by at least one before the processor can read the timer value causing the setting of the interrupt flag. The Output Compare pin is changed on the timer clock and is not synchronized to the processor clock. 14.10.3 Timer/Counter2 Interrupt Mask Register - TIMSK2 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - OCIE2A TOIE2 Read/Write R R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIMSK2 * Bit 7..2 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 1 - OCIE2A: Timer/Counter2 Output Compare Match A Interrupt Enable When the OCIE2A bit is written to one and the I-bit in the Status Register is set (one), the Timer/Counter2 Compare Match A interrupt is enabled. The corresponding interrupt is executed if a compare match in Timer/Counter2 occurs, i.e., when the OCF2A bit is set in the Timer/Counter2 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR2. * Bit 0 - TOIE2: Timer/Counter2 Overflow Interrupt Enable When the TOIE2 bit is written to one and the I-bit in the Status Register is set (one), the Timer/Counter2 Overflow interrupt is enabled. The corresponding interrupt is executed if an overflow in Timer/Counter2 occurs, i.e., when the TOV2 bit is set in the Timer/Counter2 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR2. 14.10.4 Timer/Counter2 Interrupt Flag Register - TIFR2 Bit 162 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - OCF2A TOV2 Read/Write R R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TIFR2 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 7..2 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. * Bit 1 - OCF2A: Output Compare Flag 2 A The OCF2A bit is set (one) when a compare match occurs between the Timer/Counter2 and the data in OCR2A - Output Compare Register2. OCF2A is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, OCF2A is cleared by writing a logic one to the flag. When the I-bit in SREG, OCIE2 (Timer/Counter2 Compare match Interrupt Enable), and OCF2A are set (one), the Timer/Counter2 Compare match Interrupt is executed. * Bit 0 - TOV2: Timer/Counter2 Overflow Flag The TOV2 bit is set (one) when an overflow occurs in Timer/Counter2. TOV2 is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, TOV2 is cleared by writing a logic one to the flag. When the SREG I-bit, TOIE2A (Timer/Counter2 Overflow Interrupt Enable), and TOV2 are set (one), the Timer/Counter2 Overflow interrupt is executed. In PWM mode, this bit is set when Timer/Counter2 changes counting direction at 0x00. 14.11 Timer/Counter2 Prescaler Figure 14-13. Prescaler for Timer/Counter2 AS2 clkT2S 10-BIT T/C PRESCALER Clear 1 TOSC1 1 EXCLK PSR2 clkT2S/1024 0 clkT2S/256 0 clkT2S/128 32 kHz Oscillator clkT2S/64 clkI/O clkT2S/32 Enable clkT2S/8 TOSC2 EXCLK AS2 0 CS20 CS21 CS22 TIMER/COUNTER2 CLOCK SOURCE clkT2 The clock source for Timer/Counter2 is named clkT2S. clkT2S is by default connected to the main system I/O clock clk IO. By setting the AS2 bit in ASSR, Timer/Counter2 is asynchronously clocked from the TOSC oscillator or TOSC1 pin. This enables use of Timer/Counter2 as a Real Time Counter (RTC). A crystal can then be connected between the TOSC1 and TOSC2 pins to serve as an independent clock source for Timer/Counter2. The Oscillator is optimized for use with a 32.768 kHz crystal. Setting AS2 and resetting EXCLK enables the TOSC oscillator. 163 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 14-14. Timer/Counter2 Crystal Oscillator Connections 12 - 22 pF TOSC2 32.768 KHz TOSC1 12 - 22 pF GND A external clock can also be used using TOSC1 as input. Setting AS2 and EXCLK enables this configuration. Figure 14-15. Timer/Counter2 External Clock Connections NC TOSC2 External Clock Signal TOSC1 For Timer/Counter2, the possible prescaled selections are: clk T2S /8, clk T2S /32, clk T2S /64, clkT2S/128, clkT2S/256, and clkT2S/1024. Additionally, clkT2S as well as 0 (stop) may be selected. Setting the PSR2 bit in GTCCR resets the prescaler. This allows the user to operate with a predictable prescaler. 14.11.1 General Timer/Counter Control Register - GTCCR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TSM - - - - - PSR2 PSR310 Read/Write R/W R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 GTCCR * Bit 1 - PSR2: Prescaler Reset Timer/Counter2 When this bit is one, the Timer/Counter2 prescaler will be reset. This bit is normally cleared immediately by hardware. If the bit is written when Timer/Counter2 is operating in asynchronous mode, the bit will remain one until the prescaler has been reset. The bit will not be cleared by hardware if the TSM bit is set. Refer to the description of the "Bit 7 - TSM: Timer/Counter Synchronization Mode" on page 98 for a description of the Timer/Counter Synchronization mode. 164 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 15. Output Compare Modulator - OCM 15.1 Overview Many register and bit references in this section are written in general form. * A lower case "n" replaces the Timer/Counter number, in this case 0 and 1. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., TCNT0 for accessing Timer/Counter0 counter value and so on. * A lower case "x" replaces the Output Compare unit channel, in this case A or C. However, when using the register or bit defines in a program, the precise form must be used, i.e., OCR0A for accessing Timer/Counter0 output compare channel A value and so on. The Output Compare Modulator (OCM) allows generation of waveforms modulated with a carrier frequency. The modulator uses the outputs from the Output Compare Unit C of the 16-bit Timer/Counter1 and the Output Compare Unit of the 8-bit Timer/Counter0. For more details about these Timer/Counters see "16-bit Timer/Counter (Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter3)" on page 113 and "8-bit Timer/Counter0 with PWM" on page 99. Figure 15-1. Output Compare Modulator, Block Diagram Timer/Counter 1 OC1C Pin OC0A / OC1C / PB7 Timer/Counter 0 OC0A When the modulator is enabled, the two output compare channels are modulated together as shown in the block diagram (Figure 15-1). 15.2 Description The Output Compare unit 1C and Output Compare unit 0A shares the PB7 port pin for output. The outputs of the Output Compare units (OC1C and OC0A) overrides the normal PORTB7 Register when one of them is enabled (i.e., when COMnx1:0 is not equal to zero). When both OC1C and OC0A are enabled at the same time, the modulator is automatically enabled. When the modulator is enabled the type of modulation (logical AND or OR) can be selected by the PORTB7 Register. Note that the DDRB7 controls the direction of the port independent of the COMnx1:0 bit setting. The functional equivalent schematic of the modulator is shown on Figure 15-2. The schematic includes part of the Timer/Counter units and the port B pin 7 output driver circuit. 165 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 15-2. Output Compare Modulator, Schematic COM0A1 COM0A0 Vcc COM1C1 COM1C0 (From T/C1 Waveform Generator) Modulator 0 D 1 Q 1 OC1C Pin 0 (From T/C0 Waveform Generator) D OC0A / OC1C / PB7 Q OC0A D Q D PORTB7 Q DDRB7 DATABUS 15.2.1 Timing Example Figure 15-3 illustrates the modulator in action. In this example the Timer/Counter1 is set to operate in fast PWM mode (non-inverted) and Timer/Counter0 uses CTC waveform mode with toggle Compare Output mode (COMnx1:0 = 1). Figure 15-3. Output Compare Modulator, Timing Diagram clk I/O OC1C (FPWM Mode) OC0A (CTC Mode) PB7 (PORTB7 = 0) PB7 (PORTB7 = 1) (Period) 1 2 3 In this example, Timer/Counter0 provides the carrier, while the modulating signal is generated by the Output Compare unit C of the Timer/Counter1. 166 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 15.2.2 Resolution of the PWM Signal The resolution of the PWM signal (OC1C) is reduced by the modulation. The reduction factor is equal to the number of system clock cycles of one period of the carrier (OC0A). In this example the resolution is reduced by a factor of two. The reason for the reduction is illustrated in Figure 15-3 at the second and third period of the PB7 output when PORTB7 equals zero. The period 2 high time is one cycle longer than the period 3 high time, but the result on the PB7 output is equal in both periods. 167 7679H-CAN-08/08 16. Serial Peripheral Interface - SPI The Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) allows high-speed synchronous data transfer between the AT90CAN32/64/128 and peripheral devices or between several AVR devices. The AT90CAN32/64/128 SPI includes the following features: 16.1 Features * * * * * * * * Full-duplex, Three-wire Synchronous Data Transfer Master or Slave Operation LSB First or MSB First Data Transfer Seven Programmable Bit Rates End of Transmission Interrupt Flag Write Collision Flag Protection Wake-up from Idle Mode Double Speed (CK/2) Master SPI Mode Figure 16-1. SPI Block Diagram(1) clk IO SPI2X SPI2X DIVIDER /2/4/8/16/32/64/128 Note: 168 1. Refer to Figure 1-2 on page 5 or Figure 1-3 on page 6, and Table 9-6 on page 76 for SPI pin placement. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The interconnection between Master and Slave CPUs with SPI is shown in Figure 16-2. The system consists of two shift Registers, and a Master clock generator. The SPI Master initiates the communication cycle when pulling low the Slave Select SS pin of the desired Slave. Master and Slave prepare the data to be sent in their respective shift Registers, and the Master generates the required clock pulses on the SCK line to interchange data. Data is always shifted from Master to Slave on the Master Out - Slave In, MOSI, line, and from Slave to Master on the Master In - Slave Out, MISO, line. After each data packet, the Master will synchronize the Slave by pulling high the Slave Select, SS, line. When configured as a Master, the SPI interface has no automatic control of the SS line. This must be handled by user software before communication can start. When this is done, writing a byte to the SPI Data Register starts the SPI clock generator, and the hardware shifts the eight bits into the Slave. After shifting one byte, the SPI clock generator stops, setting the end of transmission flag (SPIF). If the SPI Interrupt Enable bit (SPIE) in the SPCR Register is set, an interrupt is requested. The Master may continue to shift the next byte by writing it into SPDR, or signal the end of packet by pulling high the Slave Select, SS line. The last incoming byte will be kept in the Buffer Register for later use. When configured as a Slave, the SPI interface will remain sleeping with MISO tri-stated as long as the SS pin is driven high. In this state, software may update the contents of the SPI Data Register, SPDR, but the data will not be shifted out by incoming clock pulses on the SCK pin until the SS pin is driven low. As one byte has been completely shifted, the end of transmission flag, SPIF is set. If the SPI Interrupt Enable bit, SPIE, in the SPCR Register is set, an interrupt is requested. The Slave may continue to place new data to be sent into SPDR before reading the incoming data. The last incoming byte will be kept in the Buffer Register for later use. Figure 16-2. SPI Master-slave Interconnection SHIFT ENABLE The system is single buffered in the transmit direction and double buffered in the receive direction. This means that bytes to be transmitted cannot be written to the SPI Data Register before the entire shift cycle is completed. When receiving data, however, a received character must be read from the SPI Data Register before the next character has been completely shifted in. Otherwise, the first byte is lost. In SPI Slave mode, the control logic will sample the incoming signal of the SCK pin. To ensure correct sampling of the clock signal, the minimum low and high period should be: - Low period: Longer than 2 CPU clock cycles, - High period: Longer than 2 CPU clock cycles. 169 7679H-CAN-08/08 When the SPI is enabled, the data direction of the MOSI, MISO, SCK, and SS pins is overridden according to Table 16-1. For more details on automatic port overrides, refer to "Alternate Port Functions" on page 71. Table 16-1. Pin Direction, Master SPI Direction, Slave SPI MOSI User Defined Input MISO Input User Defined SCK User Defined Input SS User Defined Input Note: 170 SPI Pin Overrides(1) 1. See "Alternate Functions of Port B" on page 76 for a detailed description of how to define the direction of the user defined SPI pins. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The following code examples show how to initialize the SPI as a Master and how to perform a simple transmission. DDR_SPI in the examples must be replaced by the actual Data Direction Register controlling the SPI pins. DD_MOSI, DD_MISO and DD_SCK must be replaced by the actual data direction bits for these pins. E.g. if MOSI is placed on pin PB2, replace DD_MOSI with DDB2 and DDR_SPI with DDRB. Assembly Code Example(1) SPI_MasterInit: ; Set MOSI and SCK output, all others input ldi r17,(1<>8); UBRR0L = (unsigned char) baud; /* Set frame format: 8data, no parity & 2 stop bits */ UCSR0C = (0<> 1) & 0x01; return ((resh << 8) | resl); } Note: 1. The example code assumes that the part specific header file is included. The receive function example reads all the I/O Registers into the Register File before any computation is done. This gives an optimal receive buffer utilization since the buffer location read will be free to accept new data as early as possible. 188 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 17.8.3 Receive Complete Flag and Interrupt The USARTn Receiver has one flag that indicates the Receiver state. The Receive Complete (RXCn) flag indicates if there are unread data present in the receive buffer. This flag is one when unread data exist in the receive buffer, and zero when the receive buffer is empty (i.e., does not contain any unread data). If the Receiver is disabled (RXENn = 0), the receive buffer will be flushed and consequently the RXCn bit will become zero. When the Receive Complete Interrupt Enable (RXCIEn) in UCSRnB is set, the USARTn Receive Complete interrupt will be executed as long as the RXCn flag is set (provided that global interrupts are enabled). When interrupt-driven data reception is used, the receive complete routine must read the received data from UDRn in order to clear the RXCn flag, otherwise a new interrupt will occur once the interrupt routine terminates. 17.8.4 Receiver Error Flags The USARTn Receiver has three error flags: Frame Error (FEn), Data OverRun (DORn) and Parity Error (UPEn). All can be accessed by reading UCSRnA. Common for the error flags is that they are located in the receive buffer together with the frame for which they indicate the error status. Due to the buffering of the error flags, the UCSRnA must be read before the receive buffer (UDRn), since reading the UDRn I/O location changes the buffer read location. Another equality for the error flags is that they can not be altered by software doing a write to the flag location. However, all flags must be set to zero when the UCSRnA is written for upward compatibility of future USART implementations. None of the error flags can generate interrupts. The Frame Error (FEn) flag indicates the state of the first stop bit of the next readable frame stored in the receive buffer. The FEn flag is zero when the stop bit was correctly read (as one), and the FEn flag will be one when the stop bit was incorrect (zero). This flag can be used for detecting out-of-sync conditions, detecting break conditions and protocol handling. The FEn flag is not affected by the setting of the USBSn bit in UCSRnC since the Receiver ignores all, except for the first, stop bits. For compatibility with future devices, always set this bit to zero when writing to UCSRnA. The Data OverRun (DORn) flag indicates data loss due to a receiver buffer full condition. A Data OverRun occurs when the receive buffer is full (two characters), it is a new character waiting in the Receive Shift Register, and a new start bit is detected. If the DORn flag is set there was one or more serial frame lost between the frame last read from UDRn, and the next frame read from UDRn. For compatibility with future devices, always write this bit to zero when writing to UCSRnA. The DORn flag is cleared when the frame received was successfully moved from the Shift Register to the receive buffer. The Parity Error (UPEn) Flag indicates that the next frame in the receive buffer had a Parity Error when received. If Parity Check is not enabled the UPEn bit will always be read zero. For compatibility with future devices, always set this bit to zero when writing to UCSRnA. For more details see "Parity Bit Calculation" on page 182 and "Parity Checker" on page 189. 17.8.5 Parity Checker The Parity Checker is active when the high USARTn Parity mode (UPMn1) bit is set. Type of Parity Check to be performed (odd or even) is selected by the UPMn0 bit. When enabled, the Parity Checker calculates the parity of the data bits in incoming frames and compares the result with the parity bit from the serial frame. The result of the check is stored in the receive buffer together with the received data and stop bits. The Parity Error (UPEn) flag can then be read by software to check if the frame had a Parity Error. 189 7679H-CAN-08/08 The UPEn bit is set if the next character that can be read from the receive buffer had a Parity Error when received and the Parity Checking was enabled at that point (UPMn1 = 1). This bit is valid until the receive buffer (UDRn) is read. 17.8.6 Disabling the Receiver In contrast to the Transmitter, disabling of the Receiver will be immediate. Data from ongoing receptions will therefore be lost. When disabled (i.e., the RXENn is set to zero) the Receiver will no longer override the normal function of the RxDn port pin. The Receiver buffer FIFO will be flushed when the Receiver is disabled. Remaining data in the buffer will be lost 17.8.7 Flushing the Receive Buffer The receiver buffer FIFO will be flushed when the Receiver is disabled, i.e., the buffer will be emptied of its contents. Unread data will be lost. If the buffer has to be flushed during normal operation, due to for instance an error condition, read the UDRn I/O location until the RXCn flag is cleared. The following code example shows how to flush the receive buffer. Assembly Code Example (1) USART0_Flush: lds r16, UCSR0A sbrs r16, RXC0 ret lds r16, UDR0 rjmp USART0_Flush C Code Example (1) void USART0_Flush (void) { unsigned char dummy; while (UCSR0A & (1< 0 Phase error > 0 Phase error < 0 Synchronization Segment: SYNS Tsyns=1xTscl (fixed) Tprs Tphs1 (1) or Tphs1+Tsjw (3) Tphs2 (2) or Tphs2+Tsjw (4) Tbit Sample Point 19.4.3 Transmission Point Baud Rate With no baud rate prescaler (BRP[5..0]=0) the sampling point comes one time quantum too early. This leads to a fail according the ISO16845 Test plan. It is necessary to lengthen the Phase Segment 1 by one time quantum and to shorten the Phase Segment 2 by one time quantum to compensate. The baud rate selection is made by Tbit calculation: Tbit(1) = Tsyns + Tprs + Tphs1 + Tphs2 1. Tsyns = 1 x Tscl = (BRP[5..0]+ 1)/clkIO (= 1TQ) 2. Tprs = (1 to 8) x Tscl = (PRS[2..0]+ 1) x Tscl 3. Tphs1 = (1 to 8) x Tscl = (PHS1[2..0]+ 1) x Tscl 4. Tphs2 = (1 to 8) x Tscl = (PHS2[2..0](2)+ 1) x Tscl 242 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 5. Tsjw = (1 to 4) x Tscl = (SJW[1..0]+ 1) x Tscl Notes: 1. The total number of Tscl (Time Quanta) in a bit time must be from 8 to 25. 2. PHS2[2..0] 2 is programmable to be PHS1[2..0] and 1. 19.4.4 Fault Confinement (c.f. Section 19.7 "Error Management" on page 248). 19.4.5 Overload Frame An overload frame is sent by setting an overload request (OVRQ). After the next reception, the CAN channel sends an overload frame in accordance with the CAN specification. A status or flag is set (OVRG) as long as the overload frame is sent. Figure 19-9. Overload Frame Setting OVRQ bit Instructions Resetting OVRQ bit OVRQ bit OVRG bit RXCAN Ident "A" TXCAN 19.5 Cmd Message Data "A" CRC A Interframe Overload Frame Ident "B" Overload Frame Message Objects The MOb is a CAN frame descriptor. It contains all information to handle a CAN frame. This means that a MOb has been outlined to allow to describe a CAN message like an object. The set of MObs is the front end part of the "mailbox" where the messages to send and/or to receive are pre-defined as well as possible to decrease the work load of the software. The MObs are independent but priority is given to the lower one in case of multi matching. The operating modes are: - Disabled mode - Transmit mode - Receive mode - Automatic reply - Frame buffer receive mode 19.5.1 Number of MObs This device has 15 MObs, they are numbered from 0 up to 14 (i=14, no MOb 15). 243 7679H-CAN-08/08 19.5.2 Operating Modes There is no default mode after RESET. Every MOb has its own fields to control the operating mode. Before enabling the CAN peripheral, each MOb must be configured (ex: disabled mode - CONMOB=00). Table 19-1. MOb Configuration MOb Configuration 0 0 0 1 1 Reply Valid RTR Tag x x Disabled x 0 Tx Data Frame x 1 Tx Remote Frame x 0 Rx Data Frame 0 0 Operating Mode Rx Remote Frame 1 1 1 19.5.2.1 1 x Rx Remote Frame then, Tx Data Frame (reply) x Frame Buffer Receive Mode Disabled In this mode, the MOb is "free". 19.5.2.2 Tx Data & Remote Frame 1. Several fields must be initialized before sending: - Identifier tag (IDT) - Identifier extension (IDE) - Remote transmission request (RTRTAG) - Data length code (DLC) - Reserved bit(s) tag (RBnTAG) - Data bytes of message (MSG) 2. The MOb is ready to send a data or a remote frame when the MOb configuration is set (CONMOB). 3. Then, the CAN channel scans all the MObs in Tx configuration, finds the MOb having the highest priority and tries to send it. 4. When the transmission is completed the TXOK flag is set (interrupt). 5. All the parameters and data are available in the MOb until a new initialization. 19.5.2.3 Rx Data & Remote Frame 1. Several fields must be initialized before receiving: - - - - - - - - 244 Identifier tag (IDT) Identifier mask (IDMSK) Identifier extension (IDE) Identifier extension mask (IDEMSK) Remote transmission request (RTRTAG) Remote transmission request mask (RTRMSK) Data length code (DLC) Reserved bit(s) tag (RBnTAG) AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 2. The MOb is ready to receive a data or a remote frame when the MOb configuration is set (CONMOB). 3. When a frame identifier is received on CAN network, the CAN channel scans all the MObs in receive mode, tries to find the MOb having the highest priority which is matching. 4. On a hit, the IDT, the IDE and the DLC of the matched MOb are updated from the incoming (frame) values. 5. Once the reception is completed, the data bytes of the received message are stored (not for remote frame) in the data buffer of the matched MOb and the RXOK flag is set (interrupt). 6. All the parameters and data are available in the MOb until a new initialization. 19.5.2.4 Automatic Reply A reply (data frame) to a remote frame can be automatically sent after reception of the expected remote frame. 1. Several fields must be initialized before receiving the remote frame: - Reply valid (RPLV) in a identical flow to the one described in Section 19.5.2.3 "Rx Data & Remote Frame" on page 244. 2. When a remote frame matches, automatically the RTRTAG and the reply valid bit (RPLV) are reset. No flag (or interrupt) is set at this time. Since the CAN data buffer has not been used by the incoming remote frame, the MOb is then ready to be in transmit mode without any more setting. The IDT, the IDE, the other tags and the DLC of the received remote frame are used for the reply. 3. When the transmission of the reply is completed the TXOK flag is set (interrupt). 4. All the parameters and data are available in the MOb until a new initialization. 19.5.2.5 Frame Buffer Receive Mode This mode is useful to receive multi frames. The priority between MObs offers a management for these incoming frames. One set MObs (including non-consecutive MObs) is created when the MObs are set in this mode. Due to the mode setting, only one set is possible. A frame buffer completed flag (or interrupt) - BXOK - will rise only when all the MObs of the set will have received their dedicated CAN frame. 1. MObs in frame buffer receive mode need to be initialized as MObs in standard receive mode. 2. The MObs are ready to receive data (or a remote) frames when their respective configurations are set (CONMOB). 3. When a frame identifier is received on CAN network, the CAN channel scans all the MObs in receive mode, tries to find the MOb having the highest priority which is matching. 4. On a hit, the IDT, the IDE and the DLC of the matched MOb are updated from the incoming (frame) values. 5. Once the reception is completed, the data bytes of the received message are stored (not for remote frame) in the data buffer of the matched MOb and the RXOK flag is set (interrupt). 6. When the reception in the last MOb of the set is completed, the frame buffer completed BXOK flag is set (interrupt). BXOK flag can be cleared only if all CONMOB fields of the set have been re-written before. 7. All the parameters and data are available in the MObs until a new initialization. 245 7679H-CAN-08/08 19.5.3 Acceptance Filter Upon a reception hit (i.e., a good comparison between the ID + RTR + RBn + IDE received and an IDT+ RTRTAG + RBnTAG + IDE specified while taking the comparison mask into account) the IDT + RTRTAG + RBnTAG + IDE received are updated in the MOb (written over the registers). Figure 19-10. Acceptance Filter Block Diagram internal RxDcan Rx Shift Register (internal) ID & RB RTR IDE 14(33) RB excluded = Hit MOb[i] 13(31) Write Enable 14(33) ID & RB 1 13(31) - RB excluded RTRTAG IDE 13(31) CANIDT Registers & CANCDMOB (MOb[i]) Note: RTRMSK IDMSK IDEMSK CANIDM Registers (MOb[i]) Examples: Full filtering: to accept only ID = 0x317 in part A. - ID MSK = 111 1111 1111 b - ID TAG = 011 0001 0111 b Partial filtering: to accept ID from 0x310 up to 0x317 in part A. - ID MSK = 111 1111 1000 b - ID TAG = 011 0001 0xxx b No filtering: to accept all ID from 0x000 up to 0x7FF in part A. - ID MSK = 000 0000 0000 b - ID TAG = xxx xxxx xxxx b 19.5.4 MOb Page Every MOb is mapped into a page to save place. The page number is the MOb number. This page number is set in CANPAGE register. The number 15 is reserved for factory tests. CANHPMOB register gives the MOb having the highest priority in CANSIT registers. It is formatted to provide a direct entry for CANPAGE register. Because CANHPMOB codes CANSIT registers, it will be only updated if the corresponding enable bits (ENRX, ENTX, ENERR) are enabled (c.f. Figure 19-14). 19.5.5 CAN Data Buffers To preserve register allocation, the CAN data buffer is seen such as a FIFO (with address pointer accessible) into a MOb selection.This also allows to reduce the risks of un-controlled accesses. There is one FIFO per MOb. This FIFO is accessed into a MOb page thanks to the CAN message register. 246 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The data index (INDX) is the address pointer to the required data byte. The data byte can be read or write. The data index is automatically incremented after every access if the AINC* bit is reset. A roll-over is implemented, after data index=7 it is data index=0. The first byte of a CAN frame is stored at the data index=0, the second one at the data index=1, ... 19.6 CAN Timer A programmable 16-bit timer is used for message stamping and time trigger communication (TTC). Figure 19-11. CAN Timer Block Diagram clk IO 8 ENFG CANTCON clk CANTIM TTC OVRTIM overrun CANTIM TXOK[i] "EOF " "SOF " RXOK[i] CANSTM[i] 19.6.1 SYNCTTC CANTTC Prescaler An 8-bit prescaler is initialized by CANTCON register. It receives the clkIO frequency divided by 8. It provides clkCANTIM frequency to the CAN Timer if the CAN controller is enabled. TclkCANTIM = TclkIO x 8 x (CANTCON [7:0] + 1) 19.6.2 16-bit Timer This timer starts counting from 0x0000 when the CAN controller is enabled (ENFG bit). When the timer rolls over from 0xFFFF to 0x0000, an interrupt is generated (OVRTIM). 19.6.3 Time Triggering Two synchronization modes are implemented for TTC (TTC bit): - synchronization on Start of Frame (SYNCTTC=0), - synchronization on End of Frame (SYNCTTC=1). In TTC mode, a frame is sent once, even if an error occurs. 19.6.4 Stamping Message The capture of the timer value is done in the MOb which receives or sends the frame. All managed MOb are stamped, the stamping of a received (sent) frame occurs on RxOk (TXOK). 247 7679H-CAN-08/08 19.7 19.7.1 Error Management Fault Confinement The CAN channel may be in one of the three following states: * Error active (default): The CAN channel takes part in bus communication and can send an active error frame when the CAN macro detects an error. * Error passive: The CAN channel cannot send an active error frame. It takes part in bus communication, but when an error is detected, a passive error frame is sent. Also, after a transmission, an error passive unit will wait before initiating further transmission. * Bus off: The CAN channel is not allowed to have any influence on the bus. For fault confinement, a transmit error counter (TEC) and a receive error counter (REC) are implemented. BOFF and ERRP bits give the information of the state of the CAN channel. Setting BOFF to one may generate an interrupt. Figure 19-12. Line Error Mode Reset ERRP = 0 BOFF = 0 Error Active TEC > 127 or REC > 127 128 occurrences of 11 consecutive recessive bit TEC < 127 and REC < 127 ERRP = 1 BOFF = 0 ERRP = 0 BOFF = 1 Bus Off Error Passive TEC > 255 interrupt - BOFFIT Note: 19.7.2 More than one REC/TEC change may apply during a given message transfer. Error Types * BERR: Bit error. The bit value which is monitored is different from the bit value sent. Note: Exceptions: - Recessive bit sent monitored as dominant bit during the arbitration field and the acknowledge slot. - Detecting a dominant bit during the sending of an error frame. * SERR: Stuff error. Detection of more than five consecutive bit with the same polarity. * CERR: CRC error (Rx only). The receiver performs a CRC check on every destuffed received message from the start of frame up to the data field. If this checking does not match with the destuffed CRC field, an CRC error is set. * FERR: Form error. The form error results from one (or more) violations of the fixed form of the following bit fields: - CRC delimiter - acknowledgement delimiter 248 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 - end-of-frame - error delimiter - overload delimiter * AERR: Acknowledgment error (Tx only). No detection of the dominant bit in the acknowledge slot. Figure 19-13. Error Detection Procedures in a Data Frame Arbitration Bit error Stuff error Form error Tx ACK error SOF Rx Identifier RTR Control Message Data CRC CRC ACK ACK del. del. EOF inter. Bit error Stuff error Form error CRC error 19.7.3 Error Setting The CAN channel can detect some errors on the CAN network. * In transmission: The error is set at MOb level. * In reception: - The identified has matched: The error is set at MOb level. - The identified has not or not yet matched: The error is set at general level. After detecting an error, the CAN channel sends an error frame on network. If the CAN channel detects an error frame on network, it sends its own error frame. 19.8 19.8.1 Interrupts Interrupt organization The different interrupts are: * Interrupt on receive completed OK, * Interrupt on transmit completed OK, * Interrupt on error (bit error, stuff error, CRC error, form error, acknowledge error), * Interrupt on frame buffer full, * Interrupt on "Bus Off" setting, * Interrupt on overrun of CAN timer. The general interrupt enable is provided by ENIT bit and the specific interrupt enable for CAN timer overrun is provided by ENORVT bit. 249 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 19-14. CAN Controller Interrupt Structure CANGIE.4 CANGIE.5 CANGIE.3 ENTX CANSTMOB.6 TXOK[i] CANSTMOB.5 RXOK[i] CANSTMOB.4 BERR[i] CANSTMOB.3 SERR[i] CANSTMOB.2 CERR[i] CANSTMOB.1 FERR[i] CANSTMOB.0 AERR[i] ENRX ENERR CANSIT 1/2 SIT[i] CANIE 1/2 IEMOB[i] 0 CANGIT.7 i CANGIT.4 BXOK CANGIT.3 SERG CANGIT.2 CERG CANGIT.1 FERG CANGIT.0 AERG CANGIT.6 BOFFI CANGIT.5 OVRTIM CANIT CANGIE.2 CANGIE.1 CANGIE.6 CANGIE.7 ENERG ENIT ENBX ENBOFF CAN IT CANGIE.0 19.8.2 ENOVRT OVR IT Interrupt Behavior When an interrupt occurs, an interrupt flag bit is set in the corresponding MOb-CANSTMOB register or in the general CANGIT register. If in the CANIE register, ENRX / ENTX / ENERR bit are set, then the corresponding MOb bit is set in the CANSITn register. To acknowledge a MOb interrupt, the corresponding bits of CANSTMOB register (RXOK, TXOK,...) must be cleared by the software application. This operation needs a read-modify-write software routine. To acknowledge a general interrupt, the corresponding bits of CANGIT register (BXOK, BOFFIT,...) must be cleared by the software application. This operation is made writing a logical one in these interrupt flags (writing a logical zero doesn't change the interrupt flag value). OVRTIM interrupt flag is reset as the other interrupt sources of CANGIT register and is also reset entering in its dedicated interrupt handler. When the CAN node is in transmission and detects a Form Error in its frame, a bit Error will also be raised. Consequently, two consecutive interrupts can occur, both due to the same error. When a MOb error occurs and is set in its own CANSTMOB register, no general error is set in CANGIT register. 250 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 19.9 CAN Register Description Figure 19-15. Registers Organization AVR Registers Registers in Pages General Control General Status General Interrupt Bit Timing 1 Bit Timing 2 Bit Timing 3 Enable MOb 2 Enable MOb 1 Enable Interrupt Enable Interrupt MOb 2 Enable Interrupt MOb 1 Status Interrupt MOb 2 Status Interrupt MOb 1 CAN Timer Control CAN Timer Low CAN Timer High CAN TTC Low CAN TTC High TEC Counter REC Counter Hightest Priority MOb Page MOb MOb Number Me (i+1) Page MOb MOb Status MOb Control & DLC MOb0 - MOb Status MOb0 - MOb Ctrl & DLC ID Tag 4 ID Tag 3 ID Tag 2 ID Tag 1 MOb0 - ID Tag 4 MOb0 - ID Tag 3 MOb0 - ID Tag 2 MOb0 - ID Tag 1 ID Mask 4 ID Mask 3 ID Mask 2 ID Mask 1 MOb0 - ID Mask 4 MOb0 - ID Mask 3 MOb0 - ID Mask 2 Time Stamp Low Time Stamp High MOb0 - Time Stamp Low MOb0 - Time Stamp High Message Data MOb0 - Mess. Data - byte 0 MOb0 - ID Mask 1 jects e Ob ssag Data Index MOb(i) - MOb Status MOb(i) - MOb Ctrl & DLC MOb(i) - ID Tag 4 MOb(i) - ID Tag 3 MOb(i) - ID Tag 2 MOb(i) - ID Tag 1 MOb(i) - ID Mask 4 MOb(i) - ID Mask 3 MOb(i) - ID Mask 2 MOb(i) - ID Mask 1 MOb(i) - Time Stamp Low MOb(i) - Time Stamp High MOb(i) - Mess. Data - byte 0 8 bytes 251 7679H-CAN-08/08 19.10 General CAN Registers 19.10.1 CAN General Control Register - CANGCON Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ABRQ OVRQ TTC SYNTTC LISTEN TEST ENA/STB SWRES Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANGCON * Bit 7 - ABRQ: Abort Request This is not an auto resettable bit. - 0 - no request. - 1 - abort request: a reset of CANEN1 and CANEN2 registers is done. The pending communications are immediately disabled and the on-going one will be normally terminated, setting the appropriate status flags. Note that CANCDMOB register remain unchanged. * Bit 6 - OVRQ: Overload Frame Request This is not an auto resettable bit. - 0 - no request. - 1 - overload frame request: send an overload frame after the next received frame. The overload frame can be traced observing OVFG in CANGSTA register (c.f. Figure 19-9 on page 243). * Bit 5 - TTC: Time Trigger Communication - 0 - no TTC. - 1 - TTC mode. * Bit 4 - SYNTTC: Synchronization of TTC This bit is only used in TTC mode. - 0 - the TTC timer is caught on SOF. - 1 - the TTC timer is caught on the last bit of the EOF. * Bit 3 - LISTEN: Listening Mode - 0 - no listening mode. - 1 - listening mode. * Bit 2 - TEST: Test Mode - 0 - no test mode - 1 - test mode: intend for factory testing and not for customer use. Note: CAN may malfunction if this bit is set. * Bit 1 - ENA/STB: Enable / Standby Mode Because this bit is a command and is not immediately effective, the ENFG bit in CANGSTA register gives the true state of the chosen mode. 252 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 - 0 - standby mode: The on-going transmission (if exists) is normally terminated and the CAN channel is frozen (the CONMOB bits of every MOb do not change). The transmitter constantly provides a recessive level. In this mode, the receiver is not enabled but all the registers and mailbox remain accessible from CPU. Note: A standby mode applied during a reception may corrupt the on-going reception or set the controller in a wrong state. The controller will restart correctly from this state if a software reset (SWRES) is applied. If no reset is considered, a possible solution is to wait for a lake of a receiver busy (RXBSY) before to enter in stand-by mode. The best solution is first to apply an abort request command (ABRQ) and then wait for the lake of the receiver busy (RXBSY) before to enter in stand-by mode. In any cases, this standby mode behavior has no effect on the CAN bus integrity. - 1 - enable mode: The CAN channel enters in enable mode once 11 recessive bits has been read. * Bit 0 - SWRES: Software Reset Request This auto resettable bit only resets the CAN controller. - 0 - no reset - 1 - reset: this reset is "ORed" with the hardware reset. 19.10.2 CAN General Status Register - CANGSTA Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - OVRG - TXBSY RXBSY ENFG BOFF ERRP Read/Write - R - R R R R R Initial Value - 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 CANGSTA * Bit 7 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. * Bit 6 - OVRG: Overload Frame Flag This flag does not generate an interrupt. - 0 - no overload frame. - 1 - overload frame: set by hardware as long as the produced overload frame is sent. * Bit 5 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. * Bit 4 - TXBSY: Transmitter Busy This flag does not generate an interrupt. - 0 - transmitter not busy. - 1 - transmitter busy: set by hardware as long as a frame (data, remote, overload or error frame) or an ACK field is sent. Also set when an inter frame space is sent. * Bit 3 - RXBSY: Receiver Busy This flag does not generate an interrupt. - 0 - receiver not busy - 1 - receiver busy: set by hardware as long as a frame is received or monitored. * Bit 2 - ENFG: Enable Flag 253 7679H-CAN-08/08 This flag does not generate an interrupt. - 0 - CAN controller disable: because an enable/standby command is not immediately effective, this status gives the true state of the chosen mode. - 1 - CAN controller enable. * Bit 1 - BOFF: Bus Off Mode BOFF gives the information of the state of the CAN channel. Only entering in bus off mode generates the BOFFIT interrupt. - 0 - no bus off mode. - 1 - bus off mode. * Bit 0 - ERRP: Error Passive Mode ERRP gives the information of the state of the CAN channel. This flag does not generate an interrupt. - 0 - no error passive mode. - 1 - error passive mode. 19.10.3 CAN General Interrupt Register - CANGIT Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CANIT BOFFIT OVRTIM BXOK SERG CERG FERG AERG Read/Write R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANGIT * Bit 7 - CANIT: General Interrupt Flag This is a read only bit. - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - CAN interrupt: image of all the CAN controller interrupts except for OVRTIM interrupt. This bit can be used for polling method. * Bit 6 - BOFFIT: Bus Off Interrupt Flag Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. BOFFIT flag is only set when the CAN enters in bus off mode (coming from error passive mode). - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - bus off interrupt when the CAN enters in bus off mode. * Bit 5 - OVRTIM: Overrun CAN Timer Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. Entering in CAN timer overrun interrupt handler also reset this interrupt flag - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - CAN timer overrun interrupt: set when the CAN timer switches from 0xFFFF to 0. * Bit 4 - BXOK: Frame Buffer Receive Interrupt Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. BXOK flag can be cleared only if all CONMOB fields of the MOb's of the buffer have been re-written before. - 0 - no interrupt. 254 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 - 1 - burst receive interrupt: set when the frame buffer receive is completed. * Bit 3 - SERG: Stuff Error General Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - stuff error interrupt: detection of more than 5 consecutive bits with the same polarity. * Bit 2 - CERG: CRC Error General Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - CRC error interrupt: the CRC check on destuffed message does not fit with the CRC field. * Bit 1 - FERG: Form Error General Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - form error interrupt: one or more violations of the fixed form in the CRC delimiter, acknowledgment delimiter or EOF. * Bit 0 - AERG: Acknowledgment Error General Writing a logical one resets this interrupt flag. - 0 - no interrupt. - 1 - acknowledgment error interrupt: no detection of the dominant bit in acknowledge slot. 19.10.4 CAN General Interrupt Enable Register - CANGIE Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ENIT ENBOFF ENRX ENTX ENERR ENBX ENERG ENOVRT Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANGIE * Bit 7 - ENIT: Enable all Interrupts (Except for CAN Timer Overrun Interrupt) - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- CANIT interrupt enabled. * Bit 6 - ENBOFF: Enable Bus Off Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- bus off interrupt enabled. * Bit 5 - ENRX: Enable Receive Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- receive interrupt enabled. * Bit 4 - ENTX: Enable Transmit Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. 255 7679H-CAN-08/08 - 1- transmit interrupt enabled. * Bit 3 - ENERR: Enable MOb Errors Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- MOb errors interrupt enabled. * Bit 2 - ENBX: Enable Frame Buffer Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- frame buffer interrupt enabled. * Bit 1 - ENERG: Enable General Errors Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- general errors interrupt enabled. * Bit 0 - ENOVRT: Enable CAN Timer Overrun Interrupt - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1- CAN timer interrupt overrun enabled. 19.10.5 CAN Enable MOb Registers CANEN2 and CANEN1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ENMOB7 ENMOB6 ENMOB5 ENMOB4 ENMOB3 ENMOB2 ENMOB1 ENMOB0 CANEN2 ENMOB14 ENMOB13 ENMOB12 ENMOB11 ENMOB10 ENMOB9 ENMOB8 CANEN1 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 R Read/Write R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Read/Write - R R R R R R R Initial Value - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * Bits 14:0 - ENMOB14:0: Enable MOb This bit provides the availability of the MOb. It is set to one when the MOb is enabled (i.e. CONMOB1:0 of CANCDMOB register). Once TXOK or RXOK is set to one (TXOK for automatic reply), the corresponding ENMOB is reset. ENMOB is also set to zero configuring the MOb in disabled mode, applying abortion or standby mode. - 0 - message object disabled: MOb available for a new transmission or reception. - 1 - message object enabled: MOb in use. * Bit 15 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. 256 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 19.10.6 CAN Enable Interrupt MOb Registers CANIE2 and CANIE1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IEMOB7 IEMOB6 IEMOB5 IEMOB4 IEMOB3 IEMOB2 IEMOB1 IEMOB0 CANIE2 IEMOB14 IEMOB13 IEMOB12 IEMOB11 IEMOB10 IEMOB9 IEMOB8 CANIE1 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 R/W Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Read/Write - R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * Bits 14:0 - IEMOB14:0: Interrupt Enable by MOb - 0 - interrupt disabled. - 1 - MOb interrupt enabled Note: Example: CANIE2 = 0000 1100b : enable of interrupts on MOb 2 & 3. * Bit 15 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANIE1 is written. 19.10.7 CAN Status Interrupt MOb Registers - CANSIT2 and CANSIT1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SIT7 SIT6 SIT5 SIT4 SIT3 SIT2 SIT1 SIT0 CANSIT2 - SIT14 SIT13 SIT12 SIT11 SIT10 SIT9 SIT8 CANSIT1 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 R Read/Write R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Read/Write - R R R R R R R Initial Value - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * Bits 14:0 - SIT14:0: Status of Interrupt by MOb - 0 - no interrupt. - 1- MOb interrupt. Note: Example: CANSIT2 = 0010 0001b : MOb 0 & 5 interrupts. * Bit 15 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. 19.10.8 CAN Bit Timing Register 1 - CANBT1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - BRP5 BRP4 BRP3 BRP2 BRP1 BRP0 - Read/Write - R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W - Initial Value - 0 0 0 0 0 0 - CANBT1 * Bit 7- Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT1 is written. * Bit 6:1 - BRP5:0: Baud Rate Prescaler 257 7679H-CAN-08/08 The period of the CAN controller system clock Tscl is programmable and determines the individual bit timing. BRP[5:0] + 1 Tscl = clkIO frequency If BRP[5..0]=0, see Section 19.4.3 "Baud Rate" on page 242 and Section * "Bit 0 - SMP: Sample Point(s)" on page 259. * Bit 0 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT1 is written. 19.10.9 CAN Bit Timing Register 2 - CANBT2 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - SJW1 SJW0 - PRS2 PRS1 PRS0 - Read/Write - R/W R/W - R/W R/W R/W - Initial Value - 0 0 - 0 0 0 - CANBT2 * Bit 7- Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT2 is written. * Bit 6:5 - SJW1:0: Re-Synchronization Jump Width To compensate for phase shifts between clock oscillators of different bus controllers, the controller must re-synchronize on any relevant signal edge of the current transmission. The synchronization jump width defines the maximum number of clock cycles. A bit period may be shortened or lengthened by a re-synchronization. Tsjw = Tscl x (SJW [1:0] +1) * Bit 4 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT2 is written. * Bit 3:1 - PRS2:0: Propagation Time Segment This part of the bit time is used to compensate for the physical delay times within the network. It is twice the sum of the signal propagation time on the bus line, the input comparator delay and the output driver delay. Tprs = Tscl x (PRS [2:0] + 1) * Bit 0 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT2 is written. 19.10.10 CAN Bit Timing Register 3 - CANBT3 Bit 258 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - PHS22 PHS21 PHS20 PHS12 PHS11 PHS10 SMP Read/Write - R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANBT3 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 7- Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANBT3 is written. * Bit 6:4 - PHS22:0: Phase Segment 2 This phase is used to compensate for phase edge errors. This segment may be shortened by the re-synchronization jump width. PHS2[2..0] shall be 1 and PHS1[2..0] (c.f. Section 19.2.3 "CAN Bit Timing" on page 236 and Section 19.4.3 "Baud Rate" on page 242). Tphs2 = Tscl x (PHS2 [2:0] + 1) * Bit 3:1 - PHS12:0: Phase Segment 1 This phase is used to compensate for phase edge errors. This segment may be lengthened by the re-synchronization jump width. Tphs1 = Tscl x (PHS1 [2:0] + 1) * Bit 0 - SMP: Sample Point(s) This option allows to filter possible noise on TxCAN input pin. - 0 - the sampling will occur once at the user configured sampling point - SP. - 1 - with three-point sampling configuration the first sampling will occur two TclkIO clocks before the user configured sampling point - SP, again at one TclkIO clock before SP and finally at SP. Then the bit level will be determined by a majority vote of the three samples. `SMP=1' configuration is not compatible with `BRP[5:0]=0' because TQ = TclkIO. If BRP = 0, SMP must be cleared. 19.10.11 CAN Timer Control Register - CANTCON Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TPRSC7 TPRSC6 TPRSC5 TPRSC4 TPRSC3 TPRSC2 TRPSC1 TPRSC0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANTCON * Bit 7:0 - TPRSC7:0: CAN Timer Prescaler Prescaler for the CAN timer upper counter range 0 to 255. It provides the clock to the CAN timer if the CAN controller is enabled. TclkCANTIM = TclkIO x 8 x (CANTCON [7:0] + 1) 19.10.12 CAN Timer Registers - CANTIML and CANTIMH Bit 7 6 5 4 3 CANTIM7 CANTIM6 CANTIM5 CANTIM4 CANTIM3 2 1 0 CANTIM2 CANTIM1 CANTIM0 CANTIML CANTIM15 CANTIM14 CANTIM13 CANTIM12 CANTIM11 CANTIM10 CANTIM9 CANTIM8 CANTIMH Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Read/Write R R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * Bits 15:0 - CANTIM15:0: CAN Timer Count CAN timer counter range 0 to 65,535. 259 7679H-CAN-08/08 19.10.13 CAN TTC Timer Registers - CANTTCL and CANTTCH Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 TIMTTC7 TIMTTC6 TIMTTC5 TIMTTC4 TIMTTC3 TIMTTC2 1 0 TIMTTC1 TIMTTC0 CANTTCL TIMTTC15 TIMTTC14 TIMTTC13 TIMTTC12 TIMTTC11 TIMTTC10 TIMTTC9 TIMTTC8 CANTTCH Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Read/Write R R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 * Bits 15:0 - TIMTTC15:0: TTC Timer Count CAN TTC timer counter range 0 to 65,535. 19.10.14 CAN Transmit Error Counter Register - CANTEC Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TEC7 TEC6 TEC5 TEC4 TEC3 TEC2 TEC1 TEC0 Read/Write R R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANTEC * Bit 7:0 - TEC7:0: Transmit Error Count CAN transmit error counter range 0 to 255. 19.10.15 CAN Receive Error Counter Register - CANREC Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 REC7 REC6 REC5 REC4 REC3 REC2 REC1 REC0 Read/Write R R R R R R R R Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CANREC * Bit 7:0 - REC7:0: Receive Error Count CAN receive error counter range 0 to 255. 19.10.16 CAN Highest Priority MOb Register - CANHPMOB Bit 7 6 5 4 HPMOB3 HPMOB2 HPMOB1 HPMOB0 3 2 1 0 CGP3 CGP2 CGP1 CGP0 Read/Write R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 CANHPMOB * Bit 7:4 - HPMOB3:0: Highest Priority MOb Number MOb having the highest priority in CANSIT registers. If CANSIT = 0 (no MOb), the return value is 0xF. Note: Do not confuse "MOb priority" and "Message ID priority".See "Message Objects" on page 243. * Bit 3:0 - CGP3:0: CAN General Purpose Bits These bits can be pre-programmed to match with the wanted configuration of the CANPAGE register (i.e., AINC and INDX2:0 setting). 19.10.17 CAN Page MOb Register - CANPAGE Bit 7 6 5 4 2 1 0 AINC INDX2 INDX1 INDX0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MOBNB3 MOBNB2 MOBNB1 MOBNB0 260 3 CANPAGE AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 7:4 - MOBNB3:0: MOb Number Selection of the MOb number, the available numbers are from 0 to 14. * Bit 3 - AINC: Auto Increment of the FIFO CAN Data Buffer Index (Active Low) - 0 - auto increment of the index (default value). - 1- no auto increment of the index. * Bit 2:0 - INDX2:0: FIFO CAN Data Buffer Index Byte location of the CAN data byte into the FIFO for the defined MOb. 19.11 MOb Registers The MOb registers has no initial (default) value after RESET. 19.11.1 CAN MOb Status Register - CANSTMOB Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DLCW TXOK RXOK BERR SERR CERR FERR AERR Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - CANSTMOB * Bit 7 - DLCW: Data Length Code Warning The incoming message does not have the DLC expected. Whatever the frame type, the DLC field of the CANCDMOB register is updated by the received DLC. * Bit 6 - TXOK: Transmit OK This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. The communication enabled by transmission is completed. TxOK rises at the end of EOF field and then, the MOb is disabled (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is cleared). When the controller is ready to send a frame, if two or more message objects are enabled as producers, the lower MOb index is supplied first. * Bit 5 - RXOK: Receive OK This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. The communication enabled by reception is completed. RxOK rises at the end of the 6th bit of EOF field and then, the MOb is disabled (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is cleared). In case of two or more message object reception hits, the lower MOb index is updated first. * Bit 4 - BERR: Bit Error (Only in Transmission) This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. The bit value monitored is different from the bit value sent. Exceptions: the monitored recessive bit sent as a dominant bit during the arbitration field and the acknowledge slot detecting a dominant bit during the sending of an error frame. 261 7679H-CAN-08/08 The rising of this flag does not disable the MOb (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is not cleared). The next matching frame will update the BERR flag. * Bit 3 - SERR: Stuff Error This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. Detection of more than five consecutive bits with the same polarity. This flag can generate an interrupt. The rising of this flag does not disable the MOb (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is not cleared). The next matching frame will update the SERR flag. * Bit 2 - CERR: CRC Error This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. The receiver performs a CRC check on every de-stuffed received message from the start of frame up to the data field. If this checking does not match with the de-stuffed CRC field, a CRC error is set. The rising of this flag does not disable the MOb (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is not cleared). The next matching frame will update the CERR flag. * Bit 1 - FERR: Form Error This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. The form error results from one or more violations of the fixed form in the following bit fields: * CRC delimiter. * Acknowledgment delimiter. * EOF The rising of this flag does not disable the MOb (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is not cleared). The next matching frame will update the FERR flag. * Bit 0 - AERR: Acknowledgment Error This flag can generate an interrupt. It must be cleared using a read-modify-write software routine on the whole CANSTMOB register. No detection of the dominant bit in the acknowledge slot. The rising of this flag does not disable the MOb (the corresponding ENMOB-bit of CANEN registers is not cleared). The next matching frame will update the AERR flag. 19.11.2 CAN MOb Control and DLC Register - CANCDMOB Bit 7 6 CONMOB1 CONMOB0 5 4 3 2 1 0 RPLV IDE DLC3 DLC2 DLC1 DLC0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - CANCDMOB * Bit 7:6 - CONMOB1:0: Configuration of Message Object These bits set the communication to be performed (no initial value after RESET). 262 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 - 00 - disable. - 01 - enable transmission. - 10 - enable reception. - 11 - enable frame buffer reception These bits are not cleared once the communication is performed. The user must re-write the configuration to enable a new communication. * This operation is necessary to be able to reset the BXOK flag. * This operation also set the corresponding bit in the CANEN registers. * Bit 5 - RPLV: Reply Valid Used in the automatic reply mode after receiving a remote frame. - 0 - reply not ready. - 1 - reply ready and valid. * Bit 4 - IDE: Identifier Extension IDE bit of the remote or data frame to send. This bit is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. - 0 - CAN standard rev 2.0 A (identifiers length = 11 bits). - 1 - CAN standard rev 2.0 B (identifiers length = 29 bits). * Bit 3:0 - DLC3:0: Data Length Code Number of Bytes in the data field of the message. DLC field of the remote or data frame to send. The range of DLC is from 0 up to 8. If DLC field >8 then effective DLC=8. This field is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. If the expected DLC differs from the incoming DLC, a DLC warning appears in the CANSTMOB register. 19.11.3 CAN Identifier Tag Registers CANIDT1, CANIDT2, CANIDT3, and CANIDT4 V2.0 part A Bit 15/7 14/6 13/5 12/4 11/3 10/2 9/1 8/0 - - - - - RTRTAG - RB0TAG CANIDT4 - - - - - - - - CANIDT3 IDT2 IDT1 IDT0 - - - - - CANIDT2 IDT10 IDT9 IDT8 IDT7 IDT6 IDT5 IDT4 IDT3 CANIDT1 Bit 31/23 30/22 29/21 28/20 27/19 26/18 25/17 24/16 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - V2.0 part B Bit 15/7 14/6 13/5 12/4 11/3 10/2 9/1 8/0 IDT4 IDT3 IDT2 IDT1 IDT0 RTRTAG RB1TAG RB0TAG CANIDT4 IDT12 IDT11 IDT10 IDT9 IDT8 IDT7 IDT6 IDT5 CANIDT3 IDT20 IDT19 IDT18 IDT17 IDT16 IDT15 IDT14 IDT13 CANIDT2 IDT28 IDT27 IDT26 IDT25 IDT24 IDT23 IDT22 IDT21 CANIDT1 263 7679H-CAN-08/08 Bit 31/23 30/22 29/21 28/20 27/19 26/18 25/17 24/16 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - V2.0 part A * Bit 31:21 - IDT10:0: Identifier Tag Identifier field of the remote or data frame to send. This field is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. * Bit 20:3 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, they must be written to zero when CANIDTn are written. When a remote or data frame is received, these bits do not operate in the comparison but they are updated with un-predicted values. * Bit 2 - RTRTAG: Remote Transmission Request Tag RTR bit of the remote or data frame to send. This tag is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. In case of Automatic Reply mode, this bit is automatically reset before sending the response. * Bit 1 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANIDTn are written. When a remote or data frame is received, this bit does not operate in the comparison but it is updated with un-predicted values. * Bit 0 - RB0TAG: Reserved Bit 0 Tag RB0 bit of the remote or data frame to send. This tag is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. V2.0 part B * Bit 31:3 - IDT28:0: Identifier Tag Identifier field of the remote or data frame to send. This field is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. * Bit 2 - RTRTAG: Remote Transmission Request Tag RTR bit of the remote or data frame to send. This tag is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. In case of Automatic Reply mode, this bit is automatically reset before sending the response. * Bit 1 - RB1TAG: Reserved Bit 1 Tag RB1 bit of the remote or data frame to send. This tag is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. 264 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bit 0 - RB0TAG: Reserved Bit 0 Tag RB0 bit of the remote or data frame to send. This tag is updated with the corresponding value of the remote or data frame received. 19.11.4 CAN Identifier Mask Registers CANIDM1, CANIDM2, CANIDM3, and CANIDM4 V2.0 part A Bit 15/7 14/6 13/5 12/4 11/3 10/2 9/1 8/0 - - - - - RTRMSK - IDEMSK CANIDM4 - - - - - - - - CANIDM3 IDMSK2 IDMSK1 IDMSK0 - - - - - CANIDM2 IDMSK10 IDMSK9 IDMSK8 IDMSK7 IDMSK6 IDMSK5 IDMSK4 IDMSK3 CANIDM1 Bit 31/23 30/22 29/21 28/20 27/19 26/18 25/17 24/16 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - V2.0 part B Bit 15/7 14/6 13/5 12/4 11/3 10/2 9/1 8/0 IDMSK4 IDMSK3 IDMSK2 IDMSK1 IDMSK0 RTRMSK - IDEMSK IDMSK12 IDMSK11 IDMSK10 IDMSK9 IDMSK8 IDMSK7 IDMSK6 IDMSK5 CANIDM3 IDMSK20 IDMSK19 IDMSK18 IDMSK17 IDMSK16 IDMSK15 IDMSK14 IDMSK13 CANIDM2 CANIDM1 IDMSK28 IDMSK27 IDMSK26 IDMSK25 IDMSK24 IDMSK23 IDMSK22 IDMSK21 Bit 31/23 30/22 29/21 28/20 27/19 26/18 25/17 24/16 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - CANIDM4 V2.0 part A * Bit 31:21 - IDMSK10:0: Identifier Mask - 0 - comparison true forced - See "Acceptance Filter" on page 246. - 1 - bit comparison enabled - See "Acceptance Filter" on page 246. * Bit 20:3 - Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, they must be written to zero when CANIDMn are written. * Bit 2 - RTRMSK: Remote Transmission Request Mask - 0 - comparison true forced. - 1 - bit comparison enabled. * Bit 1 - Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when CANIDTn are written. * Bit 0 - IDEMSK: Identifier Extension Mask - 0 - comparison true forced. - 1 - bit comparison enabled. V2.0 part B 265 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bit 31:3 - IDMSK28:0: Identifier Mask - 0 - comparison true forced - See "Acceptance Filter" on page 246. - 1 - bit comparison enabled - See "Acceptance Filter" on page 246. * Bit 2 - RTRMSK: Remote Transmission Request Mask - 0 - comparison true forced - 1 - bit comparison enabled. * Bit 1 - Reserved Bit Writing zero in this bit is recommended. * Bit 0 - IDEMSK: Identifier Extension Mask - 0 - comparison true forced - 1 - bit comparison enabled. 19.11.5 CAN Time Stamp Registers - CANSTML and CANSTMH Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 TIMSTM7 TIMSTM6 TIMSTM5 TIMSTM4 TIMSTM3 TIMSTM2 TIMSTM1 TIMSTM0 CANSTML TIMSTM15 TIMSTM14 TIMSTM13 TIMSTM12 TIMSTM11 TIMSTM10 TIMSTM9 TIMSTM8 CANSTMH Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Read/Write R R R R R R R R Initial Value - - - - - - - - * Bits 15:0 - TIMSTM15:0: Time Stamp Count CAN time stamp counter range 0 to 65,535. 19.11.6 CAN Data Message Register - CANMSG Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MSG 7 MSG 6 MSG 5 MSG 4 MSG 3 MSG 2 MSG 1 MSG 0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value - - - - - - - - CANMSG * Bit 7:0 - MSG7:0: Message Data This register contains the CAN data byte pointed at the page MOb register. After writing in the page MOb register, this byte is equal to the specified message location of the pre-defined identifier + index. If auto-incrementation is used, at the end of the data register writing or reading cycle, the index is auto-incremented. The range of the counting is 8 with no end of loop (0, 1,..., 7, 0,...). 19.12 Examples of CAN Baud Rate Setting The CAN bus requires very accurate timing especially for high baud rates. It is recommended to use only an external crystal for CAN operations. (Refer to "Bit Timing" on page 241 and "Baud Rate" on page 242 for timing description and page 257 to page 258 for "CAN Bit Timing Registers"). 266 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 19-2. fclkio (MHz) Examples of CAN Baud Rate Settings for Commonly Frequencies CAN Baudrate (Kbps) 1000 Description Sampling Point 69 % (1) 75 % 500 75 % 250 75 % 200 75 % 125 75 % 100 75 % 1000 67 % (1) 500 75 % 250 75 % 200 75 % 125 75 % 100 75 % 16.000 12.000 Segments Registers TQ (s) Tbit (TQ) Tprs (TQ) Tph1 (TQ) Tph2 (TQ) Tsjw (TQ) CANBT1 CANBT2 CANBT3 0.0625 16 7 4 4 1 0x00 0x0C 0x36 (2) 0.125 8 3 2 2 1 0x02 0x04 0x13 0.125 16 7 4 4 1 0x02 0x0C 0x37 0.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x06 0x04 0x13 0.250 16 7 4 4 1 0x06 0x0C 0x37 0.500 8 3 2 2 1 0x0E 0x04 0x13 0.3125 16 7 4 4 1 0x08 0x0C 0x37 0.625 8 3 2 2 1 0x12 0x04 0x13 0.500 16 7 4 4 1 0x0E 0x0C 0x37 1.000 8 3 2 2 1 0x1E 0x04 0x13 0.625 16 7 4 4 1 0x12 0x0C 0x37 1.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x26 0x04 0x13 0.083333 12 5 3 3 1 0x00 0x08 0x24 (2) x - - - no data- - - 0.166666 12 5 3 3 1 0x02 0x08 0x25 0.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x04 0x04 0x13 0.250 16 7 4 4 1 0x04 0x0C 0x37 0.500 8 3 2 2 1 0x0A 0x04 0x13 0.250 20 8 6 5 1 0x04 0x0E 0x4B 0.416666 12 5 3 3 1 0x08 0x08 0x25 0.500 16 7 4 4 1 0x0A 0x0C 0x37 1.000 8 3 2 2 1 0x16 0x04 0x13 0.500 20 8 6 5 1 0x0A 0x0E 0x4B 0.833333 12 5 3 3 1 0x12 0x08 0x25 267 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 19-2. fclkio (MHz) Examples of CAN Baud Rate Settings for Commonly Frequencies (Continued) CAN Baudrate (Kbps) 1000 500 250 Description Sampling Point 63 % (1) TQ (s) Segments Tbit (TQ) Note: data- - - 1 0x00 0x04 0x12 (2) 69 % (1) 0.125 16 7 4 4 1 0x00 0x0C 0x36 (2) 75 % 0.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x02 0x04 0x13 0.250 16 7 4 4 1 0x02 0x0C 0x37 75 % 75 % 100 75 % 0.500 8 3 2 2 1 0x06 0x04 0x13 0.250 20 8 6 5 1 0x02 0x0E 0x4B 0.625 8 3 2 2 1 0x08 0x04 0x13 0.500 16 7 4 4 1 0x06 0x0C 0x37 1.000 8 3 2 2 1 0x0E 0x04 0x13 0.625 16 7 4 4 1 0x08 0x0C 0x37 1.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x12 0x04 0x13 0x00 0x08 0x24 (2) - - - not 67 % (1) 250 75 % 200 80 % 125 75 % 200 CANBT3 2 75 % 0.166666 12 0.333333 0.500 applicable- - - 5 3 3 12 5 3 3 1 0x02 0x08 0x25 8 3 2 2 1 0x04 0x04 0x13 x - - - no data- - - 15 7 4 3 1 0x02 0x0C 0x35 0.500 10 4 3 2 1 0x04 0x06 0x23 0.500 16 7 4 4 1 0x04 0x0C 0x37 1.000 8 3 2 2 1 0x0A 0x04 0x13 0.500 20 8 6 5 1 0x04 0x0E 0x4B 0.833333 12 5 3 3 1 0x08 0x08 0x25 - - - not 63 % (1) 1 0.333333 1000 4.000 CANBT2 2 125 250 - - - no CANBT1 3 75 % 500 Tsjw (TQ) 8 200 100 Tph2 (TQ) x 1000 6.000 Tph1 (TQ) 0.125 8.000 500 Tprs (TQ) Registers applicable- - - x - - - no data- - - 0.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x00 0x04 0x12 (2) 69 % (1) 0.250 16 7 4 4 1 0x00 0x0C 0x36 (2) 75 % 0.500 8 3 2 2 1 0x02 0x04 0x13 0.250 20 8 6 5 1 0x00 0x0E 0x4A (2) 0.500 16 7 4 4 1 0x02 0x0C 0x37 1.000 8 3 2 2 1 0x06 0x04 0x13 0.500 20 8 6 5 1 0x02 0x0E 0x4B 1.250 8 3 2 2 1 0x08 0x04 0x13 70 % (1) 125 75 % 100 75 % x - - - no data- - - 1. See Section 19.4.3 "Baud Rate" on page 242. 2. See Section * "Bit 0 - SMP: Sample Point(s)" on page 259 268 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 20. Analog Comparator The Analog Comparator compares the input values on the positive pin AIN0 and negative pin AIN1. 20.1 Overview When the voltage on the positive pin AIN0 is higher than the voltage on the negative pin AIN1, the Analog Comparator output, ACO, is set. The comparator's output can be set to trigger the Timer/Counter1 Input Capture function. In addition, the comparator can trigger a separate interrupt, exclusive to the Analog Comparator. The user can select Interrupt triggering on comparator output rise, fall or toggle. A block diagram of the comparator and its surrounding logic is shown in Figure 20-1. Figure 20-1. Analog Comparator Block Diagram(1)(2) BANDGAP REFERENCE ACBG ACME ADEN T/C1 INPUT CAPTURE ADC MULTIPLEXER OUTPUT Notes: 1. ADC multiplexer output: see Table 20-2 on page 271. 2. Refer to Figure 1-2 on page 5 or Figure 1-3 on page 6 and Table 9-15 on page 83 for Analog Comparator pin placement. 20.2 20.2.1 Analog Comparator Register Description ADC Control and Status Register B - ADCSRB Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - ACME - - - ADTS2 ADTS1 ADTS0 Read/Write R R/W R R R R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ADCSRB * Bit 6 - ACME: Analog Comparator Multiplexer Enable When this bit is written logic one and the ADC is switched off (ADEN in ADCSRA is zero), the ADC multiplexer selects the negative input to the Analog Comparator. When this bit is written logic zero, AIN1 is applied to the negative input of the Analog Comparator. For a detailed description of this bit, see "Analog Comparator Multiplexed Input" on page 271. 269 7679H-CAN-08/08 20.2.2 Analog Comparator Control and Status Register - ACSR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ACD ACBG ACO ACI ACIE ACIC ACIS1 ACIS0 Read/Write R/W R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 N/A 0 0 0 0 0 ACSR * Bit 7 - ACD: Analog Comparator Disable When this bit is written logic one, the power to the Analog Comparator is switched off. This bit can be set at any time to turn off the Analog Comparator. This will reduce power consumption in Active and Idle mode. When changing the ACD bit, the Analog Comparator Interrupt must be disabled by clearing the ACIE bit in ACSR. Otherwise an interrupt can occur when the bit is changed. * Bit 6 - ACBG: Analog Comparator Bandgap Select When this bit is set, a fixed bandgap reference voltage replaces the positive input to the Analog Comparator. When this bit is cleared, AIN0 is applied to the positive input of the Analog Comparator. See "Internal Voltage Reference" on page 56. * Bit 5 - ACO: Analog Comparator Output The output of the Analog Comparator is synchronized and then directly connected to ACO. The synchronization introduces a delay of 1 - 2 clock cycles. * Bit 4 - ACI: Analog Comparator Interrupt Flag This bit is set by hardware when a comparator output event triggers the interrupt mode defined by ACIS1 and ACIS0. The Analog Comparator interrupt routine is executed if the ACIE bit is set and the I-bit in SREG is set. ACI is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, ACI is cleared by writing a logic one to the flag. * Bit 3 - ACIE: Analog Comparator Interrupt Enable When the ACIE bit is written logic one and the I-bit in the Status Register is set, the Analog Comparator interrupt is activated. When written logic zero, the interrupt is disabled. * Bit 2 - ACIC: Analog Comparator Input Capture Enable When written logic one, this bit enables the input capture function in Timer/Counter1 to be triggered by the Analog Comparator. The comparator output is in this case directly connected to the input capture front-end logic, making the comparator utilize the noise canceler and edge select features of the Timer/Counter1 Input Capture interrupt. When written logic zero, no connection between the Analog Comparator and the input capture function exists. To make the comparator trigger the Timer/Counter1 Input Capture interrupt, the ICIE1 bit in the Timer Interrupt Mask Register (TIMSK1) must be set. 270 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Bits 1, 0 - ACIS1, ACIS0: Analog Comparator Interrupt Mode Select These bits determine which comparator events that trigger the Analog Comparator interrupt. The different settings are shown in Table 20-1. Table 20-1. ACIS1/ACIS0 Settings ACIS1 ACIS0 Interrupt Mode 0 0 Comparator Interrupt on Output Toggle. 0 1 Reserved 1 0 Comparator Interrupt on Falling Output Edge. 1 1 Comparator Interrupt on Rising Output Edge. When changing the ACIS1/ACIS0 bits, the Analog Comparator Interrupt must be disabled by clearing its Interrupt Enable bit in the ACSR Register. Otherwise an interrupt can occur when the bits are changed. 20.3 Analog Comparator Multiplexed Input It is possible to select any of the ADC7..0 pins to replace the negative input to the Analog Comparator. The ADC multiplexer is used to select this input, and consequently, the ADC must be switched off to utilize this feature. If the Analog Comparator Multiplexer Enable bit (ACME in ADCSRB) is set and the ADC is switched off (ADEN in ADCSRA is zero), MUX2..0 in ADMUX select the input pin to replace the negative input to the Analog Comparator, as shown in Table 20-2. If ACME is cleared or ADEN is set, AIN1 is applied to the negative input to the Analog Comparator. Table 20-2. Analog Comparator Multiplexed Input ACME ADEN MUX2..0 Analog Comparator Negative Input 0 x xxx AIN1 1 1 xxx AIN1 1 0 000 ADC0 1 0 001 ADC1 1 0 010 ADC2 1 0 011 ADC3 1 0 100 ADC4 1 0 101 ADC5 1 0 110 ADC6 1 0 111 ADC7 271 7679H-CAN-08/08 20.3.1 Digital Input Disable Register 1 - DIDR1 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - - - - AIN1D AIN0D Read/Write R R R R R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 DIDR1 * Bit 1, 0 - AIN1D, AIN0D: AIN1, AIN0 Digital Input Disable When this bit is written logic one, the digital input buffer on the AIN1/0 pin is disabled. The corresponding PIN Register bit will always read as zero when this bit is set. When an analog signal is applied to the AIN1/0 pin and the digital input from this pin is not needed, this bit should be written logic one to reduce power consumption in the digital input buffer. 272 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 21. Analog to Digital Converter - ADC 21.1 Features * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 10-bit Resolution 0.5 LSB Integral Non-linearity 2 LSB Absolute Accuracy 65 - 260 s Conversion Time Up to 15 kSPS at Maximum Resolution Eight Multiplexed Single Ended Input Channels Seven Differential input channels Optional Left Adjustment for ADC Result Readout 0 - VCC ADC Input Voltage Range Selectable 2.56 V ADC Reference Voltage Free Running or Single Conversion Mode ADC Start Conversion by Auto Triggering on Interrupt Sources Interrupt on ADC Conversion Complete Sleep Mode Noise Canceler The AT90CAN32/64/128 features a 10-bit successive approximation ADC. The ADC is connected to an 8-channel Analog Multiplexer which allows eight single-ended voltage inputs constructed from the pins of Port F. The single-ended voltage inputs refer to 0V (GND). The device also supports 16 differential voltage input combinations. Two of the differential inputs (ADC1, ADC0 and ADC3, ADC2) are equipped with a programmable gain stage, providing amplification steps of 0 dB (1x), 20 dB (10x), or 46 dB (200x) on the differential input voltage before the A/D conversion. Seven differential analog input channels share a common negative terminal (ADC1), while any other ADC input can be selected as the positive input terminal. If 1x or 10x gain is used, 8-bit resolution can be expected. If 200x gain is used, 7-bit resolution can be expected. The ADC contains a Sample and Hold circuit which ensures that the input voltage to the ADC is held at a constant level during conversion. A block diagram of the ADC is shown in Figure 21-1. The ADC has a separate analog supply voltage pin, AVCC. AVCC must not differ more than 0.3V from VCC. See the paragraph "ADC Noise Canceler" on page 280 on how to connect this pin. Internal reference voltages of nominally 2.56V or AVCC are provided On-chip. The voltage reference may be externally decoupled at the AREF pin by a capacitor for better noise performance. 273 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 21-1. Analog to Digital Converter Block Schematic ADC CONVERSION COMPLETE IRQ INTERRUPT FLAGS ADTS[2:0] TRIGGER SELECT ADC[9:0] ADPS1 0 ADC DATA REGISTER (ADCH/ADCL) ADPS0 ADPS2 ADIF ADATE ADEN ADSC MUX1 15 ADC CTRL. & STATUS REGISTER (ADCSRA) MUX0 MUX3 MUX2 MUX4 REFS0 ADLAR REFS1 ADC MULTIPLEXER SELECT (ADMUX) ADIE ADIF 8-BIT DATA BUS AVCC PRESCALER START GAIN SELECTION CHANNEL SELECTION MUX DECODER CONVERSION LOGIC INTERNAL REFERENCE SAMPLE & HOLD COMPARATOR AREF 10-BIT DAC + GND BANDGAP REFERENCE ADC7 SINGLE ENDED / DIFFERENTIAL SELECTION ADC6 ADC5 ADC MULTIPLEXER OUTPUT POS. INPUT MUX ADC4 ADC3 + DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER ADC2 ADC1 ADC0 NEG. INPUT MUX 21.2 Operation The ADC converts an analog input voltage to a 10-bit digital value through successive approximation. The minimum value represents GND and the maximum value represents the voltage on 274 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 the AREF pin minus 1 LSB. Optionally, AVCC or an internal 2.56V reference voltage may be connected to the AREF pin by writing to the REFSn bits in the ADMUX Register. The internal voltage reference may thus be decoupled by an external capacitor at the AREF pin to improve noise immunity. The analog input channel and differential gain are selected by writing to the MUX bits in ADMUX. Any of the ADC input pins, as well as GND and a fixed bandgap voltage reference, can be selected as single ended inputs to the ADC. A selection of ADC input pins can be selected as positive and negative inputs to the differential amplifier. The ADC is enabled by setting the ADC Enable bit, ADEN in ADCSRA. Voltage reference and input channel selections will not go into effect until ADEN is set. The ADC does not consume power when ADEN is cleared, so it is recommended to switch off the ADC before entering power saving sleep modes. The ADC generates a 10-bit result which is presented in the ADC Data Registers, ADCH and ADCL. By default, the result is presented right adjusted, but can optionally be presented left adjusted by setting the ADLAR bit in ADMUX. If the result is left adjusted and no more than 8-bit precision is required, it is sufficient to read ADCH. Otherwise, ADCL must be read first, then ADCH, to ensure that the content of the Data Registers belongs to the same conversion. Once ADCL is read, ADC access to Data Registers is blocked. This means that if ADCL has been read, and a conversion completes before ADCH is read, neither register is updated and the result from the conversion is lost. When ADCH is read, ADC access to the ADCH and ADCL Registers is re-enabled. The ADC has its own interrupt which can be triggered when a conversion completes. The ADC access to the Data Registers is prohibited between reading of ADCH and ADCL, the interrupt will trigger even if the result is lost. 21.3 Starting a Conversion A single conversion is started by writing a logical one to the ADC Start Conversion bit, ADSC. This bit stays high as long as the conversion is in progress and will be cleared by hardware when the conversion is completed. If a different data channel is selected while a conversion is in progress, the ADC will finish the current conversion before performing the channel change. Alternatively, a conversion can be triggered automatically by various sources. Auto Triggering is enabled by setting the ADC Auto Trigger Enable bit, ADATE in ADCSRA. The trigger source is selected by setting the ADC Trigger Select bits, ADTS in ADCSRB (See description of the ADTS bits for a list of the trigger sources). When a positive edge occurs on the selected trigger signal, the ADC prescaler is reset and a conversion is started. This provides a method of starting conversions at fixed intervals. If the trigger signal is still set when the conversion completes, a new conversion will not be started. If another positive edge occurs on the trigger signal during conversion, the edge will be ignored. Note that an interrupt flag will be set even if the specific interrupt is disabled or the Global Interrupt Enable bit in SREG is cleared. A conversion can thus be triggered without causing an interrupt. However, the interrupt flag must be cleared in order to trigger a new conversion at the next interrupt event. 275 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 21-2. ADC Auto Trigger Logic ADTS[2:0] PRESCALER START CLKADC ADATE ADIF SOURCE 1 . . . . CONVERSION LOGIC EDGE DETECTOR SOURCE n ADSC Using the ADC Interrupt Flag as a trigger source makes the ADC start a new conversion as soon as the ongoing conversion has finished. The ADC then operates in Free Running mode, constantly sampling and updating the ADC Data Register. The first conversion must be started by writing a logical one to the ADSC bit in ADCSRA. In this mode the ADC will perform successive conversions independently of whether the ADC Interrupt Flag, ADIF is cleared or not. If Auto Triggering is enabled, single conversions can be started by writing ADSC in ADCSRA to one. ADSC can also be used to determine if a conversion is in progress. The ADSC bit will be read as one during a conversion, independently of how the conversion was started. 21.4 Prescaling and Conversion Timing Figure 21-3. ADC Prescaler ADEN START Reset 7-BIT ADC PRESCALER CK/64 CK/128 CK/32 CK/8 CK/16 CK/4 CK/2 CK ADPS0 ADPS1 ADPS2 ADC CLOCK SOURCE By default, the successive approximation circuitry requires an input clock frequency between 50 kHz and 200 kHz to get maximum resolution. If a lower resolution than 10 bits is needed, the input clock frequency to the ADC can be higher than 200 kHz to get a higher sample rate. The ADC module contains a prescaler, which generates an acceptable ADC clock frequency from any CPU frequency above 100 kHz. The prescaling is set by the ADPS bits in ADCSRA. The prescaler starts counting from the moment the ADC is switched on by setting the ADEN bit in ADCSRA. The prescaler keeps running for as long as the ADEN bit is set, and is continuously reset when ADEN is low. 276 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 When initiating a single ended conversion by setting the ADSC bit in ADCSRA, the conversion starts at the following rising edge of the ADC clock cycle. See "Differential Channels" on page 278 for details on differential conversion timing. A normal conversion takes 13 ADC clock cycles. The first conversion after the ADC is switched on (ADEN in ADCSRA is set) takes 25 ADC clock cycles in order to initialize the analog circuitry. The actual sample-and-hold takes place 1.5 ADC clock cycles after the start of a normal conversion and 13.5 ADC clock cycles after the start of an first conversion. When a conversion is complete, the result is written to the ADC Data Registers, and ADIF is set. In Single Conversion mode, ADSC is cleared simultaneously. The software may then set ADSC again, and a new conversion will be initiated on the first rising ADC clock edge. When Auto Triggering is used, the prescaler is reset when the trigger event occurs. This assures a fixed delay from the trigger event to the start of conversion. In this mode, the sample-and-hold takes place two ADC clock cycles after the rising edge on the trigger source signal. Three additional CPU clock cycles are used for synchronization logic. In Free Running mode, a new conversion will be started immediately after the conversion completes, while ADSC remains high. For a summary of conversion times, see Table 21-1. Figure 21-4. ADC Timing Diagram, First Conversion (Single Conversion Mode) Next Conversion First Conversion Cycle Number 1 2 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 1 2 3 ADC Clock ADEN ADSC ADIF Sign and MSB of Result ADCH LSB of Result ADCL MUX and REFS Update MUX and REFS Update Conversion Complete Sample & Hold Figure 21-5. ADC Timing Diagram, Single Conversion One Conversion Cycle Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next Conversion 10 11 12 13 1 2 3 ADC Clock ADSC ADIF ADCH Sign and MSB of Result ADCL LSB of Result Sample & Hold MUX and REFS Update Conversion Complete MUX and REFS Update 277 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 21-6. ADC Timing Diagram, Auto Triggered Conversion One Conversion 1 Cycle Number 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next Conversion 10 11 12 13 1 2 ADC Clock Trigger Source ADATE ADIF ADCH Sign and MSB of Result ADCL LSB of Result Sample & Hold Prescaler Reset Prescaler Reset Conversion Complete MUX and REFS Update Figure 21-7. ADC Timing Diagram, Free Running Conversion One Conversion Cycle Number 11 12 13 Next Conversion 1 2 3 4 ADC Clock ADSC ADIF ADCH Sign and MSB of Result ADCL LSB of Result Conversion Complete Table 21-1. Sample & Hold MUX and REFS Update ADC Conversion Time Condition Sample & Hold (Cycles from Start of Convention) Conversion Time (Cycles) 21.4.1 First Conversion Normal Conversion, Single Ended Auto Triggered Conversion 14.5 1.5 2 25 13 13.5 Differential Channels When using differential channels, certain aspects of the conversion need to be taken into consideration. Differential conversions are synchronized to the internal clock CKADC2 equal to half the ADC clock frequency. This synchronization is done automatically by the ADC interface in such a way that the sample-and-hold occurs at a specific phase of CKADC2. A conversion initiated by the user (i.e., all single conversions, and the first free running conversion) when CKADC2 is low will take the same amount of time as a single ended conversion (13 ADC clock cycles from the next prescaled clock cycle). A conversion initiated by the user when CKADC2 is high will take 14 ADC clock cycles due to the synchronization mechanism. In Free Running mode, a new conversion is 278 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 initiated immediately after the previous conversion completes, and since CKADC2 is high at this time, all automatically started (i.e., all but the first) Free Running conversions will take 14 ADC clock cycles. If differential channels are used and conversions are started by Auto Triggering, the ADC must be switched off between conversions. When Auto Triggering is used, the ADC prescaler is reset before the conversion is started. Since the stage is dependent of a stable ADC clock prior to the conversion, this conversion will not be valid. By disabling and then re-enabling the ADC between each conversion (writing ADEN in ADCSRA to "0" then to "1"), only extended conversions are performed. The result from the extended conversions will be valid. See "Prescaling and Conversion Timing" on page 276 for timing details. The gain stage is optimized for a bandwidth of 4 kHz at all gain settings. Higher frequencies may be subjected to non-linear amplification. An external low-pass filter should be used if the input signal contains higher frequency components than the gain stage bandwidth. Note that the ADC clock frequency is independent of the gain stage bandwidth limitation. E.g. the ADC clock period may be 6 s, allowing a channel to be sampled at 12 kSPS, regardless of the bandwidth of this channel. 21.5 Changing Channel or Reference Selection The MUXn and REFS1:0 bits in the ADMUX Register are single buffered through a temporary register to which the CPU has random access. This ensures that the channels and reference selection only takes place at a safe point during the conversion. The channel and reference selection is continuously updated until a conversion is started. Once the conversion starts, the channel and reference selection is locked to ensure a sufficient sampling time for the ADC. Continuous updating resumes in the last ADC clock cycle before the conversion completes (ADIF in ADCSRA is set). Note that the conversion starts on the following rising ADC clock edge after ADSC is written. The user is thus advised not to write new channel or reference selection values to ADMUX until one ADC clock cycle after ADSC is written. If Auto Triggering is used, the exact time of the triggering event can be indeterministic. Special care must be taken when updating the ADMUX Register, in order to control which conversion will be affected by the new settings. If both ADATE and ADEN is written to one, an interrupt event can occur at any time. If the ADMUX Register is changed in this period, the user cannot tell if the next conversion is based on the old or the new settings. ADMUX can be safely updated in the following ways: 1. When ADATE or ADEN is cleared. 2. During conversion, minimum one ADC clock cycle after the trigger event. 3. After a conversion, before the interrupt flag used as trigger source is cleared. When updating ADMUX in one of these conditions, the new settings will affect the next ADC conversion. Special care should be taken when changing differential channels. Once a differential channel has been selected, the stage may take as much as 125 s to stabilize to the new value. Thus conversions should not be started within the first 125 s after selecting a new differential channel. Alternatively, conversion results obtained within this period should be discarded. The same settling time should be observed for the first differential conversion after changing ADC reference (by changing the REFS1:0 bits in ADMUX). 279 7679H-CAN-08/08 21.5.1 ADC Input Channels When changing channel selections, the user should observe the following guidelines to ensure that the correct channel is selected: * In Single Conversion mode, always select the channel before starting the conversion. The channel selection may be changed one ADC clock cycle after writing one to ADSC. However, the simplest method is to wait for the conversion to complete before changing the channel selection. * In Free Running mode, always select the channel before starting the first conversion. The channel selection may be changed one ADC clock cycle after writing one to ADSC. However, the simplest method is to wait for the first conversion to complete, and then change the channel selection. Since the next conversion has already started automatically, the next result will reflect the previous channel selection. Subsequent conversions will reflect the new channel selection. When switching to a differential gain channel, the first conversion result may have a poor accuracy due to the required settling time for the automatic offset cancellation circuitry. The user should preferably disregard the first conversion result. 21.5.2 ADC Voltage Reference The reference voltage for the ADC (VREF) indicates the conversion range for the ADC. Single ended channels that exceed VREF will result in codes close to 0x3FF. VREF can be selected as either AVCC, internal 2.56V reference, or external AREF pin. AVCC is connected to the ADC through a passive switch. The internal 2.56V reference is generated from the internal bandgap reference (VBG) through an internal amplifier. In either case, the external AREF pin is directly connected to the ADC, and the reference voltage can be made more immune to noise by connecting a capacitor between the AREF pin and ground. VREF can also be measured at the AREF pin with a high impedant voltmeter. Note that VREF is a high impedant source, and only a capacitive load should be connected in a system. If the user has a fixed voltage source connected to the AREF pin, the user may not use the other reference voltage options in the application, as they will be shorted to the external voltage. If no external voltage is applied to the AREF pin, the user may switch between AVCC and 2.56V as reference selection. The first ADC conversion result after switching reference voltage source may be inaccurate, and the user is advised to discard this result. If differential channels are used, the selected reference should not be closer to AVCC than indicated in Table 26-6 on page 374. 21.6 ADC Noise Canceler The ADC features a noise canceler that enables conversion during sleep mode to reduce noise induced from the CPU core and other I/O peripherals. The noise canceler can be used with ADC Noise Reduction and Idle mode. To make use of this feature, the following procedure should be used: 1. Make sure that the ADC is enabled and is not busy converting. Single Conversion mode must be selected and the ADC conversion complete interrupt must be enabled. 2. Enter ADC Noise Reduction mode (or Idle mode). The ADC will start a conversion once the CPU has been halted. 3. If no other interrupts occur before the ADC conversion completes, the ADC interrupt will wake up the CPU and execute the ADC Conversion Complete interrupt routine. If 280 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 another interrupt wakes up the CPU before the ADC conversion is complete, that interrupt will be executed, and an ADC Conversion Complete interrupt request will be generated when the ADC conversion completes. The CPU will remain in active mode until a new sleep command is executed. Note that the ADC will not be automatically turned off when entering other sleep modes than Idle mode and ADC Noise Reduction mode. The user is advised to write zero to ADEN before entering such sleep modes to avoid excessive power consumption. If the ADC is enabled in such sleep modes and the user wants to perform differential conversions, the user is advised to switch the ADC off and on after waking up from sleep to prompt an extended conversion to get a valid result. 21.6.1 Analog Input Circuitry The analog input circuitry for single ended channels is illustrated in Figure 21-8. An analog source applied to ADCn is subjected to the pin capacitance and input leakage of that pin, regardless of whether that channel is selected as input for the ADC. When the channel is selected, the source must drive the S/H capacitor through the series resistance (combined resistance in the input path). The ADC is optimized for analog signals with an output impedance of approximately 10 k or less. If such a source is used, the sampling time will be negligible. If a source with higher impedance is used, the sampling time will depend on how long time the source needs to charge the S/H capacitor, with can vary widely. The user is recommended to only use low impedant sources with slowly varying signals, since this minimizes the required charge transfer to the S/H capacitor. If differential gain channels are used, the input circuitry looks somewhat different, although source impedances of a few hundred k or less is recommended. Signal components higher than the Nyquist frequency (fADC/2) should not be present for either kind of channels, to avoid distortion from unpredictable signal convolution. The user is advised to remove high frequency components with a low-pass filter before applying the signals as inputs to the ADC. Figure 21-8. Analog Input Circuitry IIH ADCn 1..100 kO CS/H= 14 pF IIL VCC/2 21.6.2 Analog Noise Canceling Techniques Digital circuitry inside and outside the device generates EMI which might affect the accuracy of analog measurements. If conversion accuracy is critical, the noise level can be reduced by applying the following techniques: 281 7679H-CAN-08/08 1. Keep analog signal paths as short as possible. Make sure analog tracks run over the analog ground plane, and keep them well away from high-speed switching digital tracks. 2. The AVCC pin on the device should be connected to the digital VCC supply voltage via an LC network as shown in Figure 21-9. 3. Use the ADC noise canceler function to reduce induced noise from the CPU. 4. If any ADC port pins are used as digital outputs, it is essential that these do not switch while a conversion is in progress. Figure 21-9. ADC Power Connections VCC 51 52 GND 53 (ADC7) PF7 54 (ADC6) PF6 55 (ADC5) PF5 56 (ADC4) PF4 57 (ADC3) PF3 58 (ADC2) PF2 59 (ADC1) PF1 60 (ADC0) PF0 61 AREF 62 10uH GND AVCC 100nF Analog Ground Plane 63 64 1 NC (AD0) PA0 21.6.3 Offset Compensation Schemes The gain stage has a built-in offset cancellation circuitry that nulls the offset of differential measurements as much as possible. The remaining offset in the analog path can be measured directly by selecting the same channel for both differential inputs. This offset residue can be then subtracted in software from the measurement results. Using this kind of software based offset correction, offset on any channel can be reduced below one LSB. 21.6.4 ADC Accuracy Definitions An n-bit single-ended ADC converts a voltage linearly between GND and V REF in 2 n steps (LSBs). The lowest code is read as 0, and the highest code is read as 2n-1. Several parameters describe the deviation from the ideal behavior: * Offset: The deviation of the first transition (0x000 to 0x001) compared to the ideal transition (at 0.5 LSB). Ideal value: 0 LSB. 282 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 21-10. Offset Error Output Code Ideal ADC Actual ADC Offset Error VREF Input Voltage * Gain Error: After adjusting for offset, the Gain Error is found as the deviation of the last transition (0x3FE to 0x3FF) compared to the ideal transition (at 1.5 LSB below maximum). Ideal value: 0 LSB Figure 21-11. Gain Error Output Code Gain Error Ideal ADC Actual ADC VREF Input Voltage * Integral Non-linearity (INL): After adjusting for offset and gain error, the INL is the maximum deviation of an actual transition compared to an ideal transition for any code. Ideal value: 0 LSB. 283 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 21-12. Integral Non-linearity (INL) Output Code INL Ideal ADC Actual ADC VREF Input Voltage * Differential Non-linearity (DNL): The maximum deviation of the actual code width (the interval between two adjacent transitions) from the ideal code width (1 LSB). Ideal value: 0 LSB. Figure 21-13. Differential Non-linearity (DNL) Output Code 0x3FF 1 LSB DNL 0x000 0 VREF Input Voltage * Quantization Error: Due to the quantization of the input voltage into a finite number of codes, a range of input voltages (1 LSB wide) will code to the same value. Always 0.5 LSB. * Absolute Accuracy: The maximum deviation of an actual (unadjusted) transition compared to an ideal transition for any code. This is the compound effect of offset, gain error, differential error, non-linearity, and quantization error. Ideal value: 0.5 LSB. 21.7 ADC Conversion Result After the conversion is complete (ADIF is high), the conversion result can be found in the ADC Result Registers (ADCL, ADCH). 284 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 For single ended conversion, the result is: V IN 1023 ADC = -------------------------V REF where VIN is the voltage on the selected input pin and VREF the selected voltage reference (see Table 21-3 on page 287 and Table 21-4 on page 288). 0x000 represents analog ground, and 0x3FF represents the selected reference voltage minus one LSB. If differential channels are used, the result is: ( V POS - V NEG ) GAIN 512 ADC = -----------------------------------------------------------------------V REF where VPOS is the voltage on the positive input pin, VNEG the voltage on the negative input pin, GAIN the selected gain factor and VREF the selected voltage reference. The result is presented in two's complement form, from 0x200 (-512d) through 0x1FF (+511d). Note that if the user wants to perform a quick polarity check of the result, it is sufficient to read the MSB of the result (ADC9 in ADCH). If the bit is one, the result is negative, and if this bit is zero, the result is positive. Figure 21-14 shows the decoding of the differential input range. Table 82 shows the resulting output codes if the differential input channel pair (ADCn - ADCm) is selected with a reference voltage of VREF. Figure 21-14. Differential Measurement Range Output Code 0x1FF 0x000 - VREF 0x3FF 0 VREF Differential Input Voltage (Volts) 0x200 285 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 21-2. Correlation Between Input Voltage and Output Codes VADCn Read code Corresponding decimal value VADCm + VREF /GAIN 0x1FF 511 VADCm + 0.999 VREF /GAIN 0x1FF 511 VADCm + 0.998 VREF /GAIN 0x1FE 510 ... ... ... VADCm + 0.001 VREF /GAIN 0x001 1 VADCm 0x000 0 VADCm - 0.001 VREF /GAIN 0x3FF -1 ... ... ... VADCm - 0.999 VREF /GAIN 0x201 -511 VADCm - VREF /GAIN 0x200 -512 Example 1: - ADMUX = 0xED (ADC3 - ADC2, 10x gain, 2.56V reference, left adjusted result) - Voltage on ADC3 is 300 mV, voltage on ADC2 is 500 mV. - ADCR = 512 * 10 * (300 - 500) / 2560 = -400 = 0x270 - ADCL will thus read 0x00, and ADCH will read 0x9C. Writing zero to ADLAR right adjusts the result: ADCL = 0x70, ADCH = 0x02. Example 2: - ADMUX = 0xFB (ADC3 - ADC2, 1x gain, 2.56V reference, left adjusted result) - Voltage on ADC3 is 300 mV, voltage on ADC2 is 500 mV. - ADCR = 512 * 1 * (300 - 500) / 2560 = -41 = 0x029. - ADCL will thus read 0x40, and ADCH will read 0x0A. Writing zero to ADLAR right adjusts the result: ADCL = 0x00, ADCH = 0x29. 286 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 21.8 21.8.1 ADC Register Description ADC Multiplexer Selection Register - ADMUX Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 REFS1 REFS0 ADLAR MUX4 MUX3 MUX2 MUX1 MUX0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ADMUX * Bit 7:6 - REFS1:0: Reference Selection Bits These bits select the voltage reference for the ADC, as shown in Table 21-3. If these bits are changed during a conversion, the change will not go in effect until this conversion is complete (ADIF in ADCSRA is set). The internal voltage reference options may not be used if an external reference voltage is being applied to the AREF pin. Table 21-3. Voltage Reference Selections for ADC REFS1 REFS0 Voltage Reference Selection 0 0 AREF, Internal Vref turned off 0 1 AVCC with external capacitor on AREF pin 1 0 Reserved 1 1 Internal 2.56V Voltage Reference with external capacitor on AREF pin * Bit 5 - ADLAR: ADC Left Adjust Result The ADLAR bit affects the presentation of the ADC conversion result in the ADC Data Register. Write one to ADLAR to left adjust the result. Otherwise, the result is right adjusted. Changing the ADLAR bit will affect the ADC Data Register immediately, regardless of any ongoing conversions. For a complete description of this bit, see "The ADC Data Register - ADCL and ADCH" on page 290. * Bits 4:0 - MUX4:0: Analog Channel Selection Bits The value of these bits selects which combination of analog inputs are connected to the ADC. These bits also select the gain for the differential channels. See Table 21-4 for details. If these bits are changed during a conversion, the change will not go in effect until this conversion is complete (ADIF in ADCSRA is set). 287 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 21-4. Input Channel and Gain Selections MUX4..0 Single Ended Input 00000 ADC0 00001 ADC1 00010 ADC2 00011 ADC3 00100 ADC4 00101 ADC5 00110 ADC6 00111 ADC7 Positive Differential Input Negative Differential Input Gain ADC0 10x ADC0 200x ADC2 10x N/A 01000 (ADC0 / ADC0 / 10x) 01001 ADC1 01010 (ADC0 / ADC0 / 200x) 01011 ADC1 01100 (ADC2 / ADC2 / 10x) 01101 ADC3 01110 (ADC2 / ADC2 / 200x) 01111 ADC3 ADC2 200x 10000 ADC0 ADC1 1x 10001 (ADC1 / ADC1 / 1x) ADC2 ADC1 1x 10011 ADC3 ADC1 1x 10100 ADC4 ADC1 1x 10101 ADC5 ADC1 1x 10110 ADC6 ADC1 1x 10111 ADC7 ADC1 1x 11000 ADC0 ADC2 1x 11001 ADC1 ADC2 1x 11010 (ADC2 / ADC2 / 1x) 11011 ADC3 ADC2 1x 11100 ADC4 ADC2 1x 11101 ADC5 ADC2 1x 10010 N/A 288 11110 1.1V (VBand Gap) 11111 0V (GND) N/A AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 21.8.2 ADC Control and Status Register A - ADCSRA Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ADEN ADSC ADATE ADIF ADIE ADPS2 ADPS1 ADPS0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ADCSRA * Bit 7 - ADEN: ADC Enable Writing this bit to one enables the ADC. By writing it to zero, the ADC is turned off. Turning the ADC off while a conversion is in progress, will terminate this conversion. * Bit 6 - ADSC: ADC Start Conversion In Single Conversion mode, write this bit to one to start each conversion. In Free Running mode, write this bit to one to start the first conversion. The first conversion after ADSC has been written after the ADC has been enabled, or if ADSC is written at the same time as the ADC is enabled, will take 25 ADC clock cycles instead of the normal 13. This first conversion performs initialization of the ADC. ADSC will read as one as long as a conversion is in progress. When the conversion is complete, it returns to zero. Writing zero to this bit has no effect. * Bit 5 - ADATE: ADC Auto Trigger Enable When this bit is written to one, Auto Triggering of the ADC is enabled. The ADC will start a conversion on a positive edge of the selected trigger signal. The trigger source is selected by setting the ADC Trigger Select bits, ADTS in ADCSRB. * Bit 4 - ADIF: ADC Interrupt Flag This bit is set when an ADC conversion completes and the Data Registers are updated. The ADC Conversion Complete Interrupt is executed if the ADIE bit and the I-bit in SREG are set. ADIF is cleared by hardware when executing the corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, ADIF is cleared by writing a logical one to the flag. Beware that if doing a Read-ModifyWrite on ADCSRA, a pending interrupt can be disabled. This also applies if the SBI and CBI instructions are used. * Bit 3 - ADIE: ADC Interrupt Enable When this bit is written to one and the I-bit in SREG is set, the ADC Conversion Complete Interrupt is activated. 289 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Bits 2:0 - ADPS2:0: ADC Prescaler Select Bits These bits determine the division factor between the XTAL frequency and the input clock to the ADC. Table 21-5. 21.8.3 ADC Prescaler Selections ADPS2 ADPS1 ADPS0 Division Factor 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 4 0 1 1 8 1 0 0 16 1 0 1 32 1 1 0 64 1 1 1 128 The ADC Data Register - ADCL and ADCH ADLAR = 0 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 - - - - - - ADC9 ADC8 ADCH ADC7 ADC6 ADC5 ADC4 ADC3 ADC2 ADC1 ADC0 ADCL Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Read/Write R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Initial Value ADLAR = 1 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 ADC9 ADC8 ADC7 ADC6 ADC5 ADC4 ADC3 ADC2 ADCH ADC1 ADC0 - - - - - - ADCL Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Read/Write R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Initial Value When an ADC conversion is complete, the result is found in these two registers. If differential channels are used, the result is presented in two's complement form. When ADCL is read, the ADC Data Register is not updated until ADCH is read. Consequently, if the result is left adjusted and no more than 8-bit precision (7 bit + sign bit for differential input channels) is required, it is sufficient to read ADCH. Otherwise, ADCL must be read first, then ADCH. The ADLAR bit in ADMUX, and the MUXn bits in ADMUX affect the way the result is read from the registers. If ADLAR is set, the result is left adjusted. If ADLAR is cleared (default), the result is right adjusted. 290 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * ADC9:0: ADC Conversion Result These bits represent the result from the conversion, as detailed in "ADC Conversion Result" on page 284. 21.8.4 ADC Control and Status Register B - ADCSRB Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - ACME - - - ADTS2 ADTS1 ADTS0 Read/Write R R/W R R R R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ADCSRB * Bit 7- Reserved Bit This bit is reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, it must be written to zero when ADCSRB is written. * Bit 5:3- Reserved Bits These bits are reserved for future use. For compatibility with future devices, they must be written to zero when ADCSRB is written. * Bit 2:0 - ADTS2:0: ADC Auto Trigger Source If ADATE in ADCSRA is written to one, the value of these bits selects which source will trigger an ADC conversion. If ADATE is cleared, the ADTS2:0 settings will have no effect. A conversion will be triggered by the rising edge of the selected interrupt flag. Note that switching from a trigger source that is cleared to a trigger source that is set, will generate a positive edge on the trigger signal. If ADEN in ADCSRA is set, this will start a conversion. Switching to Free Running mode (ADTS[2:0]=0) will not cause a trigger event, even if the ADC Interrupt Flag is set. Table 21-6. ADC Auto Trigger Source Selections ADTS2 ADTS1 ADTS0 Trigger Source 0 0 0 Free Running mode 0 0 1 Analog Comparator 0 1 0 External Interrupt Request 0 0 1 1 Timer/Counter0 Compare Match 1 0 0 Timer/Counter0 Overflow 1 0 1 Timer/Counter1 Compare Match B 1 1 0 Timer/Counter1 Overflow 1 1 1 Timer/Counter1 Capture Event 291 7679H-CAN-08/08 21.8.5 Digital Input Disable Register 0 - DIDR0 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ADC7D ADC6D ADC5D ADC4D ADC3D ADC2D ADC1D ADC0D Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 DIDR0 * Bit 7:0 - ADC7D..ADC0D: ADC7:0 Digital Input Disable When this bit is written logic one, the digital input buffer on the corresponding ADC pin is disabled. The corresponding PIN Register bit will always read as zero when this bit is set. When an analog signal is applied to the ADC7..0 pin and the digital input from this pin is not needed, this bit should be written logic one to reduce power consumption in the digital input buffer. 292 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 22. JTAG Interface and On-chip Debug System 22.1 Features * JTAG (IEEE std. 1149.1 Compliant) Interface * Boundary-scan Capabilities According to the IEEE std. 1149.1 (JTAG) Standard * Debugger Access to: - All Internal Peripheral Units - Internal and External RAM - The Internal Register File - Program Counter - EEPROM and Flash Memories * Extensive On-chip Debug Support for Break Conditions, Including - AVR Break Instruction - Break on Change of Program Memory Flow - Single Step Break - Program Memory Break Points on Single Address or Address Range - Data Memory Break Points on Single Address or Address Range * Programming of Flash, EEPROM, Fuses, and Lock Bits through the JTAG Interface * On-chip Debugging Supported by AVR Studio(R) 22.2 Overview The AVR IEEE std. 1149.1 compliant JTAG interface can be used for: * Testing PCBs by using the JTAG Boundary-scan capability * Programming the non-volatile memories, Fuses and Lock bits * On-chip debugging A brief description is given in the following sections. Detailed descriptions for Programming via the JTAG interface, and using the Boundary-scan Chain can be found in the sections "JTAG Programming Overview" on page 352 and "Boundary-scan IEEE 1149.1 (JTAG)" on page 300, respectively. The On-chip Debug support is considered being private JTAG instructions, and distributed within ATMEL and to selected third party vendors only. Figure 22-1 shows a block diagram of the JTAG interface and the On-chip Debug system. The TAP Controller is a state machine controlled by the TCK and TMS signals. The TAP Controller selects either the JTAG Instruction Register or one of several Data Registers as the scan chain (Shift Register) between the TDI - input and TDO - output. The Instruction Register holds JTAG instructions controlling the behavior of a Data Register. The ID-Register (IDentifier Register), Bypass Register, and the Boundary-scan Chain are the Data Registers used for board-level testing. The JTAG Programming Interface (actually consisting of several physical and virtual Data Registers) is used for serial programming via the JTAG interface. The Internal Scan Chain and Break Point Scan Chain are used for On-chip debugging only. 22.3 Test Access Port - TAP The JTAG interface is accessed through four of the AVR's pins. In JTAG terminology, these pins constitute the Test Access Port - TAP. These pins are: * TMS: Test mode select. This pin is used for navigating through the TAP-controller state machine. 293 7679H-CAN-08/08 * TCK: Test Clock. JTAG operation is synchronous to TCK. * TDI: Test Data In. Serial input data to be shifted in to the Instruction Register or Data Register (Scan Chains). * TDO: Test Data Out. Serial output data from Instruction Register or Data Register (Scan Chains). The IEEE std. 1149.1 also specifies an optional TAP signal; TRST - Test ReSeT - which is not provided. When the JTAGEN fuse is unprogrammed, these four TAP pins are normal port pins and the TAP controller is in reset. When programmed and the JTD bit in MCUCR is cleared, the TAP input signals are internally pulled high and the JTAG is enabled for Boundary-scan and programming. In this case, the TAP output pin (TDO) is left floating in states where the JTAG TAP controller is not shifting data, and must therefore be connected to a pull-up resistor or other hardware having pull-ups (for instance the TDI-input of the next device in the scan chain). The device is shipped with this fuse programmed. For the On-chip Debug system, in addition to the JTAG interface pins, the RESET pin is monitored by the debugger to be able to detect external reset sources. The debugger can also pull the RESET pin low to reset the whole system, assuming only open collectors on the reset line are used in the application. 294 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 22-1. Block Diagram I/O PORT 0 DEVICE BOUNDARY BOUNDARY SCAN CHAIN TDI TDO TCK TMS JTAG PROGRAMMING INTERFACE TAP CONTROLLER INSTRUCTION REGISTER FLASH MEMORY Address Data INTERNAL SCAN CHAIN PC Instruction BYPASS REGISTER FLOW CONTROL UNIT DIGITAL PERIPHERAL UNITS BREAKPOINT SCAN CHAIN ADDRESS DECODER JTAG / AVR CORE COMMUNICATION INTERFACE OCD STATUS AND CONTROL ANALOG PERIPHERIAL UNITS Control & Clock lines M U X BREAKPOINT UNIT Analog inputs AVR CPU ID REGISTER I/O PORT n 295 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 22-2. TAP Controller State Diagram 1 Test-Logic-Reset 0 0 Run-Test/Idle 1 Select-DR Scan 1 Select-IR Scan 0 1 0 1 Capture-DR Capture-IR 0 0 0 Shift-DR 1 1 Exit1-DR 0 0 Pause-DR 0 Pause-IR 1 1 0 Exit2-DR Exit2-IR 1 1 Update-DR 22.4 1 Exit1-IR 0 1 0 Shift-IR 1 0 1 Update-IR 0 1 0 TAP Controller The TAP controller is a 16-state finite state machine that controls the operation of the Boundaryscan circuitry, JTAG programming circuitry, or On-chip Debug system. The state transitions depicted in Figure 22-2 depend on the signal present on TMS (shown adjacent to each state transition) at the time of the rising edge at TCK. The initial state after a Power-on Reset is TestLogic-Reset. As a definition in this document, the LSB is shifted in and out first for all Shift Registers. Assuming Run-Test/Idle is the present state, a typical scenario for using the JTAG interface is: * At the TMS input, apply the sequence 1, 1, 0, 0 at the rising edges of TCK to enter the Shift Instruction Register - Shift-IR state. While in this state, shift the four bits of the JTAG instructions into the JTAG Instruction Register from the TDI input at the rising edge of TCK. The TMS input must be held low during input of the 3 LSBs in order to remain in the Shift-IR state. The MSB of the instruction is shifted in when this state is left by setting TMS high. While the instruction is shifted in from the TDI pin, the captured IR-state 0x01 is shifted out on the TDO pin. The JTAG Instruction selects a particular Data Register as path between TDI and TDO and controls the circuitry surrounding the selected Data Register. 296 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Apply the TMS sequence 1, 1, 0 to re-enter the Run-Test/Idle state. The instruction is latched onto the parallel output from the Shift Register path in the Update-IR state. The Exit-IR, Pause-IR, and Exit2-IR states are only used for navigating the state machine. * At the TMS input, apply the sequence 1, 0, 0 at the rising edges of TCK to enter the Shift Data Register - Shift-DR state. While in this state, upload the selected data register (selected by the present JTAG instruction in the JTAG Instruction Register) from the TDI input at the rising edge of TCK. In order to remain in the Shift-DR state, the TMS input must be held low during input of all bits except the MSB. The MSB of the data is shifted in when this state is left by setting TMS high. While the data register is shifted in from the TDI pin, the parallel inputs to the data register captured in the Capture-DR state is shifted out on the TDO pin. * Apply the TMS sequence 1, 1, 0 to re-enter the Run-Test/Idle state. If the selected data register has a latched parallel-output, the latching takes place in the Update-DR state. The Exit-DR, Pause-DR, and Exit2-DR states are only used for navigating the state machine. As shown in the state diagram, the Run-Test/Idle state need not be entered between selecting JTAG instruction and using data registers, and some JTAG instructions may select certain functions to be performed in the Run-Test/Idle, making it unsuitable as an Idle state. Note: Independent of the initial state of the TAP Controller, the Test-Logic-Reset state can always be entered by holding TMS high for five TCK clock periods. For detailed information on the JTAG specification, refer to the literature listed in "Bibliography" on page 299. 22.5 Using the Boundary-scan Chain A complete description of the Boundary-scan capabilities are given in the section "Boundaryscan IEEE 1149.1 (JTAG)" on page 300. 22.6 Using the On-chip Debug System As shown in Figure 22-1, the hardware support for On-chip Debugging consists mainly of * A scan chain on the interface between the internal AVR CPU and the internal peripheral units. * Break Point unit. * Communication interface between the CPU and JTAG system. All read or modify/write operations needed for implementing the Debugger are done by applying AVR instructions via the internal AVR CPU Scan Chain. The CPU sends the result to an I/O memory mapped location which is part of the communication interface between the CPU and the JTAG system. The Break Point Unit implements Break on Change of Program Flow, Single Step Break, two Program Memory Break Points, and two combined Break Points. Together, the four Break Points can be configured as either: * 4 single Program Memory Break Points. * 3 single Program Memory Break Points + 1 single Data Memory Break Point. * 2 single Program Memory Break Points + 2 single Data Memory Break Points. 297 7679H-CAN-08/08 * 2 single Program Memory Break Points + 1 Program Memory Break Point with mask ("range Break Point"). * 2 single Program Memory Break Points + 1 Data Memory Break Point with mask ("range Break Point"). A debugger, like the AVR Studio, may however use one or more of these resources for its internal purpose, leaving less flexibility to the end-user. A list of the On-chip Debug specific JTAG instructions is given in "On-chip Debug Specific JTAG Instructions" on page 298. The JTAGEN Fuse must be programmed to enable the JTAG Test Access Port. In addition, the OCDEN Fuse must be programmed and no Lock bits must be set for the On-chip debug system to work. As a security feature, the On-chip debug system is disabled when either of the LB1 or LB2 Lock bits are set. Otherwise, the On-chip debug system would have provided a back-door into a secured device. The AVR Studio enables the user to fully control execution of programs on an AVR device with On-chip Debug capability, AVR In-Circuit Emulator, or the built-in AVR Instruction Set Simulator. AVR Studio(R) supports source level execution of Assembly programs assembled with Atmel Corporation's AVR Assembler and C programs compiled with third party vendors' compilers. AVR Studio runs under Microsoft(R) Windows(R) 95/98/2000/NT/XP. For a full description of the AVR Studio, please refer to the AVR Studio User Guide. Only highlights are presented in this document. All necessary execution commands are available in AVR Studio, both on source level and on disassembly level. The user can execute the program, single step through the code either by tracing into or stepping over functions, step out of functions, place the cursor on a statement and execute until the statement is reached, stop the execution, and reset the execution target. In addition, the user can have an unlimited number of code Break Points (using the BREAK instruction) and up to two data memory Break Points, alternatively combined as a mask (range) Break Point. 22.7 On-chip Debug Specific JTAG Instructions The On-chip debug support is considered being private JTAG instructions, and distributed within ATMEL and to selected third party vendors only. Instruction opcodes are listed for reference. 22.7.1 PRIVATE0 (0x8) Private JTAG instruction for accessing On-chip debug system. 22.7.2 PRIVATE1 (0x9) Private JTAG instruction for accessing On-chip debug system. 22.7.3 PRIVATE2 (0xA) Private JTAG instruction for accessing On-chip debug system. 22.7.4 PRIVATE3 (0xB) Private JTAG instruction for accessing On-chip debug system. 298 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 22.8 22.8.1 On-chip Debug Related Register in I/O Memory On-chip Debug Register - OCDR Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IDRD/OCDR7 OCDR6 OCDR5 OCDR4 OCDR3 OCDR2 OCDR1 OCDR0 Read/Write R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OCDR The OCDR Register provides a communication channel from the running program in the microcontroller to the debugger. The CPU can transfer a byte to the debugger by writing to this location. At the same time, an internal flag; I/O Debug Register Dirty - IDRD - is set to indicate to the debugger that the register has been written. When the CPU reads the OCDR Register the 7 LSB will be from the OCDR Register, while the MSB is the IDRD bit. The debugger clears the IDRD bit when it has read the information. In some AVR devices, this register is shared with a standard I/O location. In this case, the OCDR Register can only be accessed if the OCDEN Fuse is programmed, and the debugger enables access to the OCDR Register. In all other cases, the standard I/O location is accessed. Refer to the debugger documentation for further information on how to use this register. 22.9 Using the JTAG Programming Capabilities Programming of AVR parts via JTAG is performed via the 4-pin JTAG port, TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO. These are the only pins that need to be controlled/observed to perform JTAG programming (in addition to power pins). It is not required to apply 12V externally. The JTAGEN Fuse must be programmed and the JTD bit in the MCUCR Register must be cleared to enable the JTAG Test Access Port. The JTAG programming capability supports: * Flash programming and verifying. * EEPROM programming and verifying. * Fuse programming and verifying. * Lock bit programming and verifying. The Lock bit security is exactly as in parallel programming mode. If the Lock bits LB1 or LB2 are programmed, the OCDEN Fuse cannot be programmed unless first doing a chip erase. This is a security feature that ensures no back-door exists for reading out the content of a secured device. The details on programming through the JTAG interface and programming specific JTAG instructions are given in the section "JTAG Programming Overview" on page 352. 22.10 Bibliography For more information about general Boundary-scan, the following literature can be consulted: * IEEE: IEEE Std 1149.1-1990. IEEE Standard Test Access Port and Boundary-scan Architecture, IEEE, 1993. * Colin Maunder: The Board Designers Guide to Testable Logic Circuits, Addison-Wesley, 1992. 299 7679H-CAN-08/08 23. Boundary-scan IEEE 1149.1 (JTAG) 23.1 Features * * * * * 23.2 JTAG (IEEE std. 1149.1 compliant) Interface Boundary-scan Capabilities According to the JTAG Standard Full Scan of all Port Functions as well as Analog Circuitry having Off-chip Connections Supports the Optional IDCODE Instruction Additional Public AVR_RESET Instruction to Reset the AVR System Overview The Boundary-scan chain has the capability of driving and observing the logic levels on the digital I/O pins, as well as the boundary between digital and analog logic for analog circuitry having off-chip connections. At system level, all ICs having JTAG capabilities are connected serially by the TDI/TDO signals to form a long Shift Register. An external controller sets up the devices to drive values at their output pins, and observe the input values received from other devices. The controller compares the received data with the expected result. In this way, Boundary-scan provides a mechanism for testing interconnections and integrity of components on Printed Circuits Boards by using the four TAP signals only. The four IEEE 1149.1 defined mandatory JTAG instructions IDCODE, BYPASS, SAMPLE/PRELOAD, and EXTEST, as well as the AVR specific public JTAG instruction AVR_RESET can be used for testing the Printed Circuit Board. Initial scanning of the data register path will show the ID-Code of the device, since IDCODE is the default JTAG instruction. It may be desirable to have the AVR device in reset during test mode. If not reset, inputs to the device may be determined by the scan operations, and the internal software may be in an undetermined state when exiting the test mode. Entering reset, the outputs of any port pin will instantly enter the high impedance state, making the HIGHZ instruction redundant. If needed, the BYPASS instruction can be issued to make the shortest possible scan chain through the device. The device can be set in the reset state either by pulling the external RESET pin low, or issuing the AVR_RESET instruction with appropriate setting of the Reset Data Register. The EXTEST instruction is used for sampling external pins and loading output pins with data. The data from the output latch will be driven out on the pins as soon as the EXTEST instruction is loaded into the JTAG IR-Register. Therefore, the SAMPLE/PRELOAD should also be used for setting initial values to the scan ring, to avoid damaging the board when issuing the EXTEST instruction for the first time. SAMPLE/PRELOAD can also be used for taking a snapshot of the external pins during normal operation of the part. The JTAGEN Fuse must be programmed and the JTD bit in the I/O Register MCUCR must be cleared to enable the JTAG Test Access Port. When using the JTAG interface for Boundary-scan, using a JTAG TCK clock frequency higher than the internal chip frequency is possible. The chip clock is not required to run. 23.3 Data Registers The data registers relevant for Boundary-scan operations are: * Bypass Register * Device Identification Register * Reset Register * Boundary-scan Chain 300 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 23.3.1 Bypass Register The Bypass Register consists of a single Shift Register stage. When the Bypass Register is selected as path between TDI and TDO, the register is reset to 0 when leaving the Capture-DR controller state. The Bypass Register may be used to shorten the scan chain on a system when the other devices are to be tested. 23.3.2 Device Identification Register Figure 23-1 shows the structure of the Device Identification Register. Figure 23-1. The Format of the Device Identification Register MSB Bit Device ID 23.3.2.1 LSB 31 28 27 12 11 1 0 Version Part Number Manufacturer ID 1 4 bits 16 bits 11 bits 1-bit Version Version is a 4-bit number identifying the revision of the component. The relevant version number is shown in Table 23-1. Table 23-1. JTAG Version Numbers Version 23.3.2.2 JTAG Version Number (Hex) AT90CAN32 revision A 0x0 AT90CAN64 revision A 0x0 AT90CAN128 revision A 0x0 Part Number The part number is a 16-bit code identifying the component. The JTAG Part Number for AT90CAN32/64/128 is listed in Table 23-2. Table 23-2. 23.3.2.3 AVR JTAG Part Number Part Number JTAG Part Number (Hex) AT90CAN32 0x9581 AT90CAN64 0x9681 AT90CAN128 0x9781 Manufacturer ID The Manufacturer ID is a 11-bit code identifying the manufacturer. The JTAG manufacturer ID for ATMEL is listed in Table 23-3. Table 23-3. Manufacturer ATMEL Manufacturer ID JTAG Manufacturer ID (Hex) 0x01F 301 7679H-CAN-08/08 23.3.2.4 Device ID The full Device ID is listed in Table 23-4 following the AT90CAN32/64/128 version. Table 23-4. Device ID Version 23.3.3 JTAG Device ID (Hex) AT90CAN32 revision A 0x0958103F AT90CAN64 revision A 0x0968103F AT90CAN128 revision A 0x0978103F Reset Register The Reset Register is a test data register used to reset the part. Since the AVR tri-states Port Pins when reset, the Reset Register can also replace the function of the unimplemented optional JTAG instruction HIGHZ. A high value in the Reset Register corresponds to pulling the external Reset low. The part is reset as long as there is a high value present in the Reset Register. Depending on the fuse settings for the clock options, the part will remain reset for a reset time-out period (refer to "System Clock" on page 37) after releasing the Reset Register. The output from this data register is not latched, so the reset will take place immediately, as shown in Figure 23-2. Figure 23-2. Reset Register From Other Internal and External Reset Sources From TDI Internal reset D Q To TDO ClockDR * AVR_RESET 23.3.4 Boundary-scan Chain The Boundary-scan Chain has the capability of driving and observing the logic levels on the digital I/O pins, as well as the boundary between digital and analog logic for analog circuitry having off-chip connections. See "Boundary-scan Chain" on page 304 for a complete description. 23.4 Boundary-scan Specific JTAG Instructions The instruction register is 4-bit wide, supporting up to 16 instructions. Listed below are the JTAG instructions useful for Boundary-scan operation. Note that the optional HIGHZ instruction is not implemented, but all outputs with tri-state capability can be set in high-impedant state by using the AVR_RESET instruction, since the initial state for all port pins is tri-state. As a definition in this datasheet, the LSB is shifted in and out first for all Shift Registers. The OPCODE for each instruction is shown behind the instruction name in hex format. The text describes which data register is selected as path between TDI and TDO for each instruction. 302 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 23.4.1 EXTEST (0x0) Mandatory JTAG instruction for selecting the Boundary-scan Chain as data register for testing circuitry external to the AVR package. For port-pins, Pull-up Disable, Output Control, Output Data, and Input Data are all accessible in the scan chain. For Analog circuits having off-chip connections, the interface between the analog and the digital logic is in the scan chain. The contents of the latched outputs of the Boundary-scan chain is driven out as soon as the JTAG IRRegister is loaded with the EXTEST instruction. The active states are: * Capture-DR: Data on the external pins are sampled into the Boundary-scan Chain. * Shift-DR: The Internal Scan Chain is shifted by the TCK input. * Update-DR: Data from the scan chain is applied to output pins. 23.4.2 IDCODE (0x1) Optional JTAG instruction selecting the 32 bit ID-Register as data register. The ID-Register consists of a version number, a device number and the manufacturer code chosen by JEDEC. This is the default instruction after power-up. The active states are: * Capture-DR: Data in the IDCODE Register is sampled into the Boundary-scan Chain. * Shift-DR: The IDCODE scan chain is shifted by the TCK input. 23.4.3 SAMPLE_PRELOAD (0x2) Mandatory JTAG instruction for pre-loading the output latches and taking a snap-shot of the input/output pins without affecting the system operation. However, the output latches are not connected to the pins. The Boundary-scan Chain is selected as data register. The active states are: * Capture-DR: Data on the external pins are sampled into the Boundary-scan Chain. * Shift-DR: The Boundary-scan Chain is shifted by the TCK input. * Update-DR: Data from the Boundary-scan chain is applied to the output latches. However, the output latches are not connected to the pins. 23.4.4 AVR_RESET (0xC) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction for forcing the AVR device into the Reset mode or releasing the JTAG reset source. The TAP controller is not reset by this instruction. The one bit Reset Register is selected as data register. Note that the reset will be active as long as there is a logic "one" in the Reset Chain. The output from this chain is not latched. The active states are: * Shift-DR: The Reset Register is shifted by the TCK input. 23.4.5 BYPASS (0xF) Mandatory JTAG instruction selecting the Bypass Register for data register. The active states are: * Capture-DR: Loads a logic "0" into the Bypass Register. 303 7679H-CAN-08/08 * Shift-DR: The Bypass Register cell between TDI and TDO is shifted. 23.5 23.5.1 Boundary-scan Related Register in I/O Memory MCU Control Register - MCUCR The MCU Control Register contains control bits for general MCU functions. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 JTD - - PUD - - IVSEL IVCE Read/Write R/W R R R/W R R R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MCUCR * Bits 7 - JTD: JTAG Interface Disable When this bit is zero, the JTAG interface is enabled if the JTAGEN Fuse is programmed. If this bit is one, the JTAG interface is disabled. In order to avoid unintentional disabling or enabling of the JTAG interface, a timed sequence must be followed when changing this bit: The application software must write this bit to the desired value twice within four cycles to change its value. Note that this bit must not be altered when using the On-chip Debug system. If the JTAG interface is left unconnected to other JTAG circuitry, the JTD bit should be set to one. The reason for this is to avoid static current at the TDO pin in the JTAG interface. 23.5.2 MCU Status Register - MCUSR The MCU Status Register provides information on which reset source caused an MCU reset. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 - - - JTRF WDRF BORF EXTRF PORF Read/Write R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 MCUSR See Bit Description * Bit 4 - JTRF: JTAG Reset Flag This bit is set if a reset is being caused by a logic one in the JTAG Reset Register selected by the JTAG instruction AVR_RESET. This bit is reset by a Power-on Reset, or by writing a logic zero to the flag. 23.6 Boundary-scan Chain The Boundary-scan chain has the capability of driving and observing the logic levels on the digital I/O pins, as well as the boundary between digital and analog logic for analog circuitry having off-chip connection. 23.6.1 Scanning the Digital Port Pins Figure 23-3 shows the Boundary-scan Cell for a bi-directional port pin with pull-up function. The cell consists of a standard Boundary-scan cell for the Pull-up Enable - PUExn - function, and a bi-directional pin cell that combines the three signals Output Control - OCxn, Output Data - ODxn, and Input Data - IDxn, into only a two-stage Shift Register. The port and pin indexes are not used in the following description The Boundary-scan logic is not included in the figures in the datasheet. Figure 23-4 shows a simple digital port pin as described in the section "I/O-Ports" on page 66. The Boundary-scan details from Figure 23-3 replaces the dashed box in Figure 23-4. 304 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 When no alternate port function is present, the Input Data - ID - corresponds to the PINxn Register value (but ID has no synchronizer), Output Data corresponds to the PORT Register, Output Control corresponds to the Data Direction - DD Register, and the Pull-up Enable - PUExn - corresponds to logic expression PUD * DDxn * PORTxn. Digital alternate port functions are connected outside the dotted box in Figure 23-4 to make the scan chain read the actual pin value. For Analog function, there is a direct connection from the external pin to the analog circuit, and a scan chain is inserted on the interface between the digital logic and the analog circuitry. Figure 23-3. Boundary-scan Cell for Bi-directional Port Pin with Pull-up Function. ShiftDR To Next Cell EXTEST Pullup Enable (PUE) Vcc 0 FF2 LD2 1 0 D Q D Q 1 G Output Control (OC) FF1 LD1 0 D Q D Q 0 1 1 G 0 1 FF0 LD0 0 D Q D 1 Q 0 1 Port Pin (PXn) Output Data (OD) G Input Data (ID) From Last Cell ClockDR UpdateDR 305 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 23-4. General Port Pin Schematic Diagram See Boundary-scan Description for Details! PUExn PUD Q D DDxn Q CLR RESET OCxn WDx Q Pxn ODxn D PORTxn Q CLR WPx IDxn DATA BUS RDx RESET RRx SLEEP SYNCHRONIZER D Q L Q D RPx Q PINxn Q CLK I/O PUD: PUExn: OCxn: ODxn: IDxn: SLEEP: 23.6.2 PULLUP DISABLE PULLUP ENABLE for pin Pxn OUTPUT CONTROL for pin Pxn OUTPUT DATA to pin Pxn INPUT DATA from pin Pxn SLEEP CONTROL WDx: RDx: WPx: RRx: RPx: CLK I/O : WRITE DDRx READ DDRx WRITE PORTx READ PORTx REGISTER READ PORTx PIN I/O CLOCK Boundary-scan and the Two-wire Interface The two Two-wire Interface pins SCL and SDA have one additional control signal in the scanchain; Two-wire Interface Enable - TWIEN. As shown in Figure 23-5, the TWIEN signal enables a tri-state buffer with slew-rate control in parallel with the ordinary digital port pins. A general scan cell as shown in Figure 23-9 is attached to the TWIEN signal. Notes: 1. A separate scan chain for the 50 ns spike filter on the input is not provided. The ordinary scan support for digital port pins suffice for connectivity tests. The only reason for having TWIEN in the scan path, is to be able to disconnect the slew-rate control buffer when doing boundaryscan. 2. Make sure the OC and TWIEN signals are not asserted simultaneously, as this will lead to drive contention. 306 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 23-5. Additional Scan Signal for the Two-wire Interface PUExn OCxn ODxn TWIEN Pxn SRC Slew-rate limited IDxn 23.6.3 Scanning the RESET Pin The RESET pin accepts 3V or 5V active low logic for standard reset operation, and 12V active high logic for High Voltage Parallel programming. An observe-only cell as shown in Figure 23-6 is inserted both for the 3V or 5V reset signal - RSTT, and the 12V reset signal - RSTHV. Figure 23-6. Observe-only Cell for RESET pin To Next Cell ShiftDR From System Pin To System Logic FF1 0 D Q 1 From Previous Cell 23.6.4 ClockDR Scanning the Clock Pins The AVR devices have many clock options selectable by fuses. These are: Internal RC Oscillator, External Clock, (High Frequency) Crystal Oscillator, Low-frequency Crystal Oscillator, and Ceramic Resonator. Figure 23-7 shows how each oscillator with external connection is supported in the scan chain. The Enable signal is supported with a general Boundary-scan cell, while the Oscillator/clock output is attached to an observe-only cell. In addition to the main clock, the Timer2 Oscillator is scanned in the same way. The output from the internal RC Oscillator is not scanned, as this oscillator does not have external connections. 307 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 23-7. Boundary-scan Cells for Oscillators and Clock Options XTAL1 / TOSC1 To Next Cell ShiftDR XTAL2 / TOSC2 To Next Cell Oscillator EXTEST ShiftDR From Digital Logic 0 ENABLE OUTPUT To System Logic 1 FF1 0 D Q D Q 1 From Previous Cell ClockDR 0 D G Q 1 UpdateDR From Previous Cell ClockDR Table 23-5 summaries the scan registers for the external clock pin XTAL1, oscillators with XTAL1/XTAL2 connections as well as external Timer2 clock pin TOSC1 and 32kHz Timer2 Oscillator. Table 23-5. Scan Signals for the Oscillators(1)(2)(3) Scanned Clock Line when not Used Enable Signal Scanned Clock Line Clock Option EXTCLKEN EXTCLK (XTAL1) External Main Clock 0 OSCON OSCCK External Crystal External Ceramic Resonator 1 OSC32EN OSC32CK Low Freq. External Crystal 1 TOSKON TOSCK 32 kHz Timer2 Oscillator 1 Notes: 1. Do not enable more than one clock source as clock at a time. 2. Scanning an Oscillator output gives unpredictable results as there is a frequency drift between the internal Oscillator and the JTAG TCK clock. If possible, scanning an external clock is preferred. 3. The main clock configuration is programmed by fuses. As a fuse is not changed run-time, the main clock configuration is considered fixed for a given application. The user is advised to scan the same clock option as to be used in the final system. The enable signals are supported in the scan chain because the system logic can disable clock options in sleep modes, thereby disconnecting the Oscillator pins from the scan path if not provided. 23.6.5 Scanning the Analog Comparator The relevant Comparator signals regarding Boundary-scan are shown in Figure 23-8. The Boundary-scan cell from Figure 23-9 is attached to each of these signals. The signals are described in Table 23-6. The Comparator need not be used for pure connectivity testing, since all analog inputs are shared with a digital port pin as well. 308 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 23-8. Analog Comparator BANDGAP REFERENCE ACBG ACO AC_IDLE ACME ADCEN ADC MULTIPLEXER OUTPUT Figure 23-9. General Boundary-scan cell Used for Signals for Comparator and ADC To Next Cell ShiftDR EXTEST From Digital Logic/ From Analog Ciruitry To Analog Circuitry/ To Digital Logic 0 1 0 D Q D Q 1 G From Previous Cell Table 23-6. ClockDR UpdateDR Boundary-scan Signals for the Analog Comparator Signal Name Direction as Seen from the Comparator Description Recommended Input when Not in Use Output Values when Recommended Inputs are Used AC_IDLE input Turns off Analog Comparator when true 1 Depends upon C code being executed ACO output Analog Comparator Output Will become input to C code being executed 0 ACME input Uses output signal from ADC mux when true 0 Depends upon C code being executed ACBG input Bandgap Reference enable 0 Depends upon C code being executed 309 7679H-CAN-08/08 23.6.6 Scanning the ADC Figure 23-10 shows a block diagram of the ADC with all relevant control and observe signals. The Boundary-scan cell from Figure 23-9 is attached to each of these signals. The ADC need not be used for pure connectivity testing, since all analog inputs are shared with a digital port pin as well. Figure 23-10. Analog to Digital Converter VCCREN AREF IREFEN 2.56V ref To Comparator PASSEN MUXEN_7 ADC_7 MUXEN_6 ADC_6 MUXEN_5 ADC_5 MUXEN_4 ADC_4 ADCBGEN SCTEST 1.22V ref EXTCH MUXEN_3 ADC_3 MUXEN_2 ADC_2 MUXEN_1 ADC_1 MUXEN_0 ADC_0 PRECH PRECH AREF G10 10-bit DAC + COMP - G20 ADCEN COMP DACOUT DAC_9..0 ACTEN + 10x NEGSEL_2 - ADC_2 NEGSEL_1 ADC_0 20x HOLD - GNDEN ADC_1 NEGSEL_0 + ST ACLK AMPEN The signals are described briefly in Table 23-7. 310 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 23-7. Boundary-scan Signals for the ADC(1) Signal Name Direction as Seen from the ADC Description COMP Output Comparator Output 0 0 ACLK Input Clock signal to gain stages implemented as Switch-cap filters 0 0 ACTEN Input Enable path from gain stages to the comparator 0 0 ADCBGEN Input Enable Band-gap reference as negative input to comparator 0 0 ADCEN Input Power-on signal to the ADC 0 0 AMPEN Input Power-on signal to the gain stages 0 0 DAC_9 Input Bit 9 of digital value to DAC 1 1 DAC_8 Input Bit 8 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_7 Input Bit 7 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_6 Input Bit 6 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_5 Input Bit 5 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_4 Input Bit 4 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_3 Input Bit 3 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_2 Input Bit 2 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_1 Input Bit 1 of digital value to DAC 0 0 DAC_0 Input Bit 0 of digital value to DAC 0 0 EXTCH Input Connect ADC channels 0 - 3 to by-pass path around gain stages 1 1 G10 Input Enable 10x gain 0 0 G20 Input Enable 20x gain 0 0 Recommended Input when not in use Output Values when Recommended Inputs are Used, and CPU is not Using the ADC 311 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 23-7. 312 Boundary-scan Signals for the ADC(1) (Continued) Signal Name Direction as Seen from the ADC Description GNDEN Input Ground the negative input to comparator when true 0 0 HOLD Input Sample & Hold signal. Sample analog signal when low. Hold signal when high. If gain stages are used, this signal must go active when ACLK is high. 1 1 IREFEN Input Enables Band-gap reference as AREF signal to DAC 0 0 MUXEN_7 Input Input Mux bit 7 0 0 MUXEN_6 Input Input Mux bit 6 0 0 MUXEN_5 Input Input Mux bit 5 0 0 MUXEN_4 Input Input Mux bit 4 0 0 MUXEN_3 Input Input Mux bit 3 0 0 MUXEN_2 Input Input Mux bit 2 0 0 MUXEN_1 Input Input Mux bit 1 0 0 MUXEN_0 Input Input Mux bit 0 1 1 NEGSEL_2 Input Input Mux for negative input for differential signal, bit 2 0 0 NEGSEL_1 Input Input Mux for negative input for differential signal, bit 1 0 0 NEGSEL_0 Input Input Mux for negative input for differential signal, bit 0 0 0 PASSEN Input Enable pass-gate of gain stages. 1 1 PRECH Input Precharge output latch of comparator. (Active low) 1 1 Recommended Input when not in use Output Values when Recommended Inputs are Used, and CPU is not Using the ADC AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 23-7. Boundary-scan Signals for the ADC(1) (Continued) Direction as Seen from the ADC Description Input Switch-cap TEST enable. Output from x10 gain stage send out to Port Pin having ADC_4 0 0 ST Input Output of gain stages will settle faster if this signal is high first two ACLK periods after AMPEN goes high. 0 0 VCCREN Input Selects Vcc as the ACC reference voltage. 0 0 Signal Name SCTEST Note: Recommended Input when not in use Output Values when Recommended Inputs are Used, and CPU is not Using the ADC 1. Incorrect setting of the switches in Figure 23-10 will make signal contention and may damage the part. There are several input choices to the S&H circuitry on the negative input of the output comparator in Figure 23-10. Make sure only one path is selected from either one ADC pin, Bandgap reference source, or Ground. If the ADC is not to be used during scan, the recommended input values from Table 23-7 should be used. The user is recommended not to use the Differential Gain stages during scan. SwitchCap based gain stages require fast operation and accurate timing which is difficult to obtain when used in a scan chain. Details concerning operations of the differential gain stage is therefore not provided. The AVR ADC is based on the analog circuitry shown in Figure 23-10 with a successive approximation algorithm implemented in the digital logic. When used in Boundary-scan, the problem is usually to ensure that an applied analog voltage is measured within some limits. This can easily be done without running a successive approximation algorithm: apply the lower limit on the digital DAC[9:0] lines, make sure the output from the comparator is low, then apply the upper limit on the digital DAC[9:0] lines, and verify the output from the comparator to be high. The ADC need not be used for pure connectivity testing, since all analog inputs are shared with a digital port pin as well. When using the ADC, remember the following * The port pin for the ADC channel in use must be configured to be an input with pull-up disabled to avoid signal contention. * In Normal mode, a dummy conversion (consisting of 10 comparisons) is performed when enabling the ADC. The user is advised to wait at least 200ns after enabling the ADC before controlling/observing any ADC signal, or perform a dummy conversion before using the first result. * The DAC values must be stable at the midpoint value 0x200 when having the HOLD signal low (Sample mode). As an example, consider the task of verifying a 1.5V 5% input signal at ADC channel 3 when the power supply is 5.0V and AREF is externally connected to VCC. The lower limit is: [ 1024 * 1.5V * 0.95 / 5V ] = 291 = 0x123 The upper limit is: [ 1024 * 1.5V * 1.05 / 5V ] = 323 = 0x143 313 7679H-CAN-08/08 The recommended values from Table 23-7 are used unless other values are given in the algorithm in Table 23-8. Only the DAC and port pin values of the Scan Chain are shown. The column "Actions" describes what JTAG instruction to be used before filling the Boundary-scan Register with the succeeding columns. The verification should be done on the data scanned out when scanning in the data on the same row in the table. Table 23-8. Algorithm for Using the ADC MUXEN HOLD PRECH PA3. Data PA3. Control PA3. Pullup_ Enable 0x200 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 1 0x200 0x08 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 0x200 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 4 1 0x123 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 5 1 0x123 0x08 1 0 0 0 0 1 0x200 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 7 1 0x200 0x08 0 1 0 0 0 8 1 0x200 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 9 1 0x143 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 10 1 0x143 0x08 1 0 0 0 0 1 0x200 0x08 1 1 0 0 0 Step Actions 1 SAMPLE_ PRELOAD 1 2 EXTEST 6 11 Verify the COMP bit scanned out to be 0 Verify the COMP bit scanned out to be 1 ADCEN DAC Using this algorithm, the timing constraint on the HOLD signal constrains the TCK clock frequency. As the algorithm keeps HOLD high for five steps, the TCK clock frequency has to be at least five times the number of scan bits divided by the maximum hold time, thold,max 23.7 AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order Table 23-9 shows the Scan order between TDI and TDO when the Boundary-scan chain is selected as data path. Bit 0 is the LSB; the first bit scanned in, and the first bit scanned out. The scan order follows the pin-out order as far as possible. Therefore, the bits of Port A is scanned in the opposite bit order of the other ports. Exceptions from the rules are the Scan chains for the analog circuits, which constitute the most significant bits of the scan chain regardless of which physical pin they are connected to. In Figure 23-3, PXn. Data corresponds to FF0, PXn. Control 314 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 corresponds to FF1, and PXn. Pullup_enable corresponds to FF2. Bit 2, 3, 4, and 5 of Port C is not in the scan chain, since these pins constitute the TAP pins when the JTAG is enabled. Table 23-9. AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order Bit Number Signal Name 200 AC_IDLE 199 ACO 198 ACME 197 AINBG 196 COMP 195 ACLK 194 ACTEN 193 PRIVATE_SIGNAL(1) 192 ADCBGEN 191 ADCEN 190 AMPEN 189 DAC_9 188 DAC_8 187 DAC_7 186 DAC_6 185 DAC_5 184 DAC_4 183 DAC_3 182 DAC_2 181 DAC_1 180 DAC_0 179 EXTCH 178 G10 177 G20 176 GNDEN 175 HOLD 174 IREFEN 173 MUXEN_7 172 MUXEN_6 171 MUXEN_5 170 MUXEN_4 169 MUXEN_3 168 MUXEN_2 167 MUXEN_1 166 MUXEN_0 165 NEGSEL_2 Comment Module Comparator ADC 315 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 23-9. 316 AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order (Continued) Bit Number Signal Name 164 NEGSEL_1 163 NEGSEL_0 162 PASSEN 161 PRECH 160 SCTEST 159 ST 158 VCCREN 157 PE0.Data 156 PE0.Control 155 PE0.Pullup_Enable 154 PE1.Data 153 PE1.Control 152 PE1.Pullup_Enable 151 PE2.Data 150 PE2.Control 149 PE2.Pullup_Enable 148 PE3.Data 147 PE3.Control 146 PE3.Pullup_Enable 145 PE4.Data 144 PE4.Control 143 PE4.Pullup_Enable 142 PE5.Data 141 PE5.Control 140 PE5.Pullup_Enable 139 PE6.Data 138 PE6.Control 137 PE6.Pullup_Enable 136 PE7.Data 135 PE7.Control 134 PE7.Pullup_Enable 133 PB0.Data 132 PB0.Control 131 PB0.Pullup_Enable 130 PB1.Data 129 PB1.Control 128 PB1.Pullup_Enable 127 PB2.Data Comment Module ADC Port E Port B AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 23-9. AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order (Continued) Bit Number Signal Name 126 PB2.Control 125 PB2.Pullup_Enable 124 PB3.Data 123 PB3.Control 122 PB3.Pullup_Enable 121 PB4.Data 120 PB4.Control 119 PB4.Pullup_Enable 118 PB5.Data 117 PB5.Control 116 PB5.Pullup_Enable 115 PB6.Data 114 PB6.Control 113 PB6.Pullup_Enable 112 PB7.Data 111 PB7.Control 110 PB7.Pullup_Enable 109 PG3.Data 108 PG3.Control 107 PG3.Pullup_Enable 106 PG4.Data 105 PG4.Control 104 PG4.Pullup_Enable 103 PRIVATE_SIGNAL(1) 102 RSTT 101 RSTHV 100 EXTCLKEN 99 OSCON 98 OSC32EN 97 TOSKON 96 EXTCLK 95 OSCCK 94 OSC32CK 93 TOSK 92 PD0.Data 91 PD0.Control 90 PD0.Pullup_Enable 89 PD1.Data Comment Module Port B Port G - (Observe Only) RESET Logic Oscillators (XTAL1) Port D 317 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 23-9. 318 AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order (Continued) Bit Number Signal Name 88 PD1.Control 87 PD1.Pullup_Enable 86 PD2.Data 85 PD2.Control 84 PD2.Pullup_Enable 83 PD3.Data 82 PD3.Control 81 PD3.Pullup_Enable 80 PD4.Data 79 PD4.Control 78 PD4.Pullup_Enable 77 PD5.Data 76 PD5.Control 75 PD5.Pullup_Enable 74 PD6.Data 73 PD6.Control 72 PD6.Pullup_Enable 71 PD7.Data 70 PD7.Control 69 PD7.Pullup_Enable 68 PG0.Data 67 PG0.Control 66 PG0.Pullup_Enable 65 PG1.Data 64 PG1.Control 63 PG1.Pullup_Enable 62 PC0.Data 61 PC0.Control 60 PC0.Pullup_Enable 59 PC1.Data 58 PC1.Control 57 PC1.Pullup_Enable 56 PC2.Data 55 PC2.Control 54 PC2.Pullup_Enable 53 PC3.Data 52 PC3.Control 51 PC3.Pullup_Enable Comment Module Port D Port G Port C AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 23-9. AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order (Continued) Bit Number Signal Name 50 PC4.Data 49 PC4.Control 48 PC4.Pullup_Enable 47 PC5.Data 46 PC5.Control 45 PC5.Pullup_Enable 44 PC6.Data 43 PC6.Control 42 PC6.Pullup_Enable 41 PC7.Data 40 PC7.Control 39 PC7.Pullup_Enable 38 PG2.Data 37 PG2.Control 36 PG2.Pullup_Enable 35 PA7.Data 34 PA7.Control 33 PA7.Pullup_Enable 32 PA6.Data 31 PA6.Control 30 PA6.Pullup_Enable 29 PA5.Data 28 PA5.Control 27 PA5.Pullup_Enable 26 PA4.Data 25 PA4.Control 24 PA4.Pullup_Enable 23 PA3.Data 22 PA3.Control 21 PA3.Pullup_Enable 20 PA2.Data 19 PA2.Control 18 PA2.Pullup_Enable 17 PA1.Data 16 PA1.Control 15 PA1.Pullup_Enable 14 PA0.Data 13 PA0.Control Comment Module Port C Port G Port A 319 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 23-9. Bit Number Signal Name 12 PA0.Pullup_Enable Port A 11 PF3.Data Port F 10 PF3.Control 9 PF3.Pullup_Enable 8 PF2.Data 7 PF2.Control 6 PF2.Pullup_Enable 5 PF1.Data 4 PF1.Control 3 PF1.Pullup_Enable 2 PF0.Data 1 PF0.Control 0 PF0.Pullup_Enable Notes: 23.8 AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order (Continued) Comment Module 1. PRIVATE_SIGNAL should always be scanned-in as zero. Boundary-scan Description Language Files Boundary-scan Description Language (BSDL) files describe Boundary-scan capable devices in a standard format used by automated test-generation software. The order and function of bits in the Boundary-scan Data Register are included in this description. A BSDL file for AT90CAN32/64/128 is available. 320 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 24. Boot Loader Support - Read-While-Write Self-Programming The Boot Loader Support provides a real Read-While-Write Self-Programming mechanism for downloading and uploading program code by the MCU itself. This feature allows flexible application software updates controlled by the MCU using a Flash-resident Boot Loader program. The Boot Loader program can use any available data interface and associated protocol to read code and write (program) that code into the Flash memory, or read the code from the program memory. The program code within the Boot Loader section has the capability to write into the entire Flash, including the Boot Loader memory. The Boot Loader can thus even modify itself, and it can also erase itself from the code if the feature is not needed anymore. The size of the Boot Loader memory is configurable with fuses and the Boot Loader has two separate sets of Boot Lock bits which can be set independently. This gives the user a unique flexibility to select different levels of protection. 24.1 Features * * * * * * * Read-While-Write Self-Programming Flexible Boot Memory Size High Security (Separate Boot Lock Bits for a Flexible Protection) Separate Fuse to Select Reset Vector Optimized Page(1) Size Code Efficient Algorithm Efficient Read-Modify-Write Support Note: 24.2 1. A page is a section in the Flash consisting of several bytes (see Table 25-11 on page 341) used during programming. The page organization does not affect normal operation. Application and Boot Loader Flash Sections The Flash memory is organized in two main sections, the Application section and the Boot Loader section (see Figure 24-2). The size of the different sections is configured by the BOOTSZ Fuses as shown in Table 24-6 on page 334 and Figure 24-2. These two sections can have different level of protection since they have different sets of Lock bits. 24.2.1 AS - Application Section The Application section is the section of the Flash that is used for storing the application code. The protection level for the Application section can be selected by the application Boot Lock bits (BLB02 and BLB01 bits), see Table 24-2 on page 325. The Application section can never store any Boot Loader code since the SPM instruction is disabled when executed from the Application section. 24.2.2 BLS - Boot Loader Section While the Application section is used for storing the application code, the The Boot Loader software must be located in the BLS since the SPM instruction can initiate a programming when executing from the BLS only. The SPM instruction can access the entire Flash, including the BLS itself. The protection level for the Boot Loader section can be selected by the Boot Loader Lock bits (BLB12 and BLB11 bits), see Table 24-3 on page 325. 24.3 Read-While-Write and No Read-While-Write Flash Sections Whether the CPU supports Read-While-Write or if the CPU is halted during a Boot Loader software update is dependent on which address that is being programmed. In addition to the two 321 7679H-CAN-08/08 sections that are configurable by the BOOTSZ Fuses as described above, the Flash is also divided into two fixed sections, the Read-While-Write (RWW) section and the No Read-WhileWrite (NRWW) section. The limit between the RWW- and NRWW sections is given in Table 247 on page 334 and Figure 24-2 on page 324. The main difference between the two sections is: * When erasing or writing a page located inside the RWW section, the NRWW section can be read during the operation. * When erasing or writing a page located inside the NRWW section, the CPU is halted during the entire operation. Note that the user software can never read any code that is located inside the RWW section during a Boot Loader software operation. The syntax "Read-While-Write section" refers to which section that is being programmed (erased or written), not which section that actually is being read during a Boot Loader software update. 24.3.1 RWW - Read-While-Write Section If a Boot Loader software update is programming a page inside the RWW section, it is possible to read code from the Flash, but only code that is located in the NRWW section. During an ongoing programming, the software must ensure that the RWW section never is being read. If the user software is trying to read code that is located inside the RWW section (i.e., by a call/jmp/lpm or an interrupt) during programming, the software might end up in an unknown state. To avoid this, the interrupts should either be disabled or moved to the Boot Loader section. The Boot Loader section is always located in the NRWW section. The RWW Section Busy bit (RWWSB) in the Store Program Memory Control and Status Register (SPMCSR) will be read as logical one as long as the RWW section is blocked for reading. After a programming is completed, the RWWSB must be cleared by software before reading code located in the RWW section. See "Store Program Memory Control and Status Register - SPMCSR" on page 326. for details on how to clear RWWSB. 24.3.2 NRWW - No Read-While-Write Section The code located in the NRWW section can be read when the Boot Loader software is updating a page in the RWW section. When the Boot Loader code updates the NRWW section, the CPU is halted during the entire Page Erase or Page Write operation. Table 24-1. 322 Read-While-Write Features Which Section does the Z-pointer Address During the Programming? Which Section Can be Read During Programming? Is the CPU Halted? Read-While-Write Supported? RWW Section NRWW Section No Yes NRWW Section None Yes No AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 24-1. Read-While-Write vs. No Read-While-Write Read-While-Write (RWW) Section Z-pointer Addresses RWW Section Z-pointer Addresses NRWW Section No Read-While-Write (NRWW) Section CPU is Halted During the Operation Code Located in NRWW Section Can be Read During the Operation 323 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 24-2. Memory Sections Program Memory BOOTSZ = '10' Program Memory BOOTSZ = '11' 0x0000 Read-While-Write Section Application Flash Section End RWW Start NRWW Application Flash Section Boot Loader Flash Section End Application Start Boot Loader Flashend No Read-While-Write Section No Read-While-Write Section Read-While-Write Section 0x0000 Program Memory BOOTSZ = '01' Application Flash Section End RWW Start NRWW Application Flash Section End Application Start Boot Loader Boot Loader Flash Section Flashend Program Memory BOOTSZ = '00' 0x0000 End RWW Start NRWW Application Flash Section End Application Start Boot Loader Boot Loader Flash Section Flash end Note: 24.4 Read-While-Write Section Application Flash Section No Read-While-Write Section No Read-While-Write Section Read-While-Write Section 0x0000 Application Flash Section End RWW, End Application Start NRWW, Start Boot Loader Boot Loader Flash Section Flash end The parameters in the figure above are given in Table 24-6 on page 334. Boot Loader Lock Bits If no Boot Loader capability is needed, the entire Flash is available for application code. The Boot Loader has two separate sets of Boot Lock bits which can be set independently. This gives the user a unique flexibility to select different levels of protection. The user can select: * To protect the entire Flash from a software update by the MCU. * To protect only the Boot Loader Flash section from a software update by the MCU. * To protect only the Application Flash section from a software update by the MCU. 324 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Allow software update in the entire Flash. See Table 24-2 and Table 24-3 for further details. The Boot Lock bits can be set in software and in Serial or Parallel Programming mode, but they can be cleared by a Chip Erase command only. The general Write Lock (Lock Bit mode 2) does not control the programming of the Flash memory by SPM instruction. Similarly, the general Read/Write Lock (Lock Bit mode 1) does not control reading nor writing by LPM/SPM (Load Program Memory / Store Program Memory) instructions, if it is attempted. Table 24-2. Lock Bit Mode BLB02 BLB01 1 1 1 No restrictions for SPM or LPM accessing the Application section. 2 1 0 SPM is not allowed to write to the Application section. 0 SPM is not allowed to write to the Application section, and LPM executing from the Boot Loader section is not allowed to read from the Application section. If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Boot Loader section, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Application section. 1 LPM executing from the Boot Loader section is not allowed to read from the Application section. If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Boot Loader section, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Application section. 3 0 4 Note: 0 Protection 1. "1" means unprogrammed, "0" means programmed Table 24-3. Boot Lock Bit1 Protection Modes (Boot Loader Section)(1) Lock Bit Mode BLB12 BLB11 1 1 1 No restrictions for SPM or LPM accessing the Boot Loader section. 2 1 0 SPM is not allowed to write to the Boot Loader section. 0 SPM is not allowed to write to the Boot Loader section, and LPM executing from the Application section is not allowed to read from the Boot Loader section. If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Application section, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Boot Loader section. 1 LPM executing from the Application section is not allowed to read from the Boot Loader section. If Interrupt Vectors are placed in the Application section, interrupts are disabled while executing from the Boot Loader section. 3 4 Note: 24.5 Boot Lock Bit0 Protection Modes (Application Section)(1) 0 0 Protection 1. "1" means unprogrammed, "0" means programmed Entering the Boot Loader Program Entering the Boot Loader takes place by a jump or call from the application program. This may be initiated by a trigger such as a command received via USART, or SPI interface. Alternatively, the Boot Reset Fuse can be programmed so that the Reset Vector is pointing to the Boot Flash start address after a reset. In this case, the Boot Loader is started after a reset. After the application code is loaded, the program can start executing the application code. Note that the fuses cannot be changed by the MCU itself. This means that once the Boot Reset Fuse is pro- 325 7679H-CAN-08/08 grammed, the Reset Vector will always point to the Boot Loader Reset and the fuse can only be changed through the serial or parallel programming interface. Table 24-4. Boot Reset Fuse(1) BOOTRST Note: 24.5.1 Reset Address 1 Reset Vector = Application Reset (address 0x0000) 0 Reset Vector = Boot Loader Reset (see Table 24-6 on page 334) 1. "1" means unprogrammed, "0" means programmed Store Program Memory Control and Status Register - SPMCSR The Store Program Memory Control and Status Register contains the control bits needed to control the Boot Loader operations. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SPMIE RWWSB - RWWSRE BLBSET PGWRT PGERS SPMEN Read/Write R/W R R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W Initial Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SPMCSR * Bit 7 - SPMIE: SPM Interrupt Enable When the SPMIE bit is written to one, and the I-bit in the Status Register is set (one), the SPM ready interrupt will be enabled. The SPM ready Interrupt will be executed as long as the SPMEN bit in the SPMCSR Register is cleared. * Bit 6 - RWWSB: Read-While-Write Section Busy When a Self-Programming (Page Erase or Page Write) operation to the RWW section is initiated, the RWWSB will be set (one) by hardware. When the RWWSB bit is set, the RWW section cannot be accessed. The RWWSB bit will be cleared if the RWWSRE bit is written to one after a Self-Programming operation is completed. Alternatively the RWWSB bit will automatically be cleared if a page load operation is initiated. * Bit 5 - Res: Reserved Bit This bit is a reserved bit in the AT90CAN32/64/128 and always read as zero. * Bit 4 - RWWSRE: Read-While-Write Section Read Enable When programming (Page Erase or Page Write) to the RWW section, the RWW section is blocked for reading (the RWWSB will be set by hardware). To re-enable the RWW section, the user software must wait until the programming is completed (SPMEN will be cleared). Then, if the RWWSRE bit is written to one at the same time as SPMEN, the next SPM instruction within four clock cycles re-enables the RWW section. The RWW section cannot be re-enabled while the Flash is busy with a Page Erase or a Page Write (SPMEN is set). If the RWWSRE bit is written while the Flash is being loaded, the Flash load operation will abort and the data loaded will be lost. * Bit 3 - BLBSET: Boot Lock Bit Set If this bit is written to one at the same time as SPMEN, the next SPM instruction within four clock cycles sets Boot Lock bits, according to the data in R0. The data in R1 and the address in the Zpointer are ignored. The BLBSET bit will automatically be cleared upon completion of the Lock bit set, or if no SPM instruction is executed within four clock cycles. 326 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 An LPM instruction within three cycles after BLBSET and SPMEN are set in the SPMCSR Register, will read either the Lock bits or the Fuse bits (depending on Z0 in the Z-pointer) into the destination register. See "Reading the Fuse and Lock Bits from Software" on page 330 for details. * Bit 2 - PGWRT: Page Write If this bit is written to one at the same time as SPMEN, the next SPM instruction within four clock cycles executes Page Write, with the data stored in the temporary buffer. The page address is taken from the high part of the Z-pointer. The data in R1 and R0 are ignored. The PGWRT bit will auto-clear upon completion of a Page Write, or if no SPM instruction is executed within four clock cycles. The CPU is halted during the entire Page Write operation if the NRWW section is addressed. * Bit 1 - PGERS: Page Erase If this bit is written to one at the same time as SPMEN, the next SPM instruction within four clock cycles executes Page Erase. The page address is taken from the high part of the Z-pointer. The data in R1 and R0 are ignored. The PGERS bit will auto-clear upon completion of a Page Erase, or if no SPM instruction is executed within four clock cycles. The CPU is halted during the entire Page Write operation if the NRWW section is addressed. * Bit 0 - SPMEN: Store Program Memory Enable This bit enables the SPM instruction for the next four clock cycles. If written to one together with either RWWSRE, BLBSET, PGWRT' or PGERS, the following SPM instruction will have a special meaning, see description above. If only SPMEN is written, the following SPM instruction will store the value in R1:R0 in the temporary page buffer addressed by the Z-pointer. The LSB of the Z-pointer is ignored. The SPMEN bit will auto-clear upon completion of an SPM instruction, or if no SPM instruction is executed within four clock cycles. During Page Erase and Page Write, the SPMEN bit remains high until the operation is completed. Writing any other combination than "10001", "01001", "00101", "00011" or "00001" in the lower five bits will have no effect. 24.6 Addressing the Flash During Self-Programming The Z-pointer is used to address the SPM commands. The Z pointer consists of the Z-registers ZL and ZH in the register file, and RAMPZ in the I/O space. The number of bits actually used is implementation dependent. Note that the RAMPZ register is only implemented when the program space is larger than 64K bytes. Bit 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 16 8 RAMPZ - - - - - - - RAMPZ0 ZH (R31) Z15 Z14 Z13 Z12 Z11 Z10 Z9 Z8 ZL (R30) Z7 Z6 Z5 Z4 Z3 Z2 Z1 Z0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Since the Flash is organized in pages (see Table 25-11 on page 341), the Program Counter can be treated as having two different sections. One section, consisting of the least significant bits, is addressing the words within a page, while the most significant bits are addressing the pages. This is shown in Figure 24-3. Note that the page erase and page write operations are addressed independently. Therefore it is of major importance that the Boot Loader software addresses the 327 7679H-CAN-08/08 same page in both the page erase and page write operation. Once a programming operation is initiated, the address is latched and the Z-pointer can be used for other operations. The (E)LPM instruction use the Z-pointer to store the address. Since this instruction addresses the Flash byte-by-byte, also bit Z0 of the Z-pointer is used. Figure 24-3. Addressing the Flash During SPM(1) BIT 23 ZPCMSB ZPAGEMSB 1 0 0 PCMSB PROGRAM COUNTER Z - POINTER PAGEMSB PCPAGE PCWORD PAGE ADDRESS WITHIN THE FLASH WORD ADDRESS WITHIN A PAGE PROGRAM MEMORY PAGE PAGE INSTRUCTION WORD PCWORD[PAGEMSB:0]: 00 01 02 PAGEEND Note: 24.7 1. The different variables used in Figure 24-3 are listed in Table 24-8 on page 335. Self-Programming the Flash The program memory is updated in a page by page fashion. Before programming a page with the data stored in the temporary page buffer, the page must be erased. The temporary page buffer is filled one word at a time using SPM and the buffer can be filled either before the Page Erase command or between a Page Erase and a Page Write operation: Alternative 1: fill the buffer before a Page Erase * Fill temporary page buffer * Perform a Page Erase * Perform a Page Write Alternative 2: fill the buffer after Page Erase * Perform a Page Erase * Fill temporary page buffer * Perform a Page Write 328 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 If only a part of the page needs to be changed, the rest of the page must be stored (for example in the temporary page buffer) before the erase, and then be rewritten. When using alternative 1, the Boot Loader provides an effective Read-Modify-Write feature which allows the user software to first read the page, do the necessary changes, and then write back the modified data. If alternative 2 is used, it is not possible to read the old data while loading since the page is already erased. The temporary page buffer can be accessed in a random sequence. It is essential that the page address used in both the Page Erase and Page Write operation is addressing the same page. See "Simple Assembly Code Example for a Boot Loader" on page 332 for an assembly code example. 24.7.1 Performing Page Erase by SPM To execute Page Erase, set up the address in the Z-pointer, write "X0000011" to SPMCSR and execute SPM within four clock cycles after writing SPMCSR. The data in R1 and R0 is ignored. The page address must be written to PCPAGE in the Z-register. Other bits in the Z-pointer will be ignored during this operation. * Page Erase to the RWW section: The NRWW section can be read during the Page Erase. * Page Erase to the NRWW section: The CPU is halted during the operation. 24.7.2 Filling the Temporary Buffer (Page Loading) To write an instruction word, set up the address in the Z-pointer and data in R1:R0, write "00000001" to SPMCSR and execute SPM within four clock cycles after writing SPMCSR. The content of PCWORD in the Z-register is used to address the data in the temporary buffer. The temporary buffer will auto-erase after a Page Write operation or by writing the RWWSRE bit in SPMCSR. It is also erased after a system reset. Note that it is not possible to write more than one time to each address without erasing the temporary buffer. If the EEPROM is written in the middle of an SPM Page Load operation, all data loaded will be lost. 24.7.3 Performing a Page Write To execute Page Write, set up the address in the Z-pointer, write "X0000101" to SPMCSR and execute SPM within four clock cycles after writing SPMCSR. The data in R1 and R0 is ignored. The page address must be written to PCPAGE. Other bits in the Z-pointer will be ignored during this operation. * Page Write to the RWW section: The NRWW section can be read during the Page Write. * Page Write to the NRWW section: The CPU is halted during the operation. 24.7.4 Using the SPM Interrupt If the SPM interrupt is enabled, the SPM interrupt will generate a constant interrupt when the SPMEN bit in SPMCSR is cleared. This means that the interrupt can be used instead of polling the SPMCSR Register in software. When using the SPM interrupt, the Interrupt Vectors should be moved to the BLS section to avoid that an interrupt is accessing the RWW section when it is blocked for reading. How to move the interrupts is described in "Interrupts" on page 60. 24.7.5 Consideration While Updating BLS Special care must be taken if the user allows the Boot Loader section to be updated by leaving Boot Lock bit11 unprogrammed. An accidental write to the Boot Loader itself can corrupt the entire Boot Loader, and further software updates might be impossible. If it is not necessary to 329 7679H-CAN-08/08 change the Boot Loader software itself, it is recommended to program the Boot Lock bit11 to protect the Boot Loader software from any internal software changes. 24.7.6 Prevent Reading the RWW Section During Self-Programming During Self-Programming (either Page Erase or Page Write), the RWW section is always blocked for reading. The user software itself must prevent that this section is addressed during the self programming operation. The RWWSB in the SPMCSR will be set as long as the RWW section is busy. During Self-Programming the Interrupt Vector table should be moved to the BLS as described in "Interrupts" on page 60, or the interrupts must be disabled. Before addressing the RWW section after the programming is completed, the user software must clear the RWWSB by writing the RWWSRE. See "Simple Assembly Code Example for a Boot Loader" on page 332 for an example. 24.7.7 Setting the Boot Loader Lock Bits by SPM To set the Boot Loader Lock bits, write the desired data to R0, write "X0001001" to SPMCSR and execute SPM within four clock cycles after writing SPMCSR. The only accessible Lock bits are the Boot Lock bits that may prevent the Application and Boot Loader section from any software update by the MCU. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 R0 1 1 BLB12 BLB11 BLB02 BLB01 1 1 See Table 24-2 and Table 24-3 for how the different settings of the Boot Loader bits affect the Flash access. If bits 5..2 in R0 are cleared (zero), the corresponding Boot Lock bit will be programmed if an SPM instruction is executed within four cycles after BLBSET and SPMEN are set in SPMCSR. The Z-pointer is don't care during this operation, but for future compatibility it is recommended to load the Z-pointer with 0x0001 (same as used for reading the Lock bits). For future compatibility it is also recommended to set bits 7, 6, 1, and 0 in R0 to "1" when writing the Lock bits. When programming the Lock bits the entire Flash can be read during the operation. 24.7.8 EEPROM Write Prevents Writing to SPMCSR Note that an EEPROM write operation will block all software programming to Flash. Reading the Fuses and Lock bits from software will also be prevented during the EEPROM write operation. It is recommended that the user checks the status bit (EEWE) in the EECR Register and verifies that the bit is cleared before writing to the SPMCSR Register. 24.7.9 Reading the Fuse and Lock Bits from Software It is possible to read both the Fuse and Lock bits from software. To read the Lock bits, load the Z-pointer with 0x0001 and set the BLBSET and SPMEN bits in SPMCSR. When an LPM instruction is executed within three CPU cycles after the BLBSET and SPMEN bits are set in SPMCSR, the value of the Lock bits will be loaded in the destination register. The BLBSET and SPMEN bits will auto-clear upon completion of reading the Lock bits or if no LPM instruction is executed within three CPU cycles or no SPM instruction is executed within four CPU cycles. When BLBSET and SPMEN are cleared, LPM will work as described in the Instruction set Manual. 330 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Rd (Z=0x0001) - - BLB12 BLB11 BLB02 BLB01 LB2 LB1 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 The algorithm for reading the Fuse Low byte is similar to the one described above for reading the Lock bits. To read the Fuse Low byte, load the Z-pointer with 0x0000 and set the BLBSET and SPMEN bits in SPMCSR. When an LPM instruction is executed within three cycles after the BLBSET and SPMEN bits are set in the SPMCSR, the value of the Fuse Low byte (FLB) will be loaded in the destination register as shown below. Refer to Table 25-5 on page 338 for a detailed description and mapping of the Fuse Low byte. Bit Rd (Z=0x0000) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FLB7 FLB6 FLB5 FLB4 FLB3 FLB2 FLB1 FLB0 Similarly, when reading the Fuse High byte, load 0x0003 in the Z-pointer. When an LPM instruction is executed within three cycles after the BLBSET and SPMEN bits are set in the SPMCSR, the value of the Fuse High byte (FHB) will be loaded in the destination register as shown below. Refer to Table 25-4 on page 337 for detailed description and mapping of the Fuse High byte. Bit Rd (Z=0x0003) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FHB7 FHB6 FHB5 FHB4 FHB3 FHB2 FHB1 FHB0 When reading the Extended Fuse byte, load 0x0002 in the Z-pointer. When an LPM instruction is executed within three cycles after the BLBSET and SPMEN bits are set in the SPMCSR, the value of the Extended Fuse byte (EFB) will be loaded in the destination register as shown below. Refer to Table 25-3 on page 337 for detailed description and mapping of the Extended Fuse byte. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Rd (Z=0x0002) - - - - EFB3 EFB2 EFB1 EFB0 Fuse and Lock bits that are programmed, will be read as zero. Fuse and Lock bits that are unprogrammed, will be read as one. 24.7.10 Preventing Flash Corruption During periods of low VCC, the Flash program can be corrupted because the supply voltage is too low for the CPU and the Flash to operate properly. These issues are the same as for board level systems using the Flash, and the same design solutions should be applied. A Flash program corruption can be caused by two situations when the voltage is too low. * First, a regular write sequence to the Flash requires a minimum voltage to operate correctly. * Secondly, the CPU itself can execute instructions incorrectly, if the supply voltage for executing instructions is too low. Flash corruption can easily be avoided by following these design recommendations (one is sufficient): 1. If there is no need for a Boot Loader update in the system, program the Boot Loader Lock bits to prevent any Boot Loader software updates. 2. Keep the AVR RESET active (low) during periods of insufficient power supply voltage. This can be done by enabling the internal Brown-out Detector (BOD) if the operating voltage matches the detection level. If not, an external low VCC reset protection circuit can be used. If a reset occurs while a write operation is in progress, the write operation will be completed provided that the power supply voltage is sufficient. 331 7679H-CAN-08/08 3. Keep the AVR core in Power-down sleep mode during periods of low VCC. This will prevent the CPU from attempting to decode and execute instructions, effectively protecting the SPMCSR Register and thus the Flash from unintentional writes. 24.7.11 Programming Time for Flash when Using SPM The calibrated RC Oscillator is used to time Flash accesses. Table 24-5 shows the typical programming time for Flash accesses from the CPU. Table 24-5. 24.7.12 SPM Programming Time Symbol Min Programming Time Max Programming Time Flash write (Page Erase, Page Write, and write Lock bits by SPM) 3.7 ms 4.5 ms Simple Assembly Code Example for a Boot Loader ;- the routine writes one page of data from RAM to Flash ; the first data location in RAM is pointed to by the Y-pointer ; the first data location in Flash is pointed to by the Z-pointer ;- error handling is not included ;- the routine must be placed inside the Boot space ; (at least the Do_spm sub routine). Only code inside NRWW section can ; be read during Self-Programming (Page Erase and Page Write). ;- registers used: r0, r1, temp1 (r16), temp2 (r17), looplo (r24), ; loophi (r25), spmcsrval (r20) ; storing and restoring of registers is not included in the routine ; register usage can be optimized at the expense of code size ;- it is assumed that either the interrupt table is moved to the Boot ; loader section or that the interrupts are disabled. .equ PAGESIZEB = PAGESIZE*2 .org SMALLBOOTSTART ;PAGESIZEB is page size in BYTES, not words Write_page: ; Page Erase ldi spmcsrval, (1< 2 CPU clock cycles for fck < 12 MHz, 3 CPU clock cycles for fck 12 MHz High: > 2 CPU clock cycles for fck < 12 MHz, 3 CPU clock cycles for fck 12 MHz 25.7.2 Pin Mapping Table 25-13. Pin Mapping Serial Programming 25.7.3 Symbol Pins I/O Description MOSI (PDI) PE0 I Serial Data in MISO (PDO) PE1 O Serial Data out SCK PB1 I Serial Clock Parameters The Flash parameters are given in Table 25-11 on page 341 and the EEPROM parameters in Table 25-12 on page 341. 25.8 SPI Serial Programming When writing serial data to the AT90CAN32/64/128, data is clocked on the rising edge of SCK. When reading data from the AT90CAN32/64/128, data is clocked on the falling edge of SCK. To program and verify the AT90CAN32/64/128 in the serial programming mode, the following sequence is recommended (See four byte instruction formats in Table 25-15): 349 7679H-CAN-08/08 1. Power-up sequence: Apply power between VCC and GND while RESET and SCK are set to "0". In some systems, the programmer can not guarantee that SCK is held low during power-up. In this case, RESET must be given a positive pulse of at least two CPU clock cycles duration after SCK has been set to "0". 2. Wait for at least 20 ms and enable serial programming by sending the Programming Enable serial instruction to pin MOSI. 3. The serial programming instructions will not work if the communication is out of synchronization. When in sync. the second byte (0x53), will echo back when issuing the third byte of the Programming Enable instruction. Whether the echo is correct or not, all four bytes of the instruction must be transmitted. If the 0x53 did not echo back, give RESET a positive pulse and issue a new Programming Enable command. 4. The Flash is programmed one page at a time. The page size is found in Table 25-11 on page 341. The memory page is loaded one byte at a time by supplying the 7 LSB of the address and data together with the Load Program Memory Page instruction. To ensure correct loading of the page, the data low byte must be loaded before data high byte is applied for given address. The Program Memory Page is stored by loading the Write Program Memory Page instruction with the 9 MSB of the address. If polling is not used, the user must wait at least tWD_FLASH before issuing the next page. (See Table 25-14). Note: If other commands than polling (read) are applied before any write operation (Flash, EEPROM, Lock bits, Fuses) is completed, may result in incorrect programming. A delay of 1 s is sufficient. 5. The EEPROM array is programmed one byte at a time by supplying the address and data together with the appropriate Write instruction. An EEPROM memory location is first automatically erased before new data is written. If polling is not used, the user must wait at least tWD_EEPROM before issuing the next byte. (See Table 25-14.) In a chip erased device, no 0xFFs in the data file(s) need to be programmed. 6. Any memory location can be verified by using the Read instruction which returns the content at the selected address at serial output MISO. 7. At the end of the programming session, RESET can be set high to commence normal operation. 8. Power-off sequence (if needed): Set RESET to "1". Turn Vcc power off. 25.8.1 Data Polling Flash When a page is being programmed into the Flash, reading an address location within the page being programmed will give the value 0xFF. At the time the device is ready for a new page, the programmed value will read correctly. This is used to determine when the next page can be written. Note that the entire page is written simultaneously and any address within the page can be used for polling. Data polling of the Flash will not work for the value 0xFF, so when programming this value, the user will have to wait for at least tWD_FLASH before programming the next page. As a chip-erased device contains 0xFF in all locations, programming of addresses that are meant to contain 0xFF, can be skipped. See Table 25-14 for tWD_FLASH value. 25.8.2 Data Polling EEPROM When a new byte has been written and is being programmed into EEPROM, reading the address location being programmed will give the value 0xFF. At the time the device is ready for a new byte, the programmed value will read correctly. This is used to determine when the next byte can be written. This will not work for the value 0xFF, but the user should have the following in mind: As a chip-erased device contains 0xFF in all locations, programming of addresses that 350 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 are meant to contain 0xFF, can be skipped. This does not apply if the EEPROM is re-programmed without chip erasing the device. In this case, data polling cannot be used for the value 0xFF, and the user will have to wait at least tWD_EEPROM before programming the next byte. See Table 25-14 for tWD_EEPROM value. Table 25-14. Minimum Wait Delay Before Writing the Next Flash or EEPROM Location Symbol Minimum Wait Delay tWD_FUSE 4.5 ms tWD_FLASH 4.5 ms tWD_EEPROM 9.0 ms tWD_ERASE 9.0 ms Figure 25-8. Serial Programming Waveforms SERIAL DATA INPUT (MOSI-PDI) MSB LSB SERIAL DATA OUTPUT (MISO-PDO) MSB LSB SERIAL CLOCK INPUT (SCK) Sample Table 25-15. Serial Programming Instruction Set Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction Format(1) Instruction Byte 1 Byte 2(2) Byte 3 Operation(1) Byte4 Programming Enable 1010 1100 0101 0011 xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx Enable Serial Programming after RESET goes low. Chip Erase 1010 1100 100x xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx Chip Erase EEPROM and Flash. Read Program Memory 0010 H000 aaaa aaaa bbbb bbbb oooo oooo Load Program Memory Page Write H (high or low) data i to Program Memory page at word address b. Data low byte must be loaded 0100 H000 000x xxxx xbbb bbbb iiii iiii before Data high byte is applied within the same address. Write Program Memory Page 0100 1100 aaaa aaaa bxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx Write Program Memory Page at address a:b. Read EEPROM Memory 1010 0000 000x aaaa bbbb bbbb oooo oooo Read data o from EEPROM memory at address a:b. Write EEPROM Memory 1100 0000 000x aaaa bbbb bbbb iiii iiii Write data i to EEPROM memory at address a:b. Read H (high or low) data o from Program memory at word address a:b. 351 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 25-15. Serial Programming Instruction Set (Continued) Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction Format(1) Instruction Byte 1 Byte 2(2) Byte 3 Operation(1) Byte4 Load EEPROM Memory Page (page access) 1100 0001 0000 0000 0000 0bbb iiii iiii Write EEPROM Memory Page (page access) 1100 0010 000x aaaa bbbb b000 xxxx xxxx Write EEPROM page at address a:b. Read Lockbits 0101 1000 0000 0000 xxxx xxxx xxoo oooo Read Lock bits. "0"=programmed, "1"=unprogrammed. See Table 25-1 on page 336 for details. Write Lock bits 1010 1100 111x xxxx xxxx xxxx 11ii iiii Write Lock bits. Set bits = "0" to program Lock bits. See Table 25-1 on page 336 for details. Read Signature Byte 0011 0000 000x xxxx xxxx xxbb oooo oooo Read Signature Byte o at address b. Write Fuse Low bits 1010 1100 1010 0000 xxxx xxxx iiii iiii Set bits = "0" to program, "1" to unprogram. See Table 25-5 on page 338 for details. Write Fuse High bits 1010 1100 1010 1000 xxxx xxxx iiii iiii Set bits = "0" to program, "1" to unprogram. See Table 25-4 on page 337 for details. Write Extended Fuse Bits 1010 1100 1010 0100 xxxx xxxx xxxx iiii Set bits = "0" to program, "1" to unprogram. See Table 25-3 on page 337 for details. Read Fuse Low bits 0101 0000 0000 0000 xxxx xxxx oooo oooo Read Fuse bits. "0"=programmed, "1"=unprogrammed. See Table 25-5 on page 338 for details. Read Fuse High bits Read Fuse High bits. 0101 1000 0000 1000 xxxx xxxx oooo oooo "0"=programmed, "1"=unprogrammed. See Table 25-4 on page 337 for details. Read Extended Fuse Bits Read Extended Fuse bits. 0101 0000 0000 1000 xxxx xxxx oooo oooo "0"=programmed, "1"=unprogrammed. See Table 25-3 on page 337 for details. Read Calibration Byte 0011 1000 000x xxxx 0000 0000 oooo oooo Read Calibration Byte Poll RDY/BSY If o = "1", a programming operation is still busy. Wait 1111 0000 0000 0000 xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxo until this bit returns to "0" before applying another command. Notes: Load data i to EEPROM memory page buffer. After data is loaded, program EEPROM page. 1. All bytes are represented by binary digits (0b...). 2. Address bits exceeding PCMSB and EEAMSB (see Table 25-11 on page 341 and Table 25-12 on page 341) are don't care. 25.9 JTAG Programming Overview Programming through the JTAG interface requires control of the four JTAG specific pins: TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO. Control of the reset and clock pins is not required. To be able to use the JTAG interface, the JTAGEN Fuse must be programmed. The device is default shipped with the fuse programmed. In addition, the JTD bit in MCUCR must be cleared. Alternatively, if the JTD bit is set, the external reset can be forced low. Then, the JTD bit will be cleared after two chip clocks, and the JTAG pins are available for programming. This provides a means of using the JTAG pins as normal port pins in Running mode while still allowing In-System Programming via the JTAG interface. Note that this technique can not be used when using 352 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 the JTAG pins for Boundary-scan or On-chip Debug. In these cases the JTAG pins must be dedicated for this purpose. During programming the clock frequency of the TCK Input must be less than the maximum frequency of the chip. The System Clock Prescaler can not be used to divide the TCK Clock Input into a sufficiently low frequency. As a definition in this datasheet, the LSB is shifted in and out first of all Shift Registers. 25.9.1 Programming Specific JTAG Instructions The instruction register is 4-bit wide, supporting up to 16 instructions. The JTAG instructions useful for programming are listed below. The OPCODE for each instruction is shown behind the instruction name in hex format. The text describes which data register is selected as path between TDI and TDO for each instruction. The Run-Test/Idle state of the TAP controller is used to generate internal clocks. It can also be used as an idle state between JTAG sequences. The state machine sequence for changing the instruction word is shown in Figure 25-9. Figure 25-9. State Machine Sequence for Changing the Instruction Word 1 Test-Logic-Reset 0 0 Run-Test/Idle 1 Select-DR Scan 1 Select-IR Scan 0 0 1 1 Capture-DR Capture-IR 0 0 Shift-DR 0 Shift-IR 1 1 1 Exit1-IR 0 0 0 Pause-DR 0 Pause-IR 1 1 0 Exit2-DR Exit2-IR 1 1 Update-DR 1 0 1 Exit1-DR 0 1 Update-IR 0 1 0 353 7679H-CAN-08/08 25.9.1.1 AVR_RESET (0xC) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction for setting the AVR device in the Reset mode or taking the device out from the Reset mode. The TAP controller is not reset by this instruction. The one bit Reset Register is selected as data register. Note that the reset will be active as long as there is a logic "one" in the Reset Chain. The output from this chain is not latched. The active states are: * Shift-DR: The Reset Register is shifted by the TCK input. 25.9.1.2 PROG_ENABLE (0x4) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction for enabling programming via the JTAG port. The 16bit Programming Enable Register is selected as data register. The active states are the following: * Shift-DR: The programming enable signature is shifted into the data register. * Update-DR: The programming enable signature is compared to the correct value, and Programming mode is entered if the signature is valid. 25.9.1.3 PROG_COMMANDS (0x5) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction for entering programming commands via the JTAG port. The 15-bit Programming Command Register is selected as data register. The active states are the following: * Capture-DR: The result of the previous command is loaded into the data register. * Shift-DR: The data register is shifted by the TCK input, shifting out the result of the previous command and shifting in the new command. * Update-DR: The programming command is applied to the Flash inputs * Run-Test/Idle: One clock cycle is generated, executing the applied command (not always required, see Table 25-16 below). 25.9.1.4 PROG_PAGELOAD (0x6) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction to directly load the Flash data page via the JTAG port. An 8-bit Flash Data Byte Register is selected as the data register. This is physically the 8 LSBs of the Programming Command Register. The active states are the following: * Shift-DR: The Flash Data Byte Register is shifted by the TCK input. * Update-DR: The content of the Flash Data Byte Register is copied into a temporary register. A write sequence is initiated that within 11 TCK cycles loads the content of the temporary register into the Flash page buffer. The AVR automatically alternates between writing the low and the high byte for each new Update-DR state, starting with the low byte for the first Update-DR encountered after entering the PROG_PAGELOAD command. The Program Counter is pre-incremented before writing the low byte, except for the first written byte. This ensures that the first data is written to the address set up by PROG_COMMANDS, and loading the last location in the page buffer does not make the program counter increment into the next page. 25.9.1.5 354 PROG_PAGEREAD (0x7) The AVR specific public JTAG instruction to directly capture the Flash content via the JTAG port. An 8-bit Flash Data Byte Register is selected as the data register. This is physically the 8 LSBs of the Programming Command Register. The active states are the following: AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 * Capture-DR: The content of the selected Flash byte is captured into the Flash Data Byte Register. The AVR automatically alternates between reading the low and the high byte for each new Capture-DR state, starting with the low byte for the first Capture-DR encountered after entering the PROG_PAGEREAD command. The Program Counter is post-incremented after reading each high byte, including the first read byte. This ensures that the first data is captured from the first address set up by PROG_COMMANDS, and reading the last location in the page makes the program counter increment into the next page. * Shift-DR: The Flash Data Byte Register is shifted by the TCK input. 25.9.2 Data Registers The data registers are selected by the JTAG instruction registers described in section "Programming Specific JTAG Instructions" on page 353. The data registers relevant for programming operations are: * Reset Register * Programming Enable Register * Programming Command Register * Flash Data Byte Register 25.9.2.1 Reset Register The Reset Register is a Test Data Register used to reset the part during programming. It is required to reset the part before entering Programming mode. A high value in the Reset Register corresponds to pulling the external reset low. The part is reset as long as there is a high value present in the Reset Register. Depending on the Fuse settings for the clock options, the part will remain reset for a Reset Time-out period (refer to "Clock Sources" on page 38) after releasing the Reset Register. The output from this data register is not latched, so the reset will take place immediately, as shown in Figure 23-2 on page 302. 25.9.2.2 Programming Enable Register The Programming Enable Register is a 16-bit register. The contents of this register is compared to the programming enable signature, binary code 0b1010_0011_0111_0000. When the contents of the register is equal to the programming enable signature, programming via the JTAG port is enabled. The register is reset to 0 on Power-on Reset, and should always be reset when leaving Programming mode. Figure 25-10. Programming Enable Register TDI D A T A 0xA370 = D Q Programming Enable ClockDR & PROG_ENABLE TDO 355 7679H-CAN-08/08 25.9.2.3 Programming Command Register The Programming Command Register is a 15-bit register. This register is used to serially shift in programming commands, and to serially shift out the result of the previous command, if any. The JTAG Programming Instruction Set is shown in Table 25-16. The state sequence when shifting in the programming commands is illustrated in Figure 25-12. Figure 25-11. Programming Command Register TDI S T R O B E S A D D R E S S / D A T A Flash EEPROM Fuses Lock Bits TDO Table 25-16. JTAG Programming Instruction Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction TDI Sequence(1)(2) TDO Sequence(1)(2) 1a. Chip Erase 0100011_10000000 0110001_10000000 0110011_10000000 0110011_10000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 1b. Poll for Chip Erase Complete 0110011_10000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx 2a. Enter Flash Write 0100011_00010000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 2b. Load Address High Byte 0000111_aaaaaaaa xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 2c. Load Address Low Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 2d. Load Data Low Byte 0010011_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 2e. Load Data High Byte 0010111_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 2f. Latch Data 0110111_00000000 1110111_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 356 Notes (4) (11) (3) AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 25-16. JTAG Programming Instruction (Continued) Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction TDI Sequence(1)(2) TDO Sequence(1)(2) Notes 2g. Write Flash Page 0110111_00000000 0110101_00000000 0110111_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 2h. Poll for Page Write Complete 0110111_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 3a. Enter Flash Read 0100011_00000010 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 3b. Load Address High Byte 0000111_aaaaaaaa xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 3c. Load Address Low Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 3d. Read Data Low and High Byte 0110010_00000000 0110110_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo xxxxxxx_oooooooo 4a. Enter EEPROM Write 0100011_00010001 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 4b. Load Address High Byte 0000111_aaaaaaaa xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 4c. Load Address Low Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 4d. Load Data Byte 0010011_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 4e. Latch Data 0110111_00000000 1110111_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 4f. Write EEPROM Page 0110011_00000000 0110001_00000000 0110011_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 4g. Poll for Page Write Complete 0110011_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 5a. Enter EEPROM Read 0100011_00000011 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 5b. Load Address High Byte 0000111_aaaaaaaa xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 5c. Load Address Low Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 5d. Read Data Byte 0110011_bbbbbbbb 0110010_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 0100011_01000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 0010011_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (5) 6c. Write Fuse Extended Byte 0111011_00000000 0111001_00000000 0111011_00000000 0111011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 6d. Poll for Fuse Write Complete 0110111_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 6e. Load Data Low Byte(9) 0010011_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (5) 6a. Enter Fuse Write 6b. Load Data Low Byte (8) (11) Low byte High byte (11) (11) 357 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 25-16. JTAG Programming Instruction (Continued) Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction TDI Sequence(1)(2) TDO Sequence(1)(2) Notes 6f. Write Fuse High Byte 0110111_00000000 0110101_00000000 0110111_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 6g. Poll for Fuse Write Complete 0110111_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 6h. Load Data Low Byte(9) 0010011_iiiiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (5) 6i. Write Fuse Low Byte 0110011_00000000 0110001_00000000 0110011_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 6j. Poll for Fuse Write Complete 0110011_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 7a. Enter Lock Bit Write 0100011_00100000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 7b. Load Data Byte 0010011_11iiiiii xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (6) 7c. Write Lock Bits 0110011_00000000 0110001_00000000 0110011_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (3) 7d. Poll for Lock Bit Write complete 0110011_00000000 xxxxxox_xxxxxxxx (4) 8a. Enter Fuse/Lock Bit Read 0100011_00000100 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 8b. Read Extended Fuse Byte(8) 0111010_00000000 0111011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 8c. Read Fuse High Byte(9) 0111110_00000000 0111111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 8d. Read Fuse Low Byte(10) 0110010_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 8e. Read Lock Bits(11) 0110110_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxoooooo 8f. Read Fuses and Lock Bits 0111010_00000000 0111110_00000000 0110010_00000000 0110110_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo xxxxxxx_oooooooo xxxxxxx_oooooooo xxxxxxx_oooooooo 9a. Enter Signature Byte Read 0100011_00001000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 9b. Load Address Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 9c. Read Signature Byte 0110010_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 10a. Enter Calibration Byte Read 0100011_00001000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx (11) 358 (7) (7) Fuse Ext. byte Fuse High byte Fuse Low byte Lock bits AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 25-16. JTAG Programming Instruction (Continued) Set a = address high bits, b = address low bits, H = 0 - Low byte, 1 - High Byte, o = data out, i = data in, x = don't care Instruction TDI Sequence(1)(2) TDO Sequence(1)(2) 10b. Load Address Byte 0000011_bbbbbbbb xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx 10c. Read Calibration Byte 0110110_00000000 0110111_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_oooooooo 11a. Load No Operation Command 0100011_00000000 0110011_00000000 xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx_xxxxxxxx Notes: Notes 1. Address bits exceeding PCMSB and EEAMSB (Table 25-11 and Table 25-12) are don't care. 2. All TDI and TDO sequences are represented by binary digits (0b...). 3. This command sequence is not required if the seven MSB are correctly set by the previous command sequence (which is normally the case). 4. Repeat until o = "1". 5. Set bits to "0" to program the corresponding Fuse, "1" to unprogram the Fuse. 6. Set bits to "0" to program the corresponding Lock bit, "1" to leave the Lock bit unchanged. 7. "0" = programmed, "1" = unprogrammed. 8. The bit mapping for Fuses Extended byte is listed in Table 25-3 on page 337. 9. The bit mapping for Fuses High byte is listed in Table 25-4 on page 337. 10. The bit mapping for Fuses Low byte is listed in Table 25-5 on page 338. 11. The bit mapping for Lock bits byte is listed in Table 25-1 on page 336. 359 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 25-12. State Machine Sequence for Changing/Reading the Data Word 1 Test-Logic-Reset 0 0 Run-Test/Idle 1 Select-DR Scan 1 Select-IR Scan 0 0 1 1 Capture-DR Capture-IR 0 0 Shift-DR 0 Shift-IR 1 Exit1-DR 0 0 Pause-DR 0 Pause-IR 1 1 0 Exit2-DR Exit2-IR 1 1 Update-DR 25.9.2.4 1 Exit1-IR 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 Update-IR 0 1 0 Flash Data Byte Register The Flash Data Byte Register provides an efficient way to load the entire Flash page buffer before executing Page Write, or to read out/verify the content of the Flash. A state machine sets up the control signals to the Flash and senses the strobe signals from the Flash, thus only the data words need to be shifted in/out. The Flash Data Byte Register actually consists of the 8-bit scan chain and a 8-bit temporary register. During page load, the Update-DR state copies the content of the scan chain over to the temporary register and initiates a write sequence that within 11 TCK cycles loads the content of the temporary register into the Flash page buffer. The AVR automatically alternates between writing the low and the high byte for each new Update-DR state, starting with the low byte for the first Update-DR encountered after entering the PROG_PAGELOAD command. The Program Counter is pre-incremented before writing the low byte, except for the first written byte. This ensures that the first data is written to the address set up by PROG_COMMANDS, and loading the last location in the page buffer does not make the Program Counter increment into the next page. During Page Read, the content of the selected Flash byte is captured into the Flash Data Byte Register during the Capture-DR state. The AVR automatically alternates between reading the low and the high byte for each new Capture-DR state, starting with the low byte for the first Cap- 360 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 ture-DR encountered after entering the PROG_PAGEREAD command. The Program Counter is post-incremented after reading each high byte, including the first read byte. This ensures that the first data is captured from the first address set up by PROG_COMMANDS, and reading the last location in the page makes the program counter increment into the next page. Figure 25-13. Flash Data Byte Register STROBES State Machine ADDRESS TDI Flash EEPROM Fuses Lock Bits D A T A TDO The state machine controlling the Flash Data Byte Register is clocked by TCK. During normal operation in which eight bits are shifted for each Flash byte, the clock cycles needed to navigate through the TAP controller automatically feeds the state machine for the Flash Data Byte Register with sufficient number of clock pulses to complete its operation transparently for the user. However, if too few bits are shifted between each Update-DR state during page load, the TAP controller should stay in the Run-Test/Idle state for some TCK cycles to ensure that there are at least 11 TCK cycles between each Update-DR state. 25.9.3 25.9.3.1 Programming Algorithm All references below of type "1a", "1b", and so on, refer to Table 25-16 on page 356. Entering Programming Mode 1. Enter JTAG instruction AVR_RESET and shift 1 in the Reset Register. 2. Enter instruction PROG_ENABLE and shift 0b1010_0011_0111_0000 in the Programming Enable Register. 25.9.3.2 Leaving Programming Mode 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Disable all programming instructions by using no operation instruction 11a. 3. Enter instruction PROG_ENABLE and shift 0b0000_0000_0000_0000 in the programming Enable Register. 4. Enter JTAG instruction AVR_RESET and shift 0 in the Reset Register. 361 7679H-CAN-08/08 25.9.3.3 Performing Chip Erase 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Start Chip Erase using programming instruction 1a. 3. Poll for Chip Erase complete using programming instruction 1b, or wait for tWLRH_CE (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 25.9.3.4 Programming the Flash 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Flash write using programming instruction 2a. 3. Load address High byte using programming instruction 2b. 4. Load address Low byte using programming instruction 2c. 5. Load data using programming instructions 2d, 2e and 2f. 6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 for all instruction words in the page. 7. Write the page using programming instruction 2g. 8. Poll for Flash write complete using programming instruction 2h, or wait for tWLRH (refer to ). 9. Repeat steps 3 to 7 until all data have been programmed. A more efficient data transfer can be achieved using the PROG_PAGELOAD instruction: 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Flash write using programming instruction 2a. 3. Load the page address using programming instructions 2b and 2c. PCWORD (refer to Table 25-11 on page 341) is used to address within one page and must be written as 0. 4. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_PAGELOAD. 5. Load the entire page by shifting in all instruction words in the page byte-by-byte, starting with the LSB of the first instruction in the page and ending with the MSB of the last instruction in the page. Use Update-DR to copy the contents of the Flash Data Byte Register into the Flash page location and to auto-increment the Program Counter before each new word. 6. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 7. Write the page using programming instruction 2g. 8. Poll for Flash write complete using programming instruction 2h, or wait for tWLRH (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 9. Repeat steps 3 to 8 until all data have been programmed. 25.9.3.5 Reading the Flash 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Flash read using programming instruction 3a. 3. Load address using programming instructions 3b and 3c. 4. Read data using programming instruction 3d. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 until all data have been read. A more efficient data transfer can be achieved using the PROG_PAGEREAD instruction: 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Flash read using programming instruction 3a. 3. Load the page address using programming instructions 3b and 3c. PCWORD (refer to Table 25-11 on page 341) is used to address within one page and must be written as 0. 362 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 4. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_PAGEREAD. 5. Read the entire page (or Flash) by shifting out all instruction words in the page (or Flash), starting with the LSB of the first instruction in the page (Flash) and ending with the MSB of the last instruction in the page (Flash). The Capture-DR state both captures the data from the Flash, and also auto-increments the program counter after each word is read. Note that Capture-DR comes before the shift-DR state. Hence, the first byte which is shifted out contains valid data. 6. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 7. Repeat steps 3 to 6 until all data have been read. 25.9.3.6 Programming the EEPROM 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable EEPROM write using programming instruction 4a. 3. Load address High byte using programming instruction 4b. 4. Load address Low byte using programming instruction 4c. 5. Load data using programming instructions 4d and 4e. 6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 for all data bytes in the page. 7. Write the data using programming instruction 4f. 8. Poll for EEPROM write complete using programming instruction 4g, or wait for tWLRH (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 9. Repeat steps 3 to 8 until all data have been programmed. Note that the PROG_PAGELOAD instruction can not be used when programming the EEPROM. 25.9.3.7 Reading the EEPROM 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable EEPROM read using programming instruction 5a. 3. Load address using programming instructions 5b and 5c. 4. Read data using programming instruction 5d. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 until all data have been read. Note that the PROG_PAGEREAD instruction can not be used when reading the EEPROM. 25.9.3.8 Programming the Fuses 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Fuse write using programming instruction 6a. 3. Load data high byte using programming instructions 6b. A bit value of "0" will program the corresponding fuse, a "1" will unprogram the fuse. 4. Write Fuse High byte using programming instruction 6c. 5. Poll for Fuse write complete using programming instruction 6d, or wait for tWLRH (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 6. Load data low byte using programming instructions 6e. A "0" will program the fuse, a "1" will unprogram the fuse. 7. Write Fuse low byte using programming instruction 6f. 8. Poll for Fuse write complete using programming instruction 6g, or wait for tWLRH (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 363 7679H-CAN-08/08 25.9.3.9 Programming the Lock Bits 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Lock bit write using programming instruction 7a. 3. Load data using programming instructions 7b. A bit value of "0" will program the corresponding lock bit, a "1" will leave the lock bit unchanged. 4. Write Lock bits using programming instruction 7c. 5. Poll for Lock bit write complete using programming instruction 7d, or wait for tWLRH (refer to Table 26-15 on page 382). 25.9.3.10 Reading the Fuses and Lock Bits 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Fuse/Lock bit read using programming instruction 8a. 3. To read all Fuses and Lock bits, use programming instruction 8f. To only read Extended Fuse byte, use programming instruction 8b. To only read Fuse High byte, use programming instruction 8c. To only read Fuse Low byte, use programming instruction 8d. To only read Lock bits, use programming instruction 8e. 25.9.3.11 Reading the Signature Bytes 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Signature byte read using programming instruction 9a. 3. Load address 0x00 using programming instruction 9b. 4. Read first signature byte using programming instruction 9c. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 with address 0x01 and address 0x02 to read the second and third signature bytes, respectively. 25.9.3.12 Reading the Calibration Byte 1. Enter JTAG instruction PROG_COMMANDS. 2. Enable Calibration byte read using programming instruction 10a. 3. Load address 0x00 using programming instruction 10b. 4. Read the calibration byte using programming instruction 10c. 364 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 26. Electrical Characteristics (1) 26.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings* Industrial Operating Temperature ...................- 40C to +85C Storage Temperature ....................................- 65C to +150C Voltage on any Pin except RESET with respect to Ground .............................. - 0.5V to VCC+0.5V Voltage on RESET with respect to Ground.... - 0.5V to +13.0V Voltage on VCC with respect to Ground............. - 0.5V to 6.0V *NOTICE: Stresses beyond those listed under "Absolute Maximum Ratings" may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. DC Current per I/O Pin ............................................... 40.0 mA DC Current VCC and GND Pins................................ 200.0 mA Note: 1. Electrical Characteristics for this product have not yet been finalized. Please consider all values listed herein as preliminary and non-contractual. 365 7679H-CAN-08/08 26.2 DC Characteristics TA = -40C to +85C, VCC = 2.7V to 5.5V (unless otherwise noted) Symbol Parameter Condition Min. VIL Input Low Voltage Except XTAL1 and RESET pins VIL1 Input Low Voltage VIL2 Max. Units - 0.5 0.2 Vcc (1) V XTAL1 pin - External Clock Selected - 0.5 0.1 Vcc (1) V Input Low Voltage RESET pin - 0.5 0.2 Vcc (1) V VIH Input High Voltage Except XTAL1 and RESET pins 0.6 Vcc (2) Vcc + 0.5 V VIH1 Input High Voltage XTAL1 pin - External Clock Selected 0.7 Vcc (2) Vcc + 0.5 V VIH2 Input High Voltage RESET pin 0.85 Vcc (2) Vcc + 0.5 V VOL Output Low Voltage (3) (Ports A, B, C, D, E, F, G) IOL = 20 mA, VCC = 5V IOL = 10 mA, VCC = 3V 0.7 0.5 V VOH Output High Voltage (4) (Ports A, B, C, D, E, F, G) IOH = - 20 mA, VCC = 5V IOH = - 10 mA, VCC = 3V IIL Input Leakage Current I/O Pin VCC = 5.5V, pin low (absolute value) 1.0 A IIH Input Leakage Current I/O Pin VCC = 5.5V, pin high (absolute value) 1.0 A RRST Reset Pull-up Resistor 30 100 k Rpu I/O Pin Pull-up Resistor 20 50 k 8 MHz, VCC = 5V 15 mA 16 MHz, VCC = 5V 29 mA 4 MHz, VCC = 3V 4 mA 8 MHz, VCC = 3V 8 mA 8 MHz, VCC = 5V 9 mA 16 MHz, VCC = 5V 17 mA 4 MHz, VCC = 3V 3 mA 8 MHz, VCC = 3V 5 mA WDT enabled, VCC = 5V 40 A WDT disabled, VCC = 5V 18 A WDT enabled, VCC = 3V 25 A WDT disabled, VCC = 3V 10 A 20 mV Power Supply Current Active Mode (external clock) ICC Power Supply Current Idle Mode (external clock) Power Supply Current Power-down Mode VACIO 366 Analog Comparator Input Offset Voltage VCC = 5V Vin = VCC/2 Typ. 4.2 2.4 1.0 V 8.0 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 TA = -40C to +85C, VCC = 2.7V to 5.5V (unless otherwise noted) (Continued) Symbol Parameter Condition Min. IACLK Analog Comparator Input Leakage Current VCC = 5V Vin = VCC/2 - 50 Analog Comparator Propagation Delay Common Mode Vcc/2 VCC = 2.7V 170 ns tACID VCC = 5.0V 180 ns Notes: Typ. Max. Units 50 nA 1. "Max" means the highest value where the pin is guaranteed to be read as low 2. "Min" means the lowest value where the pin is guaranteed to be read as high 3. Although each I/O port can sink more than the test conditions (20 mA at VCC = 5V, 10 mA at VCC = 3V) under steady state conditions (non-transient), the following must be observed: TQFP and QFN Package: 1] The sum of all IOL, for all ports, should not exceed 400 mA. 2] The sum of all IOL, for ports A0 - A7, G2, C3 - C7 should not exceed 300 mA. 3] The sum of all IOL, for ports C0 - C2, G0 - G1, D0 - D7, XTAL2 should not exceed 150 mA. 4] The sum of all IOL, for ports B0 - B7, G3 - G4, E0 - E7 should not exceed 150 mA. 5] The sum of all IOL, for ports F0 - F7, should not exceed 200 mA. If IOL exceeds the test condition, VOL may exceed the related specification. Pins are not guaranteed to sink current greater than the listed test condition. 4. Although each I/O port can source more than the test conditions (-20 mA at VCC = 5V, -10 mA at VCC = 3V) under steady state conditions (non-transient), the following must be observed: TQFP and QFN Package: 1] The sum of all IOH, for all ports, should not exceed -400 mA. 2] The sum of all IOH, for ports A0 - A7, G2, C3 - C7 should not exceed -300 mA. 3] The sum of all IOH, for ports C0 - C2, G0 - G1, D0 - D7, XTAL2 should not exceed 1-50 mA. 4] The sum of all IOH, for ports B0 - B7, G3 - G4, E0 - E7 should not exceed -150 mA. 5] The sum of all IOH, for ports F0 - F7, should not exceed -200 mA. If IOH exceeds the test condition, VOH may exceed the related specification. Pins are not guaranteed to source current greater than the listed test condition. 26.3 External Clock Drive Characteristics Figure 26-1. External Clock Drive Waveforms V IH1 V IL1 Table 26-1. Symbol External Clock Drive Parameter VCC = 2.7 - 5.5V VCC = 4.5 - 5.5V Min. Max. Min. Max. 0 8 0 16 Units 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency MHz tCLCL Clock Period 125 62.5 ns tCHCX High Time 50 25 ns 367 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 26-1. Symbol 26.4 External Clock Drive (Continued) Parameter VCC = 2.7 - 5.5V VCC = 4.5 - 5.5V Min. Min. Max. 50 Units Max. tCLCX Low Time 25 ns tCLCH Rise Time 1.6 0.5 s tCHCL Fall Time 1.6 0.5 s tCLCL Change in period from one clock cycle to the next 2 2 % Maximum Speed vs. VCC Maximum frequency is depending on VCC. As shown in Figure 26-2., the Maximum Frequency vs. VCC curve is linear between 1.8V < VCC < 4.5V. To calculate the maximum frequency at a given voltage in this interval, use this equation: Frequency = a * ( V - Vx ) + Fy To calculate required voltage for a given frequency, use this equation: Voltage = b * ( F - Fy ) + Vx Table 26-2. Constants used to calculate maximum speed vs. VCC Voltage and Frequency range a b Vx Fy 2.7 < VCC < 4.5 or 8 < Frequency < 16 8/1.8 1.8/8 2.7 8 At 3 Volt, this gives: 8 1.8 Frequency = -------- * ( 3 - 2.7 ) + 8 = 9.33 Thus, when VCC = 3V, maximum frequency will be 9.33 MHz. At 8 MHz this gives: 1.8 8 Voltage = -------- * ( 8 - 8 ) + 2.7 = 2.7 Thus, a maximum frequency of 8 MHz requires VCC = 2.7V. Figure 26-2. Maximum Frequency vs. VCC, AT90CAN32/64/128 Frequency 16 MHz 8 MHz Safe Operating Area Voltage 2.7V 368 4.5V 5.5V AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 26.5 Two-wire Serial Interface Characteristics Table 26-3 describes the requirements for devices connected to the Two-wire Serial Bus. The AT90CAN32/64/128 Two-wire Serial Interface meets or exceeds these requirements under the noted conditions. Timing symbols refer to Figure 26-3. Table 26-3. Two-wire Serial Bus Requirements Symbol Parameter VIL VIH tr Max Units Input Low-voltage - 0.5 0.3 Vcc V Input High-voltage 0.7 Vcc Vcc + 0.5 V - V 0 0.4 V 20 + 0.1Cb 300 ns 20 + 0.1Cb (3)(2) 250 ns 0 50 (2) ns - 10 10 A - 10 pF 0 400 kHz fSCL 100 kHz V CC - 0,4V ---------------------------3mA 1000ns ------------------Cb fSCL > 100 kHz V CC - 0,4V ---------------------------3mA 300ns ---------------Cb fSCL 100 kHz 4.0 - s Hysteresis of Schmitt Trigger Inputs (1) Output Low-voltage Vhys VOL Min (1) (1) Output Fall Time from VIHmin to VILmax (1) tSP Spikes Suppressed by Input Filter Ii Input Current each I/O Pin Ci(1) Capacitance for each I/O Pin Rp tHD;STA SCL Clock Frequency 3 mA sink current Hold Time (repeated) START Condition 10 pF < Cb < 400 pF (3) 0.1 VCC < Vi < 0.9 VCC fCK (4) > max(16fSCL, 250kHz) (5) fSCL > 100 kHz Low Period of the SCL Clock tHIGH High period of the SCL clock tSU;STA Set-up time for a repeated START condition tHD;DAT Data hold time tSU;DAT Data setup time tSU;STO Setup time for STOP condition tBUF Bus free time between a STOP and START condition (2) (3)(2) Value of Pull-up resistor tLOW Notes: 0.05 Vcc Rise Time for both SDA and SCL (1) tof fSCL Condition 0.6 - s fSCL 100 kHz (6) 4.7 - s fSCL > 100 kHz (7) 1.3 - s fSCL 100 kHz 4.0 - s fSCL > 100 kHz 0.6 - s fSCL 100 kHz 4.7 - s fSCL > 100 kHz 0.6 - s fSCL 100 kHz 0 3.45 s fSCL > 100 kHz 0 0.9 s fSCL 100 kHz 250 - ns fSCL > 100 kHz 100 - ns fSCL 100 kHz 4.0 - s fSCL > 100 kHz 0.6 - s fSCL 100 kHz 4.7 - s 1. In AT90CAN32/64/128, this parameter is characterized and not 100% tested. 369 7679H-CAN-08/08 2. Required only for fSCL > 100 kHz. 3. Cb = capacitance of one bus line in pF. 4. fCK = CPU clock frequency 5. This requirement applies to all AT90CAN32/64/128 Two-wire Serial Interface operation. Other devices connected to the Two-wire Serial Bus need only obey the general fSCL requirement. 6. The actual low period generated by the AT90CAN32/64/128 Two-wire Serial Interface is (1/fSCL - 2/fCK), thus fCK must be greater than 6 MHz for the low time requirement to be strictly met at fSCL = 100 kHz. 7. The actual low period generated by the AT90CAN32/64/128 Two-wire Serial Interface is (1/fSCL - 2/fCK), thus the low time requirement will not be strictly met for fSCL > 308 kHz when fCK = 8 MHz. Still, AT90CAN32/64/128 devices connected to the bus may communicate at full speed (400 kHz) with other AT90CAN32/64/128 devices, as well as any other device with a proper tLOW acceptance margin. Figure 26-3. Two-wire Serial Bus Timing tHIGH tof tLOW tr tLOW SCL tSU;STA tHD;STA tHD;DAT tSU;DAT tSU;STO SDA tBUF 26.6 SPI Timing Characteristics See Figure 26-4 and Figure 26-5 for details. Table 26-4. Description Mode 1 SCK period Master See Table 16-4 2 SCK high/low Master 50% duty cycle 3 Rise/Fall time Master 3.6 4 Setup Master 10 5 Hold Master 10 6 Out to SCK Master 0.5 * tsck 7 SCK to out Master 10 8 SCK to out high Master 10 9 SS low to out Slave 15 10 SCK period Slave 4 * tck Slave 2 * tck 11 12 370 SPI Timing Parameters SCK high/low (1) Rise/Fall time Slave Min. Typ. Max. ns 1.6 s AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 26-4. SPI Timing Parameters (Continued) Description Mode Min. 13 Setup Slave 10 14 Hold Slave tck 15 SCK to out Slave 16 SCK to SS high Slave 17 SS high to tri-state Slave 18 SS low to SCK Slave Note: Typ. Max. 15 ns 20 10 2 * tck In SPI Programming mode the minimum SCK high/low period is: - 2 tCLCL for fCK < 12 MHz - 3 tCLCL for fCK >12 MHz Figure 26-4. SPI Interface Timing Requirements (Master Mode) SS 6 1 SCK (CPOL = 0) 2 2 SCK (CPOL = 1) 4 MISO (Data Input) 5 3 MSB ... LSB 7 MOSI (Data Output) MSB 8 ... LSB Figure 26-5. SPI Interface Timing Requirements (Slave Mode) 18 SS 10 9 16 SCK (CPOL = 0) 11 11 SCK (CPOL = 1) 13 MOSI (Data Input) 14 12 MSB ... LSB 17 15 MISO (Data Output) MSB ... LSB X 371 7679H-CAN-08/08 26.7 CAN Physical Layer Characteristics Only pads dedicated to the CAN communication belong to the physical layer. Table : CAN Physical Layer Characteristics (1) Parameter 1 2 Notes: TxCAN output delay RxCAN input delay Condition Min. Max. Units Vcc=2.7 V Load=20 pF VOL/VOH=VCC/2 9 Vcc=4.5 V Load=20 pF VOL/VOH=VCC/2 5.3 ns Vcc=2.7 V VIL/VIH=VCC/2 9+ Vcc=4.5 V VIL/VIH=VCC/2 7.2 + 1 / fCLKIO(2) 1 / fCLKIO(2) 1. Characteristics for CAN physical layer have not yet been finalized. 2. Metastable immunity flip-flop. 372 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 26.8 ADC Characteristics Table 26-5. Symbol ADC Characteristics, Single Ended Channels Min(1) Typ(1) Max(1) Parameter Condition Resolution Single Ended Conversion 10 Bits Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz 1.5 LSB Absolute accuracy (Included INL, DNL, Quantization Error, Gain and Offset Error) Units Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 1 MHz LSB Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz Noise Reduction Mode 1.5 LSB Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 1 MHz Noise Reduction Mode Integral Non-linearity (INL) Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz 0.5 1 LSB Differential Non-linearity (DNL) Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz 0.3 1 LSB Gain Error Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz -2 0 +2 LSB Offset Error Single Ended Conversion VREF = 4V, Vcc = 4V ADC clock = 200 kHz -2 1 +2 LSB Clock Frequency Free Running Conversion 50 1000 kHz Conversion Time Free Running Conversion 65 AVCC Analog Supply Voltage VREF External Reference Voltage VIN LSB Input voltage VCC - 0.3 260 (2) VCC + 0.3 s (3) V 2.0 AVCC V GND VREF V Input bandwidth 38.5 VINT Internal Voltage Reference RREF Reference Input Resistance 32 k RAIN Analog Input Resistance 100 M Notes: 2.4 2.56 kHz 2.7 V 1. Values are guidelines only. 2. Minimum for AVCC is 2.7 V. 3. Maximum for AVCC is 5.5 V 373 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 26-6. Symbol ADC Characteristics, Differential Channels Parameter Condition Min(1) Typ(1) Max(1) Units Differential Conversion Gain = 1x or 10x 8 Bits Differential Conversion Gain = 200x 7 Bits Absolute accuracy Gain = 1x, 10x or 200x VREF = 4V, Vcc = 5V ADC clock = 50 - 200 kHz 1 LSB Integral Non-linearity (INL) (Accuracy after Calibration for Offset and Gain Error) Gain = 1x, 10x or 200x VREF = 4V, Vcc = 5V ADC clock = 50 - 200 kHz 0.5 1 LSB Gain Error Gain = 1x, 10x or 200x -2 0 +2 LSB Offset Error Gain = 1x, 10x or 200x VREF = 4V, Vcc = 5V ADC clock = 50 - 200 kHz -1 0 +1 LSB Clock Frequency Free Running Conversion 50 200 kHz Conversion Time Free Running Conversion 65 Resolution Analog Supply Voltage VREF External Reference Voltage Differential Conversion 2.0 AVCC - 0.5 V Input voltage Differential Conversion 0 AVCC V Input Differential Voltage -VREF/Gain +VREF/Gain V ADC Conversion Output -511 511 LSB VDIFF Input bandwidth Differential Conversion VCC + 0.3 s (3) AVCC VIN VCC - 0.3 260 (2) 4 2.56 kHz VINT Internal Voltage Reference RREF Reference Input Resistance 32 k RAIN Analog Input Resistance 100 M Notes: 2.4 V 2.7 V 1. Values are guidelines only. 2. Minimum for AVCC is 2.7 V. 3. Maximum for AVCC is 5.5 V 374 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 26.9 External Data Memory Characteristics Table 26-7. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 4.5 - 5.5 Volts, No Wait-state 8 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 1 tLHLL ALE Pulse Width Max. 115 Min. Max. 0.0 16 MHz 1.0 tCLCL - 10 ns (1) 2 tAVLL Address Valid A to ALE Low 57.5 3a tLLAX_ST Address Hold After ALE Low, write access 5 5 ns 3b tLLAX_LD Address Hold after ALE Low, read access 5 5 ns 4 tAVLLC Address Valid C to ALE Low 57.5 0.5 tCLCL - 5 (1) ns 5 tAVRL Address Valid to RD Low 115 1.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 6 tAVWL Address Valid to WR Low 115 1.0 tCLCL - 10 7 tLLWL ALE Low to WR Low 8 tLLRL ALE Low to RD Low 9 tDVRH Data Setup to RD High 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 11 tRHDX Data Hold After RD High 12 tRLRH 13 47.5 47.5 0.5 tCLCL - 5 67.5 67.5 40 0.5 tCLCL - 15 (2) 0.5 tCLCL - 15 (2) ns ns 0.5 tCLCL + 5 (2) ns 0.5 tCLCL + 5 (2) ns 40 ns 75 1.0 tCLCL - 50 ns 0 0 ns RD Pulse Width 115 1.0 tCLCL - 10 ns tDVWL Data Setup to WR Low 42.5 0.5 tCLCL - 20 (1) ns 14 tWHDX Data Hold After WR High 115 1.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 125 1.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 115 1.0 tCLCL - 10 ns Notes: 1. This assumes 50% clock duty cycle. The half period is actually the high time of the external clock, XTAL1. 2. This assumes 50% clock duty cycle. The half period is actually the low time of the external clock, XTAL1. Table 26-8. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 4.5 - 5.5 Volts, 1 Cycle Wait-state 8 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 16 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width 240 2.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 240 2.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 240 2.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 200 2.0 tCLCL - 50 MHz ns 375 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 26-9. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 4.5 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 0 8 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 16 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width 365 3.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 375 3.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 365 3.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 325 MHz 3.0 tCLCL - 50 ns Table 26-10. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 4.5 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 1 8 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 16 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width 365 3.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 14 tWHDX Data Hold After WR High 240 2.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 375 3.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 365 3.0 tCLCL - 10 ns 200 MHz 3.0 tCLCL - 50 ns Table 26-11. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, No Wait-state 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 16 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 1 tLHLL ALE Pulse Width 235 tCLCL - 15 ns 2 tAVLL Address Valid A to ALE Low 115 0.5 tCLCL - 10 (1) ns 3a tLLAX_ST Address Hold After ALE Low, write access 5 5 ns 3b tLLAX_LD Address Hold after ALE Low, read access 5 5 ns 4 tAVLLC Address Valid C to ALE Low 115 0.5 tCLCL - 10 (1) ns 5 tAVRL Address Valid to RD Low 235 1.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 6 tAVWL Address Valid to WR Low 235 1.0 tCLCL - 15 7 tLLWL ALE Low to WR Low 115 8 tLLRL ALE Low to RD Low 115 9 tDVRH Data Setup to RD High 45 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 376 130 130 0.5 tCLCL - 10 (2) 0.5 tCLCL - 10 (2) MHz ns 0.5 tCLCL + 5 (2) ns 0.5 tCLCL + 5 (2) ns 45 190 ns 1.0 tCLCL - 60 ns AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Table 26-11. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, No Wait-state (Continued) 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. 11 tRHDX Data Hold After RD High 12 tRLRH 13 Max. Min. Max. 0 0 ns RD Pulse Width 235 1.0 tCLCL - 15 ns tDVWL Data Setup to WR Low 105 0.5 tCLCL - 20 (1) ns 14 tWHDX Data Hold After WR High 235 1.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 250 1.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 235 1.0 tCLCL - 15 ns Notes: 1. This assumes 50% clock duty cycle. The half period is actually the high time of the external clock, XTAL1. 2. This assumes 50% clock duty cycle. The half period is actually the low time of the external clock, XTAL1. Table 26-12. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 0, SRWn0 = 1 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 8 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width 485 2.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 500 2.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 485 2.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 440 2.0 tCLCL - 60 MHz ns Table 26-13. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 0 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 0.0 8 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width 735 3.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 750 3.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 735 3.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 690 3.0 tCLCL - 60 MHz ns Table 26-14. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 1 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. 0 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 10 tRLDV Read Low to Data Valid 12 tRLRH RD Pulse Width Max. Min. Max. 0.0 8 690 735 3.0 tCLCL - 60 3.0 tCLCL - 15 MHz ns ns 377 7679H-CAN-08/08 Table 26-14. External Data Memory Characteristics, VCC = 2.7 - 5.5 Volts, SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 1 (Continued) 4 MHz Oscillator Symbol Variable Oscillator Parameter Unit Min. Max. Min. Max. 14 tWHDX Data Hold After WR High 485 2.0 tCLCL - 15 ns 15 tDVWH Data Valid to WR High 750 3.0 tCLCL ns 16 tWLWH WR Pulse Width 735 3.0 tCLCL - 15 ns Figure 26-6. External Memory Timing (SRWn1 = 0, SRWn0 = 0) T1 T2 T3 T4 System Clock (CLKCPU ) 1 ALE 4 A15:8 7 Prev. addr. Address 15 DA7:0 Prev. data 13 3a Address XX Data 14 16 6 Write 2 WR 9 3b Address Data 5 Read DA7:0 (XMBK = 0) 11 10 8 12 RD 378 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 26-7. External Memory Timing (SRWn1 = 0, SRWn0 = 1) T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 System Clock (CLKCPU ) 1 ALE 4 A15:8 7 Prev. addr. Address 15 DA7:0 Prev. data 13 3a Address Data XX 14 16 6 Write 2 WR 9 3b DA7:0 (XMBK = 0) Data 5 Read Address 11 10 8 12 RD Figure 26-8. External Memory Timing (SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 0) T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 System Clock (CLKCPU ) 1 ALE 4 A15:8 7 Address Prev. addr. 15 DA7:0 Prev. data 13 3a Address XX Data 14 16 6 Write 2 WR 9 3b Address 11 Data 5 Read DA7:0 (XMBK = 0) 10 8 12 RD 379 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 26-9. External Memory Timing (SRWn1 = 1, SRWn0 = 1)(1) T1 T2 T3 T6 T5 T4 T7 System Clock (CLKCPU ) 1 ALE 4 A15:8 7 Address Prev. addr. 15 DA7:0 Prev. data 13 3a Address XX Data 14 16 6 Write 2 WR 9 3b Address 11 Data 5 Read DA7:0 (XMBK = 0) 10 8 12 RD Note: 1. The ALE pulse in the last period (T4-T7) is only present if the next instruction accesses the RAM (internal or external). 26.10 Parallel Programming Characteristics Figure 26-10. Parallel Programming Timing, Including some General Timing Requirements tXLWL tXHXL XTAL1 tDVXH tXLDX tBVPH tPLBX t BVWL Data & Contol (DATA, XA0/1, BS1, BS2) PAGEL tWLBX tPHPL tWLWH WR tPLWL WLRL RDY/BSY tWLRH 380 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 26-11. Parallel Programming Timing, Loading Sequence with Timing Requirements(1) LOAD ADDRESS (LOW BYTE) LOAD DATA LOAD DATA (HIGH BYTE) LOAD DATA (LOW BYTE) tXLPH t XLXH LOAD ADDRESS (LOW BYTE) tPLXH XTAL1 BS1 PAGEL DATA ADDR0 (Low Byte) DATA (Low Byte) DATA (High Byte) ADDR1 (Low Byte) XA0 XA1 Note: 1. The timing requirements shown in Figure 26-10 (i.e., tDVXH, tXHXL, and tXLDX) also apply to loading operation. Figure 26-12. Parallel Programming Timing, Reading Sequence (within the Same Page) with Timing Requirements(1) LOAD ADDRESS (LOW BYTE) READ DATA (LOW BYTE) READ DATA (HIGH BYTE) LOAD ADDRESS (LOW BYTE) tXLOL XTAL1 tBVDV BS1 tOLDV OE DATA tOHDZ ADDR0 (Low Byte) DATA (Low Byte) DATA (High Byte) ADDR1 (Low Byte) XA0 XA1 381 7679H-CAN-08/08 Note: 1. The timing requirements shown in Figure 26-10 (i.e., tDVXH, tXHXL, and tXLDX) also apply to reading operation. Table 26-15. Parallel Programming Characteristics, VCC = 5V 10% Symbol Parameter Min. VPP Programming Enable Voltage 11.5 IPP Programming Enable Current tDVXH Data and Control Valid before XTAL1 High 67 ns tXLXH XTAL1 Low to XTAL1 High 200 ns tXHXL XTAL1 Pulse Width High 150 ns tXLDX Data and Control Hold after XTAL1 Low 67 ns tXLWL XTAL1 Low to WR Low 0 ns tXLPH XTAL1 Low to PAGEL high 0 ns tPLXH PAGEL low to XTAL1 high 150 ns tBVPH BS1 Valid before PAGEL High 67 ns tPHPL PAGEL Pulse Width High 150 ns tPLBX BS1 Hold after PAGEL Low 67 ns tWLBX BS2/1 Hold after WR Low 67 ns tPLWL PAGEL Low to WR Low 67 ns tBVWL BS1 Valid to WR Low 67 ns tWLWH WR Pulse Width Low 150 ns tWLRL WR Low to RDY/BSY Low (1) WR Low to RDY/BSY High tWLRH Max. Units 12.5 V 250 A 0 1 s 3.7 5 ms 7.5 10 ms tWLRH_CE WR Low to RDY/BSY High for Chip Erase tXLOL XTAL1 Low to OE Low 0 tBVDV BS1 Valid to DATA valid 0 tOLDV tOHDZ Notes: 382 (2) Typ. ns 250 ns OE Low to DATA Valid 250 ns OE High to DATA Tri-stated 250 ns 1. tWLRH is valid for the Write Flash, Write EEPROM, Write Fuse bits and Write Lock bits commands. 2. tWLRH_CE is valid for the Chip Erase command. AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 27. Decoupling Capacitors The operating frequency (i.e. system clock) of the processor determines in 95% of cases the value needed for microcontroller decoupling capacitors. The hypotheses used as first evaluation for decoupling capacitors are: * The operating frequency (fop) supplies itself the maximum peak levels of noise. The main peaks are located at fop and 2 * fop. * An SMC capacitor connected to 2 micro-vias on a PCB has the following characteristics: - 1.5 nH from the connection of the capacitor to the PCB, - 1.5 nH from the capacitor intrinsic inductance. Figure 27-1. Capacitor description 1.5 nH 0.75 nH Capacitor 0.75 nH PCB According to the operating frequency of the product, the decoupling capacitances are chosen considering the frequencies to filter, fop and 2 * fop. The relation between frequencies to cut and decoupling characteristics are defined by: f op where: 1 = ----------------------2 LC 1 and 1 2 * f op = ----------------------2 LC 2 - L: the inductance equivalent to the global inductance on the Vcc/Gnd lines. - C1 & C2: decoupling capacitors (C1 = 4 * C2). Then, in normalized value range, the decoupling capacitors become: Table 27-1. Decoupling Capacitors vs. Frequency fop , operating frequency C1 C2 16 MHz 33 nF 10 nF 12 MHz 56 nF 15 nF 10 MHz 82 nF 22 nF 8 MHz 120 nF 33 nF 6 MHz 220 nF 56 nF 4 MHz 560 nF 120 nF These decoupling capacitors must to be implemented as close as possible to each pair of power supply pins: - 21-22 and 52-53 for logic sub-system, - 64-63 for analogical sub-system. Nevertheless, a bulk capacitor of 10-47 F is also needed on the power distribution network of the PCB, near the power source. For further information, please refer to Application Notes AVR040 "EMC Design Considerations" and AVR042 "Hardware Design Considerations" on the Atmel web site. 383 7679H-CAN-08/08 28. AT90CAN32/64/128 Typical Characteristics * The following charts show typical behavior. These figures are not tested during manufacturing. All current consumption measurements are performed with all I/O pins configured as inputs and with internal pull-ups enabled. A sine wave generator with rail-to-rail output is used as clock source. * The power consumption in Power-down mode is independent of clock selection. * The current consumption is a function of several factors such as: operating voltage, operating frequency, loading of I/O pins, switching rate of I/O pins, code executed and ambient temperature. The dominating factors are operating voltage and frequency. * The current drawn from capacitive loaded pins may be estimated (for one pin) as CL*VCC*f where CL = load capacitance, VCC = operating voltage and f = average switching frequency of I/O pin. * The parts are characterized at frequencies higher than test limits. Parts are not guaranteed to function properly at frequencies higher than the ordering code indicates. * The difference between current consumption in Power-down mode with Watchdog Timer enabled and Power-down mode with Watchdog Timer disabled represents the differential current drawn by the Watchdog Timer. 28.1 Active Supply Current Figure 28-1. Active Supply Current vs. Frequency (0.1 - 1.0 MHz) ACTIVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (25C, 0.1 - 1 MHz) 3 Icc (mA) 2.5 2 5.50V 5.00V 4.50V 1.5 4.00V 1 3.30V 3.00V 2.70V 0.5 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 Frequency (MHz) 384 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 28-2. Active Supply Current vs. Frequency (1 - 16 MHz) ACTIVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (25C, 1 - 16 MHz) 40 35 30 5.50V 5.00V 4.50V 4.00V 3.30V 3.00V 2.70V Icc (mA) 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Frequency (MHz) Figure 28-3. Active Supply Current vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 8 MHz) ACTIVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 8 MHz) 20 18 16 Icc (mA) 14 12 85C 25C -40C 10 8 6 4 2 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 385 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-4. Active Supply Current vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 1 MHz) ACTIVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 1 MHz) 3 2.5 Icc (mA) 2 85C 1.5 25C -40C 1 0.5 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-5. Active Supply Current vs. Vcc (32 kHz Watch Crystal) ACTIVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (32 kHz Watch Crystal) 140 120 Icc (uA) 100 80 25C 60 40 20 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 386 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.2 Idle Supply Current Figure 28-6. Idle Supply Current vs. Frequency (0.1 - 1.0 MHz) IDLE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (25C, 0.1 - 1 MHz) 1.6 1.4 1.2 5.50V 5.00V 4.50V 4.00V 3.30V 3.00V 2.70V Icc (mA) 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 Frequency (MHz) Figure 28-7. Idle Supply Current vs. Frequency (1 - 16 MHz) IDLE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (25C, 1 - 16 MHz) 25 Icc (mA) 20 5.50V 5.00V 4.50V 4.00V 3.30V 3.00V 2.70V 15 10 5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Frequency (MHz) 387 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-8. Idle Supply Current vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 8 MHz) IDLE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 8 MHz) 14 12 Icc (mA) 10 85C 25C -40C 8 6 4 2 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-9. Idle Supply Current vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 1 MHz) IDLE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Internal RC Oscillator 1 MHz) 1.8 1.6 1.4 Icc (mA) 1.2 85C 1 25C 0.8 -40C 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 388 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 28-10. Idle Supply Current vs. Vcc (32 kHz Watch Crystal) IDLE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (32 KHz Watch Crystal) 60 50 Icc (uA) 40 30 25C 20 10 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 28.3 Power-down Supply Current Figure 28-11. Power-down Supply Current vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Disabled) POWER-DOWN SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Disabled) 9 8 7 Icc (uA) 6 85C 25C -40C 5 4 3 2 1 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 389 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-12. Power-down Supply Current vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Enabled) POWER-DOWN SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Enabled) 25 22.5 20 Icc (uA) 17.5 15 85C 25C -40C 12.5 10 7.5 5 2.5 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 28.4 Power-save Supply Current Figure 28-13. Power-save Supply Current vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Disabled) POWER-SAVE SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (Watchdog Timer Disabled) 25 22.5 20 Icc (uA) 17.5 15 12.5 25C 10 7.5 5 2.5 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 390 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.5 Standby Supply Current Figure 28-14. Power-save Supply Current vs. Vcc (25C, Watchdog Timer Disabled) STANDBY SUPPLY CURRENT vs. Vcc (25C, Watchdog Timer Disabled) 0.2 0.18 0.16 Icc (mA) 0.14 6 MHZ Xtal 4 MHZ Res 2 MHZ Xtal 2 MHZ Res 0.12 0.1 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 28.6 Pin Pull-up Figure 28-15. I/O Pin Pull-up Resistor Current vs. Input Voltage (Vcc = 5V) I/O PIN PULL-UP RESISTOR CURRENT vs. INPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 5V) 0 -20 -40 I IO (uA) -60 85C 25C -40C -80 -100 -120 -140 -160 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 V IO (V) 391 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-16. I/O Pin Pull-up Resistor Current vs. Input Voltage (Vcc = 2.7V) I/O PIN PULL-UP RESISTOR CURRENT vs. INPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 2.7V) 0 -10 -20 I IO (uA) -30 85C 25C -40C -40 -50 -60 -70 -80 -90 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 V IO (V) Figure 28-17. Reset Pull-up Resistor Current vs. Reset Pin Voltage (Vcc = 5V) RESET PULL-UP RESISTOR CURRENT vs. RESET PIN VOLTAGE (Vcc = 5V) 0 -20 I RESET (uA) -40 85C 25C -40C -60 -80 -100 -120 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 V RESET (V) 392 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 28-18. Reset Pull-up Resistor Current vs. Reset Pin Voltage (Vcc = 2.7V) RESET PULL-UP RESISTOR CURRENT vs. RESET PIN VOLTAGE (Vcc = 2.7V) 0 -10 I RESET (uA) -20 85C 25C -40C -30 -40 -50 -60 -70 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 V RESET (V) 28.7 Pin Driver Strength Figure 28-19. I/O Pin Source Current vs. Output Voltage (Vcc = 5V) I/O PIN SOURCE CURRENT vs. OUTPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 5V) 0 -10 -20 I OH (mA) -30 85C 25C -40C -40 -50 -60 -70 -80 -90 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 V OH (V) 393 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-20. I/O Pin Source Current vs. Output Voltage (Vcc = 2.7V) I/O PIN SOURCE CURRENT vs. OUTPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 2.7V) 0 -5 I OH (mA) -10 85C 25C -40C -15 -20 -25 -30 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 V OH (V) Figure 28-21. I/O Pin Sink Current vs. Output Voltage (Vcc = 5V) I/O PIN SINK CURRENT vs. OUTPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 5V) 90 80 70 I OL (mA) 60 85C 25C -40C 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 V OL (V) 394 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 28-22. I/O Pin Sink Current vs. Output Voltage (Vcc = 2.7V) I/O PIN SINK CURRENT vs. OUTPUT VOLTAGE (Vcc = 2.7V) 35 30 I OL (mA) 25 85C 25C -40C 20 15 10 5 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 V OL (V) 28.8 Pin Thresholds and Hysteresis Figure 28-23. I/O Input Threshold Voltage vs. Vcc (VIH, I/O Pin Read as "1") I/O PIN INPUT THRESHOLD VOLTAGE vs. VCC (VIH, I/O PIN READ AS "1") 2 Threshold (V) 1.75 1.5 85C 1.25 25C -40C 1 0.75 0.5 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 395 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 1. I/O Input Threshold Voltage vs. Vcc (VIL, I/O Pin Read as "0") I/O PIN INPUT THRESHOLD VOLTAGE vs. VCC (VIL, I/O PIN READ AS "0") 2 Threshold (V) 1.75 1.5 85C 1.25 25C -40C 1 0.75 0.5 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 2. I/O Input Hysteresis vs. Vcc I/O PIN INPUT HYSTERESIS vs. VCC 0.6 Threshold (V) 0.5 0.4 85C 0.3 25C -40C 0.2 0.1 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 396 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.9 BOD Thresholds and Analog Comparator Offset Figure 28-24. BOD Thresholds vs. Temperature (BOD level is 4.1V) BOD THRESHOLDS vs. TEMPERATURE (BOD level is 4.1V) 4.4 Threshold (V) 4.2 4 Rising Vcc Falling Vcc 3.8 3.6 3.4 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 Temp (C) Figure 28-25. BOD Thresholds vs. Temperature (BOD level is 2.7V) BOD THRESHOLDS vs. TEMPERATURE (BOD level is 2.7V) 3 Threshold (V) 2.8 2.6 Rising Vcc Falling Vcc 2.4 2.2 2 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 Temp (C) 397 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-26. Bandgap Voltage vs. Operating Voltage BANDGAP VOLTAGE vs. OPERATING VOLTAGE 1.14 Bandgap Voltage (V) 1.13 1.12 85C 1.11 25C -40C 1.1 1.09 1.08 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-27. Analog Comparator Offset vs. Common Mode Voltage (Vcc = 5V) ANALOG COMPARATOR OFFSET vs. COMMON MODE VOLTAGE (Vcc = 5V) Comparator Offset Voltage (V) 0.012 0.01 0.008 85C 0.006 25C 0.004 -40C 0.002 0 -0.002 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Common Voltage Mode (V) 398 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.10 Internal Oscillator Speed Figure 28-28. Watchdog Oscillator Frequency vs. Operating Voltage WATCHDOG OSCILLATOR FREQUENCY vs. VCC 1200 1150 F WATCHDOG (kHz) 1100 1050 85C 1000 25C -40C 950 900 850 800 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-29. Calibrated 8 MHz RC Oscillator Frequency vs. Temperature CALIBRATED 8MHz RC OSCILLATOR FREQUENCY vs. TEMPERATURE 8.8 8.6 F RC (MHz) 8.4 8.2 2.7V 8 4.0V 5.5V 7.8 7.6 7.4 7.2 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 Temp (C) 399 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-30. Calibrated 8 MHz RC Oscillator Frequency vs. Operating Voltage CALIBRATED 8MHz RC OSCILLATOR FREQUENCY vs. VCC 10 9.5 F RC (MHz) 9 8.5 85C 8 25C -40C 7.5 7 6.5 6 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-31. Calibrated 8 MHz RC Oscillator Frequency vs. OSCCAL Value CALIBRATED 8MHz RC OSCILLATOR FREQUENCY vs. OSCCAL VALUE 16 15 14 13 F RC (MHz) 12 11 85C 10 25C -40C 9 8 7 6 5 4 0 16 32 48 64 80 96 112 128 OSCCAL Value 400 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.11 Current Consumption of Peripheral Units Figure 28-32. Brownout Detector Current vs. Operating Voltage BROWNOUT DETECTOR CURRENT vs. Vcc 35 30 Icc (uA) 25 85C 25C -40C 20 15 10 5 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-33. ADC Current vs. Operating Voltage (ADC at 1 MHz) ADC CURRENT vs. Vcc (ADC at 1 MHz) 300 250 Icc (uA) 200 85C 25C -40C 150 100 50 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 401 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-34. AREF External Reference Current vs. Operating Voltage AREF EXTERNAL REFERENCE CURRENT vs. Vcc 200 180 IAREF (uA) 160 140 85C 25C -40C 120 100 80 60 40 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) Figure 28-35. Analog Comparator Current vs. Operating Voltage ANALOG COMPARATOR CURRENT vs. Vcc 120 100 I CC (uA) 80 85C 25C -40C 60 40 20 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 402 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Figure 28-36. Programming Current vs. Operating Voltage PROGRAMMING CURRENT vs. Vcc 25 I CC (mA) 20 15 85C 25C -40C 10 5 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 28.12 Current Consumption in Reset and Reset Pulse Width Figure 28-37. Reset Supply Current vs. Operating Voltage (0.1 - 1.0 MHz) (Excluding Current Through the Reset Pull-up) RESET SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (25C, 0.1 - 1 MHz) (EXCLUDING CURRENT THROUGH THE RESET PULL-UP) 0.25 Icc (mA) 0.2 5.50V 5.00V 4.50V 4.00V 3.30V 3.00V 2.70V 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 Frequency (MHz) 403 7679H-CAN-08/08 Figure 28-38. Reset Supply Current vs. Operating Voltage (1 - 16 MHz) (Excluding Current Through the Reset Pull-up) RESET SUPPLY CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY (1 - 16 MHz) (EXCLUDING CURRENT THROUGH THE RESET PULL-UP) 3.5 3 5.50V 2.5 Icc (mA) 5.00V 4.50V 2 4.00V 1.5 3.30V 3.00V 1 2.70V 0.5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Frequency (MHz) Figure 28-39. Minimum Reset Pulse Width vs. Operating Voltage MINIMUM RESET PULSE WIDTH vs. Vcc 1500 Pulse Width (ns) 1250 1000 85C 25C -40C 750 500 250 0 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 Vcc (V) 404 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 29. Register Summary Address Name (0xFF) Reserved (0xFE) Reserved (0xFD) Reserved (0xFC) Reserved (0xFB) Reserved Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Page (0xFA) CANMSG MSG 7 MSG 6 MSG 5 MSG 4 MSG 3 MSG 2 MSG 1 MSG 0 page 266 (0xF9) CANSTMH TIMSTM15 TIMSTM14 TIMSTM13 TIMSTM12 TIMSTM11 TIMSTM10 TIMSTM9 TIMSTM8 page 266 (0xF8) CANSTML TIMSTM7 TIMSTM6 TIMSTM5 TIMSTM4 TIMSTM3 TIMSTM2 TIMSTM1 TIMSTM0 page 266 (0xF7) CANIDM1 IDMSK28 IDMSK27 IDMSK26 IDMSK25 IDMSK24 IDMSK23 IDMSK22 IDMSK21 page 265 (0xF6) CANIDM2 IDMSK20 IDMSK19 IDMSK18 IDMSK17 IDMSK16 IDMSK15 IDMSK14 IDMSK13 page 265 (0xF5) CANIDM3 IDMSK12 IDMSK11 IDMSK10 IDMSK9 IDMSK8 IDMSK7 IDMSK6 IDMSK5 page 265 (0xF4) CANIDM4 IDMSK4 IDMSK3 IDMSK2 IDMSK1 IDMSK0 RTRMSK - IDEMSK page 265 (0xF3) CANIDT1 IDT28 IDT27 IDT26 IDT25 IDT24 IDT23 IDT22 IDT21 page 263 (0xF2) CANIDT2 IDT20 IDT19 IDT18 IDT17 IDT16 IDT15 IDT14 IDT13 page 263 (0xF1) CANIDT3 IDT12 IDT11 IDT10 IDT9 IDT8 IDT7 IDT6 IDT5 page 263 (0xF0) CANIDT4 IDT4 IDT3 IDT2 IDT1 IDT0 RTRTAG RB1TAG RB0TAG page 263 (0xEF) CANCDMOB CONMOB1 CONMOB0 RPLV IDE DLC3 DLC2 DLC1 DLC0 page 262 (0xEE) CANSTMOB DLCW TXOK RXOK BERR SERR CERR FERR AERR page 261 (0xED) CANPAGE MOBNB3 MOBNB2 MOBNB1 MOBNB0 AINC INDX2 INDX1 INDX0 page 260 (0xEC) CANHPMOB HPMOB3 HPMOB2 HPMOB1 HPMOB0 CGP3 CGP2 CGP1 CGP0 page 260 (0xEB) CANREC REC7 REC6 REC5 REC4 REC3 REC2 REC1 REC0 page 260 (0xEA) CANTEC TEC7 TEC6 TEC5 TEC4 TEC3 TEC2 TEC1 TEC0 page 260 (0xE9) CANTTCH TIMTTC15 TIMTTC14 TIMTTC13 TIMTTC12 TIMTTC11 TIMTTC10 TIMTTC9 TIMTTC8 page 260 (0xE8) CANTTCL TIMTTC7 TIMTTC6 TIMTTC5 TIMTTC4 TIMTTC3 TIMTTC2 TIMTTC1 TIMTTC0 page 260 (0xE7) CANTIMH CANTIM15 CANTIM14 CANTIM13 CANTIM12 CANTIM11 CANTIM10 CANTIM9 CANTIM8 page 259 (0xE6) CANTIML CANTIM7 CANTIM6 CANTIM5 CANTIM4 CANTIM3 CANTIM2 CANTIM1 CANTIM0 page 259 (0xE5) CANTCON TPRSC7 TPRSC6 TPRSC5 TPRSC4 TPRSC3 TPRSC2 TRPSC1 TPRSC0 page 259 (0xE4) CANBT3 - PHS22 PHS21 PHS20 PHS12 PHS11 PHS10 SMP page 258 (0xE3) CANBT2 - SJW1 SJW0 - PRS2 PRS1 PRS0 - page 258 (0xE2) CANBT1 - BRP5 BRP4 BRP3 BRP2 BRP1 BRP0 - page 257 (0xE1) CANSIT1 - SIT14 SIT13 SIT12 SIT11 SIT10 SIT9 SIT8 page 257 (0xE0) CANSIT2 SIT7 SIT6 SIT5 SIT4 SIT3 SIT2 SIT1 SIT0 page 257 (0xDF) CANIE1 - IEMOB14 IEMOB13 IEMOB12 IEMOB11 IEMOB10 IEMOB9 IEMOB8 page 257 (0xDE) CANIE2 IEMOB7 IEMOB6 IEMOB5 IEMOB4 IEMOB3 IEMOB2 IEMOB1 IEMOB0 page 257 (0xDD) CANEN1 - ENMOB14 ENMOB13 ENMOB12 ENMOB11 ENMOB10 ENMOB9 ENMOB8 page 256 (0xDC) CANEN2 ENMOB7 ENMOB6 ENMOB5 ENMOB4 ENMOB3 ENMOB2 ENMOB1 ENMOB0 page 256 (0xDB) CANGIE ENIT ENBOFF ENRX ENTX ENERR ENBX ENERG ENOVRT page 255 (0xDA) CANGIT CANIT BOFFIT OVRTIM BXOK SERG CERG FERG AERG page 254 (0xD9) CANGSTA - OVRG - TXBSY RXBSY ENFG BOFF ERRP page 253 (0xD8) CANGCON ABRQ OVRQ TTC SYNTTC LISTEN TEST ENA/STB SWRES page 252 (0xD7) Reserved (0xD6) Reserved (0xD5) Reserved (0xD4) Reserved (0xD3) Reserved (0xD2) Reserved (0xD1) Reserved (0xD0) Reserved (0xCF) Reserved (0xCE) UDR1 UDR17 UDR16 UDR15 UDR14 UDR13 UDR12 UDR11 UDR10 page 195 (0xCD) UBRR1H - - - - UBRR111 UBRR110 UBRR19 UBRR18 page 199 (0xCC) UBRR1L UBRR17 UBRR16 UBRR15 UBRR14 UBRR13 UBRR12 UBRR11 UBRR10 page 199 (0xCB) Reserved (0xCA) UCSR1C - UMSEL1 UPM11 UPM10 USBS1 UCSZ11 UCSZ10 UCPOL1 page 198 (0xC9) UCSR1B RXCIE1 TXCIE1 UDRIE1 RXEN1 TXEN1 UCSZ12 RXB81 TXB81 page 197 (0xC8) UCSR1A RXC1 TXC1 UDRE1 FE1 DOR1 UPE1 U2X1 MPCM1 page 195 (0xC7) Reserved (0xC6) UDR0 UDR07 UDR06 UDR05 UDR04 UDR03 UDR02 UDR01 UDR00 page 195 (0xC5) UBRR0H - - - - UBRR011 UBRR010 UBRR09 UBRR08 page 199 (0xC4) UBRR0L UBRR07 UBRR06 UBRR05 UBRR04 UBRR03 UBRR02 UBRR01 UBRR00 page 199 (0xC3) Reserved (0xC2) UCSR0C - UMSEL0 UPM01 UPM00 USBS0 UCSZ01 UCSZ00 UCPOL0 page 197 (0xC1) UCSR0B RXCIE0 TXCIE0 UDRIE0 RXEN0 TXEN0 UCSZ02 RXB80 TXB80 page 196 (0xC0) UCSR0A RXC0 TXC0 UDRE0 FE0 DOR0 UPE0 U2X0 MPCM0 page 195 (0xBF) Reserved 405 7679H-CAN-08/08 Address Name (0xBE) Reserved (0xBD) Reserved (0xBC) TWCR TWINT (0xBB) TWDR TWDR7 (0xBA) TWAR TWAR6 (0xB9) TWSR (0xB8) TWBR (0xB7) Reserved 406 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Page TWEA TWSTA TWSTO TWWC TWEN TWDR6 TWDR5 TWDR4 TWDR3 TWDR2 - TWIE page 212 TWDR1 TWDR0 TWAR5 TWAR4 TWAR3 TWAR2 TWAR1 TWAR0 TWGCE page 214 page 214 TWS7 TWS6 TWS5 TWS4 TWS3 - TWPS1 TWPS0 page 213 TWBR7 TWBR6 TWBR5 TWBR4 TWBR3 TWBR2 TWBR1 TWBR0 page 212 - - - EXCLK AS2 TCN2UB OCR2UB TCR2UB page 160 (0xB6) ASSR (0xB5) Reserved (0xB4) Reserved (0xB3) OCR2A OCR2A7 OCR2A6 OCR2A5 OCR2A4 OCR2A3 OCR2A2 OCR2A1 OCR2A0 page 159 (0xB2) TCNT2 TCNT27 TCNT26 TCNT25 TCNT24 TCNT23 TCNT22 TCNT21 TCNT20 page 159 (0xB1) Reserved FOC2A WGM20 COM2A1 COM2A0 WGM21 CS22 CS21 CS20 page 164 (0xB0) TCCR2A (0xAF) Reserved (0xAE) Reserved (0xAD) Reserved (0xAC) Reserved (0xAB) Reserved (0xAA) Reserved (0xA9) Reserved (0xA8) Reserved (0xA7) Reserved (0xA6) Reserved (0xA5) Reserved (0xA4) Reserved (0xA3) Reserved (0xA2) Reserved (0xA1) Reserved (0xA0) Reserved (0x9F) Reserved (0x9E) Reserved (0x9D) OCR3CH OCR3C15 OCR3C14 OCR3C13 OCR3C12 OCR3C11 OCR3C10 OCR3C9 OCR3C8 page 141 (0x9C) OCR3CL OCR3C7 OCR3C6 OCR3C5 OCR3C4 OCR3C3 OCR3C2 OCR3C1 OCR3C0 page 141 (0x9B) OCR3BH OCR3B15 OCR3B14 OCR3B13 OCR3B12 OCR3B11 OCR3B10 OCR3B9 OCR3B8 page 141 (0x9A) OCR3BL OCR3B7 OCR3B6 OCR3B5 OCR3B4 OCR3B3 OCR3B2 OCR3B1 OCR3B0 page 141 (0x99) OCR3AH OCR3A15 OCR3A14 OCR3A13 OCR3A12 OCR3A11 OCR3A10 OCR3A9 OCR3A8 page 141 (0x98) OCR3AL OCR3A7 OCR3A6 OCR3A5 OCR3A4 OCR3A3 OCR3A2 OCR3A1 OCR3A0 page 141 (0x97) ICR3H ICR315 ICR314 ICR313 ICR312 ICR311 ICR310 ICR39 ICR38 page 142 (0x96) ICR3L ICR37 ICR36 ICR35 ICR34 ICR33 ICR32 ICR31 ICR30 page 142 (0x95) TCNT3H TCNT315 TCNT314 TCNT313 TCNT312 TCNT311 TCNT310 TCNT39 TCNT38 page 140 (0x94) TCNT3L TCNT37 TCNT36 TCNT35 TCNT34 TCNT33 TCNT32 TCNT31 TCNT30 page 140 (0x93) Reserved (0x92) TCCR3C FOC3A FOC3B FOC3C - - - - (0x91) TCCR3B ICNC3 ICES3 - WGM33 WGM32 CS32 CS31 CS30 page 138 (0x90) TCCR3A COM3A1 COM3A0 COM3B1 COM3B0 COM3C1 COM3C0 WGM31 WGM30 page 135 page 140 (0x8F) Reserved (0x8E) Reserved (0x8D) OCR1CH OCR1C15 OCR1C14 OCR1C13 OCR1C12 OCR1C11 OCR1C10 OCR1C9 OCR1C8 page 141 (0x8C) OCR1CL OCR1C7 OCR1C6 OCR1C5 OCR1C4 OCR1C3 OCR1C2 OCR1C1 OCR1C0 page 141 (0x8B) OCR1BH OCR1B15 OCR1B14 OCR1B13 OCR1B12 OCR1B11 OCR1B10 OCR1B9 OCR1B8 page 141 (0x8A) OCR1BL OCR1B7 OCR1B6 OCR1B5 OCR1B4 OCR1B3 OCR1B2 OCR1B1 OCR1B0 page 141 (0x89) OCR1AH OCR1A15 OCR1A14 OCR1A13 OCR1A12 OCR1A11 OCR1A10 OCR1A9 OCR1A8 page 141 (0x88) OCR1AL OCR1A7 OCR1A6 OCR1A5 OCR1A4 OCR1A3 OCR1A2 OCR1A1 OCR1A0 page 141 (0x87) ICR1H ICR115 ICR114 ICR113 ICR112 ICR111 ICR110 ICR19 ICR18 page 142 (0x86) ICR1L ICR17 ICR16 ICR15 ICR14 ICR13 ICR12 ICR11 ICR10 page 142 (0x85) TCNT1H TCNT115 TCNT114 TCNT113 TCNT112 TCNT111 TCNT110 TCNT19 TCNT18 page 140 (0x84) TCNT1L TCNT17 TCNT16 TCNT15 TCNT14 TCNT13 TCNT12 TCNT11 TCNT10 page 140 (0x83) Reserved page 139 (0x82) TCCR1C FOC1A FOC1B FOC1C - - - - - (0x81) TCCR1B ICNC1 ICES1 - WGM13 WGM12 CS12 CS11 CS10 page 138 (0x80) TCCR1A COM1A1 COM1A0 COM1B1 COM1B0 COM1C1 COM1C0 WGM11 WGM10 page 135 (0x7F) DIDR1 - - - - - - AIN1D AIN0D page 272 (0x7E) DIDR0 ADC7D ADC6D ADC5D ADC4D ADC3D ADC2D ADC1D ADC0D page 292 (0x7D) Reserved AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Address Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Page (0x7C) ADMUX REFS1 REFS0 ADLAR MUX4 MUX3 MUX2 MUX1 MUX0 page 287 (0x7B) ADCSRB - ACME - - - ADTS2 ADTS1 ADTS0 page 291, 269 (0x7A) ADCSRA ADEN ADSC ADATE ADIF ADIE ADPS2 ADPS1 ADPS0 page 289 (0x79) ADCH - / ADC9 - / ADC8 - / ADC7 - / ADC6 - / ADC5 - / ADC4 ADC9 / ADC3 ADC8 / ADC2 page 290 (0x78) ADCL ADC7 / ADC1 ADC6 / ADC0 ADC5 / - ADC4 / - ADC3 / - ADC2 / - ADC1 / - ADC0 / page 290 (0x77) Reserved (0x76) Reserved (0x75) XMCRB XMBK - - - - XMM2 XMM1 XMM0 page 33 (0x74) XMCRA SRE SRL2 SRL1 SRL0 SRW11 SRW10 SRW01 SRW00 page 32 (0x73) Reserved (0x72) Reserved (0x71) TIMSK3 - - ICIE3 - OCIE3C OCIE3B OCIE3A TOIE3 page 142 (0x70) TIMSK2 - - - - - - OCIE2A TOIE2 page 162 (0x6F) TIMSK1 - - ICIE1 - OCIE1C OCIE1B OCIE1A TOIE1 page 142 (0x6E) TIMSK0 - - - - - - OCIE0A TOIE0 page 112 (0x6D) Reserved (0x6C) Reserved (0x6B) Reserved (0x6A) EICRB ISC71 ISC70 ISC61 ISC60 ISC51 ISC50 ISC41 ISC40 page 94 (0x69) EICRA ISC31 ISC30 ISC21 ISC20 ISC11 ISC10 ISC01 ISC00 page 93 (0x68) Reserved (0x67) Reserved - CAL6 CAL5 CAL4 CAL3 CAL2 CAL1 CAL0 page 42 (0x66) OSCCAL (0x65) Reserved (0x64) Reserved (0x63) Reserved (0x62) Reserved (0x61) CLKPR CLKPCE - - - CLKPS3 CLKPS2 CLKPS1 CLKPS0 page 44 (0x60) WDTCR - - - WDCE WDE WDP2 WDP1 WDP0 page 58 0x3F (0x5F) SREG I T H S V N Z C page 11 0x3E (0x5E) SPH SP15 SP14 SP13 SP12 SP11 SP10 SP9 SP8 page 14 0x3D (0x5D) SPL SP7 SP6 SP5 SP4 SP3 SP2 SP1 SP0 page 14 0x3C (0x5C) Reserved - - - - - - - RAMPZ0 page 13 page 326 0x3B (0x5B) RAMPZ(1) 0x3A (0x5A) Reserved 0x39 (0x59) Reserved 0x38 (0x58) Reserved 0x37 (0x57) SPMCSR SPMIE RWWSB - RWWSRE BLBSET PGWRT PGERS SPMEN 0x36 (0x56) Reserved - - - - - - - - 0x35 (0x55) MCUCR JTD - - PUD - - IVSEL IVCE page 64, 73, 304 0x34 (0x54) MCUSR - - - JTRF WDRF BORF EXTRF PORF page 56, 304 0x33 (0x53) SMCR - - - - SM2 SM1 SM0 SE page 46 0x32 (0x52) Reserved 0x31 (0x51) OCDR IDRD/OCDR7 OCDR6 OCDR5 OCDR4 OCDR3 OCDR2 OCDR1 OCDR0 page 299 0x30 (0x50) ACSR ACD ACBG ACO ACI ACIE ACIC ACIS1 ACIS0 page 270 0x2F (0x4F) Reserved page 175 0x2E (0x4E) SPDR SPD7 SPD6 SPD5 SPD4 SPD3 SPD2 SPD1 SPD0 0x2D (0x4D) SPSR SPIF WCOL - - - - - SPI2X page 175 0x2C (0x4C) SPCR SPIE SPE DORD MSTR CPOL CPHA SPR1 SPR0 page 173 0x2B (0x4B) GPIOR2 GPIOR27 GPIOR26 GPIOR25 GPIOR24 GPIOR23 GPIOR22 GPIOR21 GPIOR20 page 36 0x2A (0x4A) GPIOR1 GPIOR17 GPIOR16 GPIOR15 GPIOR14 GPIOR13 GPIOR12 GPIOR11 GPIOR10 page 36 0x29 (0x49) Reserved 0x28 (0x48) Reserved 0x27 (0x47) OCR0A OCR0A7 OCR0A6 OCR0A5 OCR0A4 OCR0A3 OCR0A2 OCR0A1 OCR0A0 page 112 0x26 (0x46) TCNT0 TCNT07 TCNT06 TCNT05 TCNT04 TCNT03 TCNT02 TCNT01 TCNT00 page 111 0x25 (0x45) Reserved 0x24 (0x44) TCCR0A FOC0A WGM00 COM0A1 COM0A0 WGM01 CS02 CS01 CS00 page 109 0x23 (0x43) GTCCR TSM - - - - - PSR2 PSR310 page 98, 164 0x22 (0x42) EEARH(2) - - - - EEAR11 EEAR10 EEAR9 EEAR8 page 22 0x21 (0x41) EEARL EEAR7 EEAR6 EEAR5 EEAR4 EEAR3 EEAR2 EEAR1 EEAR0 page 22 0x20 (0x40) EEDR EEDR7 EEDR6 EEDR5 EEDR4 EEDR3 EEDR2 EEDR1 EEDR0 page 23 0x1F (0x3F) EECR - - - - EERIE EEMWE EEWE EERE page 23 0x1E (0x3E) GPIOR0 GPIOR07 GPIOR06 GPIOR05 GPIOR04 GPIOR03 GPIOR02 GPIOR01 GPIOR00 page 36 0x1D (0x3D) EIMSK INT7 INT6 INT5 INT4 INT3 INT2 INT1 INT0 page 95 0x1C (0x3C) 0x1B (0x3B) EIFR INTF7 INTF6 INTF5 INTF4 INTF3 INTF2 INTF1 INTF0 page 95 Reserved 407 7679H-CAN-08/08 Address Name 0x1A (0x3A) Reserved 0x19 (0x39) Reserved Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Page 0x18 (0x38) TIFR3 - - ICF3 - OCF3C OCF3B OCF3A TOV3 page 143 0x17 (0x37) TIFR2 - - - - - - OCF2A TOV2 page 162 0x16 (0x36) TIFR1 - - ICF1 - OCF1C OCF1B OCF1A TOV1 page 143 0x15 (0x35) TIFR0 - - - - - - OCF0A TOV0 page 112 0x14 (0x34) PORTG - - - PORTG4 PORTG3 PORTG2 PORTG1 PORTG0 page 92 0x13 (0x33) DDRG - - - DDG4 DDG3 DDG2 DDG1 DDG0 page 92 0x12 (0x32) PING - - - PING4 PING3 PING2 PING1 PING0 page 92 0x11 (0x31) PORTF PORTF7 PORTF6 PORTF5 PORTF4 PORTF3 PORTF2 PORTF1 PORTF0 page 91 0x10 (0x30) DDRF DDF7 DDF6 DDF5 DDF4 DDF3 DDF2 DDF1 DDF0 page 91 0x0F (0x2F) PINF PINF7 PINF6 PINF5 PINF4 PINF3 PINF2 PINF1 PINF0 page 92 0x0E (0x2E) PORTE PORTE7 PORTE6 PORTE5 PORTE4 PORTE3 PORTE2 PORTE1 PORTE0 page 91 0x0D (0x2D) DDRE DDE7 DDE6 DDE5 DDE4 DDE3 DDE2 DDE1 DDE0 page 91 0x0C (0x2C) PINE PINE7 PINE6 PINE5 PINE4 PINE3 PINE2 PINE1 PINE0 page 91 0x0B (0x2B) PORTD PORTD7 PORTD6 PORTD5 PORTD4 PORTD3 PORTD2 PORTD1 PORTD0 page 91 0x0A (0x2A) DDRD DDD7 DDD6 DDD5 DDD4 DDD3 DDD2 DDD1 DDD0 page 91 0x09 (0x29) PIND PIND7 PIND6 PIND5 PIND4 PIND3 PIND2 PIND1 PIND0 page 91 0x08 (0x28) PORTC PORTC7 PORTC6 PORTC5 PORTC4 PORTC3 PORTC2 PORTC1 PORTC0 page 90 0x07 (0x27) DDRC DDC7 DDC6 DDC5 DDC4 DDC3 DDC2 DDC1 DDC0 page 90 0x06 (0x26) PINC PINC7 PINC6 PINC5 PINC4 PINC3 PINC2 PINC1 PINC0 page 90 0x05 (0x25) PORTB PORTB7 PORTB6 PORTB5 PORTB4 PORTB3 PORTB2 PORTB1 PORTB0 page 90 0x04 (0x24) DDRB DDB7 DDB6 DDB5 DDB4 DDB3 DDB2 DDB1 DDB0 page 90 0x03 (0x23) PINB PINB7 PINB6 PINB5 PINB4 PINB3 PINB2 PINB1 PINB0 page 90 0x02 (0x22) PORTA PORTA7 PORTA6 PORTA5 PORTA4 PORTA3 PORTA2 PORTA1 PORTA0 page 89 0x01 (0x21) DDRA DDA7 DDA6 DDA5 DDA4 DDA3 DDA2 DDA1 DDA0 page 90 0x00 (0x20) PINA PINA7 PINA6 PINA5 PINA4 PINA3 PINA2 PINA1 PINA0 page 90 Notes: 1. Address bits exceeding PCMSB (Table 25-11 on page 341) are don't care. 2. Address bits exceeding EEAMSB (Table 25-12 on page 341) are don't care. 3. For compatibility with future devices, reserved bits should be written to zero if accessed. Reserved I/O memory addresses should never be written. 4. I/O Registers within the address range 0x00 - 0x1F are directly bit-accessible using the SBI and CBI instructions. In these registers, the value of single bits can be checked by using the SBIS and SBIC instructions. 5. Some of the status flags are cleared by writing a logical one to them. Note that, unlike most other AVRs, the CBI and SBI instructions will only operate on the specified bit, and can therefore be used on registers containing such status flags. The CBI and SBI instructions work with registers 0x00 to 0x1F only. 6. When using the I/O specific commands IN and OUT, the I/O addresses 0x00 - 0x3F must be used. When addressing I/O Registers as data space using LD and ST instructions, 0x20 must be added to these addresses. The AT90CAN32/64/128 is a complex microcontroller with more peripheral units than can be supported within the 64 location reserved in Opcode for the IN and OUT instructions. For the Extended I/O space from 0x60 - 0xFF in SRAM, only the ST/STS/STD and LD/LDS/LDD instructions can be used. 408 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 30. Instruction Set Summary Mnemonics Operands Description Operation Flags #Clocks ARITHMETIC AND LOGIC INSTRUCTIONS ADD Rd, Rr Add two Registers Rd Rd + Rr Z,C,N,V,H 1 ADC Rd, Rr Add with Carry two Registers Rd Rd + Rr + C Z,C,N,V,H 1 ADIW Rdl,K Add Immediate to Word Rdh:Rdl Rdh:Rdl + K Z,C,N,V,S 2 SUB Rd, Rr Subtract two Registers Rd Rd - Rr Z,C,N,V,H 1 SUBI Rd, K Subtract Constant from Register Rd Rd - K Z,C,N,V,H 1 SBC Rd, Rr Subtract with Carry two Registers Rd Rd - Rr - C Z,C,N,V,H 1 SBCI Rd, K Subtract with Carry Constant from Reg. Rd Rd - K - C Z,C,N,V,H 1 SBIW Rdl,K Subtract Immediate from Word Rdh:Rdl Rdh:Rdl - K Z,C,N,V,S 2 AND Rd, Rr Logical AND Registers Rd Rd * Rr Z,N,V 1 ANDI Rd, K Logical AND Register and Constant Rd Rd * K Z,N,V 1 OR Rd, Rr Logical OR Registers Rd Rd v Rr Z,N,V 1 ORI Rd, K Logical OR Register and Constant Rd Rd v K Z,N,V 1 EOR Rd, Rr Exclusive OR Registers Rd Rd Rr Z,N,V 1 COM Rd One's Complement Rd 0xFF - Rd Z,C,N,V 1 NEG Rd Two's Complement Rd 0x00 - Rd Z,C,N,V,H 1 SBR Rd,K Set Bit(s) in Register Rd Rd v K Z,N,V 1 CBR Rd,K Clear Bit(s) in Register Rd Rd * (0xFF - K) Z,N,V 1 INC Rd Increment Rd Rd + 1 Z,N,V 1 DEC Rd Decrement Rd Rd - 1 Z,N,V 1 TST Rd Test for Zero or Minus Rd Rd * Rd Z,N,V 1 CLR Rd Clear Register Rd Rd Rd Z,N,V 1 SER Rd Set Register Rd 0xFF None 1 MUL Rd, Rr Multiply Unsigned R1:R0 Rd x Rr Z,C 2 MULS Rd, Rr Multiply Signed R1:R0 Rd x Rr Z,C 2 MULSU Rd, Rr Multiply Signed with Unsigned R1:R0 Rd x Rr Z,C 2 FMUL Rd, Rr Fractional Multiply Unsigned R1:R0 (Rd x Rr) << 1 Z,C 2 FMULS Rd, Rr Fractional Multiply Signed R1:R0 (Rd x Rr) << 1 Z,C 2 FMULSU Rd, Rr Fractional Multiply Signed with Unsigned R1:R0 (Rd x Rr) << 1 Z,C 2 RJMP k 2 BRANCH INSTRUCTIONS IJMP Relative Jump PC PC + k + 1 None Indirect Jump to (Z) PC Z None 2 JMP k Direct Jump PC k None 3 RCALL k Relative Subroutine Call PC PC + k + 1 None 3 Indirect Call to (Z) PC Z None 3 Direct Subroutine Call PC k None 4 4 ICALL CALL k RET Subroutine Return PC STACK None RETI Interrupt Return PC STACK I 4 Compare, Skip if Equal if (Rd = Rr) PC PC + 2 or 3 None 1/2/3 CPSE Rd,Rr CP Rd,Rr Compare Rd - Rr Z, N,V,C,H 1 CPC Rd,Rr Compare with Carry Rd - Rr - C Z, N,V,C,H 1 CPI Rd,K Compare Register with Immediate Rd - K Z, N,V,C,H 1 SBRC Rr, b Skip if Bit in Register Cleared if (Rr(b)=0) PC PC + 2 or 3 None 1/2/3 SBRS Rr, b Skip if Bit in Register is Set if (Rr(b)=1) PC PC + 2 or 3 None 1/2/3 SBIC P, b Skip if Bit in I/O Register Cleared if (P(b)=0) PC PC + 2 or 3 None 1/2/3 SBIS P, b Skip if Bit in I/O Register is Set if (P(b)=1) PC PC + 2 or 3 None 1/2/3 BRBS s, k Branch if Status Flag Set if (SREG(s) = 1) then PCPC+k + 1 None 1/2 BRBC s, k Branch if Status Flag Cleared if (SREG(s) = 0) then PCPC+k + 1 None 1/2 BREQ k Branch if Equal if (Z = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRNE k Branch if Not Equal if (Z = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRCS k Branch if Carry Set if (C = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRCC k Branch if Carry Cleared if (C = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRSH k Branch if Same or Higher if (C = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRLO k Branch if Lower if (C = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRMI k Branch if Minus if (N = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRPL k Branch if Plus if (N = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRGE k Branch if Greater or Equal, Signed if (N V= 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRLT k Branch if Less Than Zero, Signed if (N V= 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRHS k Branch if Half Carry Flag Set if (H = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRHC k Branch if Half Carry Flag Cleared if (H = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRTS k Branch if T Flag Set if (T = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRTC k Branch if T Flag Cleared if (T = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRVS k Branch if Overflow Flag is Set if (V = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 BRVC k Branch if Overflow Flag is Cleared if (V = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 409 7679H-CAN-08/08 Mnemonics Operands Description Operation Flags BRIE k Branch if Interrupt Enabled if ( I = 1) then PC PC + k + 1 None #Clocks 1/2 BRID k Branch if Interrupt Disabled if ( I = 0) then PC PC + k + 1 None 1/2 SBI P,b Set Bit in I/O Register I/O(P,b) 1 None 2 CBI P,b Clear Bit in I/O Register I/O(P,b) 0 None 2 LSL Rd Logical Shift Left Rd(n+1) Rd(n), Rd(0) 0 Z,C,N,V 1 LSR Rd Logical Shift Right Rd(n) Rd(n+1), Rd(7) 0 Z,C,N,V 1 ROL Rd Rotate Left Through Carry Rd(0)C,Rd(n+1) Rd(n),CRd(7) Z,C,N,V 1 ROR Rd Rotate Right Through Carry Rd(7)C,Rd(n) Rd(n+1),CRd(0) Z,C,N,V 1 ASR Rd Arithmetic Shift Right Rd(n) Rd(n+1), n=0..6 Z,C,N,V 1 SWAP Rd Swap Nibbles Rd(3..0)Rd(7..4),Rd(7..4)Rd(3..0) None 1 BSET s Flag Set SREG(s) 1 SREG(s) 1 BCLR s Flag Clear SREG(s) 0 SREG(s) 1 BST Rr, b Bit Store from Register to T T Rr(b) T 1 BLD Rd, b Bit load from T to Register Rd(b) T None 1 1 BIT AND BIT-TEST INSTRUCTIONS SEC Set Carry C1 C CLC Clear Carry C0 C 1 SEN Set Negative Flag N1 N 1 CLN Clear Negative Flag N0 N 1 SEZ Set Zero Flag Z1 Z 1 CLZ Clear Zero Flag Z0 Z 1 SEI Global Interrupt Enable I1 I 1 CLI Global Interrupt Disable I0 I 1 SES Set Signed Test Flag S1 S 1 CLS Clear Signed Test Flag S0 S 1 SEV Set Twos Complement Overflow. V1 V 1 CLV Clear Twos Complement Overflow V0 V 1 SET Set T in SREG T1 T 1 CLT Clear T in SREG T0 T 1 SEH CLH Set Half Carry Flag in SREG Clear Half Carry Flag in SREG H1 H0 H H 1 1 DATA TRANSFER INSTRUCTIONS MOV Rd, Rr Move Between Registers 1 Rd, Rr Copy Register Word Rd Rr Rd+1:Rd Rr+1:Rr None MOVW None 1 LDI Rd, K Load Immediate Rd K None 1 LD Rd, X Load Indirect Rd (X) None 2 LD Rd, X+ Load Indirect and Post-Inc. Rd (X), X X + 1 None 2 LD Rd, - X Load Indirect and Pre-Dec. X X - 1, Rd (X) None 2 LD Rd, Y Load Indirect Rd (Y) None 2 LD Rd, Y+ Load Indirect and Post-Inc. Rd (Y), Y Y + 1 None 2 2 LD Rd, - Y Load Indirect and Pre-Dec. Y Y - 1, Rd (Y) None LDD Rd,Y+q Load Indirect with Displacement Rd (Y + q) None 2 LD Rd, Z Load Indirect Rd (Z) None 2 LD Rd, Z+ Load Indirect and Post-Inc. Rd (Z), Z Z+1 None 2 LD Rd, -Z Load Indirect and Pre-Dec. Z Z - 1, Rd (Z) None 2 LDD Rd, Z+q Load Indirect with Displacement Rd (Z + q) None 2 LDS Rd, k Load Direct from SRAM Rd (k) None 2 ST X, Rr Store Indirect (X) Rr None 2 ST X+, Rr Store Indirect and Post-Inc. (X) Rr, X X + 1 None 2 ST - X, Rr Store Indirect and Pre-Dec. X X - 1, (X) Rr None 2 ST Y, Rr Store Indirect (Y) Rr None 2 ST Y+, Rr Store Indirect and Post-Inc. (Y) Rr, Y Y + 1 None 2 2 ST - Y, Rr Store Indirect and Pre-Dec. Y Y - 1, (Y) Rr None STD Y+q,Rr Store Indirect with Displacement (Y + q) Rr None 2 ST Z, Rr Store Indirect (Z) Rr None 2 ST Z+, Rr Store Indirect and Post-Inc. (Z) Rr, Z Z + 1 None 2 ST -Z, Rr Store Indirect and Pre-Dec. Z Z - 1, (Z) Rr None 2 STD Z+q,Rr Store Indirect with Displacement (Z + q) Rr None 2 STS k, Rr Store Direct to SRAM (k) Rr None 2 Load Program Memory R0 (Z) None 3 3 LPM LPM Rd, Z Load Program Memory Rd (Z) None LPM Rd, Z+ Load Program Memory and Post-Inc Rd (Z), Z Z+1 None 3 Extended Load Program Memory R0 (RAMPZ:Z) None 3 ELPM ELPM Rd, Z Extended Load Program Memory Rd (RAMPZ:Z) None 3 ELPM Rd, Z+ Extended Load Program Memory and Post-Inc Rd (RAMPZ:Z), RAMPZ:Z RAMPZ:Z+1 None 3 Store Program Memory (Z) R1:R0 None - SPM 410 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Mnemonics Operands Description Operation Flags #Clocks IN Rd, P In Port Rd P None 1 OUT P, Rr Out Port P Rr None 1 PUSH Rr Push Register on Stack STACK Rr None 2 POP Rd Pop Register from Stack Rd STACK None 2 None 1 MCU CONTROL INSTRUCTIONS NOP No Operation SLEEP Sleep (see specific descr. for Sleep function) None 1 WDR BREAK Watchdog Reset Break (see specific descr. for WDR/timer) For On-chip Debug Only None None 1 N/A 411 7679H-CAN-08/08 31. Ordering Information Ordering Code (1) Speed (MHz) Power Supply (V) Package Operation Range Product Marking AT90CAN32-16AI 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN32-16AI AT90CAN32-16MI 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-1 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN32-16MI AT90CAN32-16AU 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN32-16AU AT90CAN32-16MU 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-1 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN32-16MU AT90CAN64-16AI 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN64-16AI AT90CAN64-16MI 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-2 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN64-16MI AT90CAN64-16AU 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN64-16AU AT90CAN64-16MU 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-2 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN64-16MU AT90CAN128-16AI 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN128-16AI AT90CAN128-16MI 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-2 Industrial (-40 to +85C) AT90CAN128-16MI AT90CAN128-16AU 16 2.7 - 5.5 A2 64 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN128-16AU AT90CAN128-16MU 16 2.7 - 5.5 Z64-2 Industrial (-40 to +85C) Green AT90CAN128-16MU Notes: 1. These devices can also be supplied in wafer form. Please contact your local Atmel sales office for detailed ordering information and minimum quantities. 32. Packaging Information Package Type A2 64 64-Lead, Thin (1.0 mm / 0.03937 in) Plastic Gull Wing Quad Flat Package. Z64-1 64-Lead, QFN, Exposed Die Attach Pad D2/E2: 5.4 0.1mm / 0.212 0.004 in. Z64-2 64-Lead, QFN, Exposed Die Attach Pad D2/E2: 6.0 0.1mm / 0.236 0.004 in. 412 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 32.1 TQFP64 64 PINS THIN QUAD FLAT PACK D 0O to 7O A L 64 e 1 E E1 f J C 11O / 13O TOP VIEW SIDE VIEW A2 DRAWINGS NOT SCALED 0.100 mm LEAD COPLANARITY MM INCH Min Max Min Max A ---- 1.20 ---- 0.047 A2 0.95 1.05 0.037 0.041 C 0.09 0.20 0.004 0.008 D 16.00 BSC 0.630 BSC D1 14.00 BSC 0.551 BSC E 16.00 BSC 0.630 BSC E1 14.00 BSC 0.551 BSC J 0.05 0.15 0.002 0.006 L 0.45 0.75 0.018 0.030 e f 0.80 BSC 0.30 0.45 0.0315 BSC 0.012 0.018 413 7679H-CAN-08/08 32.2 414 QFN64 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 415 7679H-CAN-08/08 33. Errata 33.1 33.1.1 Errata Summary AT90CAN32 RevB (Date code 0107) * CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 * CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission * Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt 33.1.2 AT90CAN32 RevA (Date code < 0107) * CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 * CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission * Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt * Reset of Timer-2 flags in asynchronous mode * Miss-functioning when code stack is in XRAM 33.1.3 AT90CAN64 RevA * LPM Instruction versus Protection levels and BOOTSIZE * CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 * CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission * Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt 33.1.4 AT90CAN128 RevD (Date code 0107) * CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 * CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission * Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt 33.1.5 AT90CAN128 RevC (Date code < 4006) * CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 * CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission * Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt * Reset of Timer-2 flags in asynchronous mode * Miss-functioning when code stack is in XRAM * Extra consumption in power reduction modes * Power supply current in Power-down mode 33.2 Errata Description 8. AT90CAN64 : LPM Instruction versus Protection levels and BOOTSIZE In AT90CAN64 Product, if the Bootloader and Application protection modes are programmed at level 3, the LPM instruction does not operate properly in some configuration cases. It will not load the right constant value. The differents cases versus BOOTSIZE value and Flash memory areas are detailed in following Tables : 416 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Let's consider 4 sections in the Flash, described below: Table 33-1. Flash memory sections Memory space A Application : Memory space B Application : Memory space C Application : Memory space D : Bootloader Bootsize=4096 Words 0000h-2FFFh 3000h-3FFFh 4000h-6FFFh 7000h-7FFFh Bootsize=2048 Words 0000h-37FFh 3800h-3FFFh 4000h-77FFh 7800h-7FFFh Bootsize=1024 Words 0000h-3BFFh 3C00h-3FFFh 4000h-7BFFh 7C00h-7FFFh Bootsize=512 Words 0000h-3DFFh 3E00h-3FFFh 4000h-7DFFh 7E00h-7FFFh Failing cases : From memory space T o me meo ry space Bug comment LPM instruction D B Allowed but should not be valid LPM instruction B D Allowed but should not be valid LPM instruction B A or C Not allowed but should be LPM instruction A or C B Not allowed but should be Problem fix / workaround If protection level 3 is mandatory, the LPM instruction must be moved outside the failing sections. 7. CAN acknowledge error in 3-sample mode with prescaler =1 Some acknowledge errors can occur when the clock prescaler = 1 (BRP[5..0] = 0 in CANBTR1 register) and the SMP bit is set (CANBTR3[0] = 1 in CANBTR3 register). That can result in a reduction of the maximum length of the CAN bus. Problem fix / workaround If BRP[5..0]=0 use SMP=0. 6. CAN transmission after 3-bit intermission If a Transmit Message Object (MOb) is enabled while the CAN bus is busy with an on going message, the transmitter will wait for the 3-bit intermission before starting its transmission. This is in full agreement with the CAN recommendation. If the transmitter lost arbitration against another node, two conditions can occur: - At least one receive MOb of the chip are programmed to accept the incoming message. In this case, the transmitter will wait for the next 3-bit intermission to retry its transmission. - No receive MOb of the chip are programmed to accept the incoming message. In this case the transmitter will wait for a 4-bit intermission to retry its transmission. In this case, any other CAN nodes ready to transmit after a 3-bit intermission will start transmit before the chip transmitter, even if their messages have lower priority IDs. Problem fix / workaround Always have a receive MOb enabled ready to accept any incoming messages. Thanks to the implementation of the CAN interface, a receive MOb must be enable at latest, before the 1st bit of the DLC field. The receive MOb status register is written (RXOK if message OK) immediately after the 6th bit of the End of Frame field. This will leave in CAN2.0A mode a minimum 19-bit time delay to respond to the end of message interrupt (RXOK) and reenable the receive MOb before the start of the DLC field of the next incoming message. This 417 7679H-CAN-08/08 minimum delay will be 39-bit time in CAN2.0B. See CAN2.0A CAN2.0B frame timings below. T1 T2 CAN 2.0A 19-bit time minimum (RXOK) 15-bit CRC CRC ACK del. ACK del. CRC Field ACK Field 7 bits 3 bits End of Frame Intermission SOF 11-bit identifier ID10..0 RTR IDE Arbitration Field 4-bit DLC DLC4..0 r0 Control Field T1 T2 CAN 2.0B 39-bit time minimum (RXOK) 15-bit CRC CRC ACK del. ACK del. CRC Field ACK Field 7 bits 3 bits End of Frame Intermission SOF 11-bit base identifier IDT28..18 SRR IDE 18-bit identifier extension ID17..0 Arbitration Field RTR r1 r0 4-bit DLC DLC4..0 Control Field Workaround implementation The workaround is to have the last MOb (MOb14) as "spy" enabled all the time; it is the MOb of lowest priority. If a MOb other than MOb14 is programmed in receive mode and its acceptance filter matches with the incoming message ID, this MOb will take the message. MOb14 will only take messages than no other MObs will have accepted. MOb14 will need to be reenabled fast enough to manage back to back frames. The deadline to do this is the beginning of DLC slot of incoming frames as explained above. Minimum code to insert in CAN interrupt routine: __interrupt void can_int_handler(void) { if ((CANSIT1 & 0x40) == 0x40 ) /* MOb14 interrupt (SIT14=1) */ { CANPAGE = (0x0E << 4); /* select MOb14 */ CANSTMOB = 0x00; /* reset MOb14 status */ CANCDMOB = 0x88; /* reception enable */ } ........ ........ } 5. Asynchronous Timer-2 wakes up without interrupt The asynchronous timer can wake from sleep without giving interrupt. The error only occurs if the interrupt flag(s) is cleared by software less than 4 cycles before going to sleep and this clear is done exactly when it is supposed to be set (compare match or overflow). Only the interrupts flags are affected by the clear, not the signal witch is used to wake up the part. Problem fix / workaround No known workaround, try to lock the code to avoid such a timing. 418 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 4. Reset of Timer-2 flags in asynchronous mode In asynchronous mode, a writing in any register of the TIMER-2 (TCCR2A, TCNT2 & OCR2A) automatically clears TOV2 and OCF2A flags in TFIR register. Problem fix / workaround - TOV2: Do not write in Timer-2 registers if TCNT2 is equal to 0xFF, 0x00 or 0x01. - OCF2A: Do not write in Timer-2 registers if TCNT2 and OCR2A differ from -1, 0 or 1. 3. Miss-functioning when code stack is in XRAM If the stack pointer (SP) targets the XRAM and if the execution of an instruction is split to serve a rising interrupt, the last operation of this instruction, executed after pushing out the return address from XRAM, may be disturbed providing wrong data to the system. Example: - the "OUT" instruction can be executed twice - the "MOV" instruction can update a register with un-predictable data. Problem fix / workaround Map the code stack in internal SRAM. 2. Extra consumption in power reduction modes When AVCC is selected as voltage reference for ADC (REF[1,0]=0,1), an extra consumption close to 30 A (5.0V/25C) appears in power reduction modes. Problem fix / workaround Switch from AVCC to AREF pin (REF[1,0]=0,0) before enabling one of the power reduction modes. 1. Power supply current in Power-down mode The power supply current in Power-down mode of AT90CAN128 parts with lot number before A04900 is: TA = - 40C to + 85C Symbol ICC Parameter Power Supply Current Power-down Mode Condition Min. Typ. Max. Max. WDT enabled, VCC = 5 V 150 A WDT disabled, VCC = 5 V 120 A WDT enabled, VCC = 3 V 50 A WDT disabled, VCC = 3 V 40 A 419 7679H-CAN-08/08 34. Datasheet Revision History for AT90CAN32/64/128 Please note that the page numbers in this section refer to this document. The revision noted in this section refer to the document revision. 34.1 Changes from 7679G - 03/08 to 7679H - 08/08 1. Minor corrections throughout the document. 34.2 Changes from 7679F - 11/07 to 7679G - 03/08 1. Added errata problem 8 on 416. 34.3 Changes from 7679E - 07/07 to 7679F - 11/07 1. Updated "Errata" on page 416. 2. Updated "Bit 0 - SMP: Sample Point(s)" on page 259 in Section "CAN Register Description" 34.4 Changes from 7679D - 02/07 to 7679E - 07/07 1. More details on CANSTMOB register. Section 19.11.1 on page 261. 2. Update to Ordering information, product marking. Section 32. on page 412. 34.5 Changes from 7679C - 01/07 to 7679D - 02/07 1. Modified DC Characteristics - Icc Active & Idle modes. Section 26.2 on page 366. 2. Removed "SPI programming timing" errata and replaced by the note in the 4th step of "SPI Serial Programming" on page 349. 3. Updated "Bit 1 - ENA/STB: Enable / Standby Mode" on page 252 in Section "CAN Register Description" 4. Updated POR characteristics in Table 7-1 on page 52. 5. Updated "Phase Correct PWM Mode" on page 153. 6. Updated SPI Features . Section 16.1 on page 168. 7. Updated "Errata" on page 416. 34.6 Changes from 7679B - 11/06 to 7679C - 01/07 1. Modified QFN64 package drawing. Section 32.2 on page 414 and Section 32. on page 412. 34.7 Changes from 7679A - 10/06 to 7679B - 11/06 1. CAN Sampling point position when the prescaler is bypassed in Section 19.4.3 "Baud Rate" on page 242 and update of Table 19-2 on page 267. 34.8 Document Creation 1. 7679A - 10/06 420 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 Features ..................................................................................................... 1 1 Description ............................................................................................... 2 1.1 Comparison Between AT90CAN32, AT90CAN64 and AT90CAN128 ................2 1.2 Part Description ..................................................................................................2 1.3 Disclaimer ...........................................................................................................3 1.4 Block Diagram ....................................................................................................4 1.5 Pin Configurations ..............................................................................................5 1.6 Pin Descriptions ..................................................................................................6 2 About Code Examples ............................................................................. 8 3 AVR CPU Core .......................................................................................... 9 4 5 3.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................9 3.2 Architectural Overview ........................................................................................9 3.3 ALU - Arithmetic Logic Unit ..............................................................................10 3.4 Status Register .................................................................................................11 3.5 General Purpose Register File .........................................................................12 3.6 Stack Pointer ....................................................................................................14 3.7 Instruction Execution Timing .............................................................................14 3.8 Reset and Interrupt Handling ............................................................................15 Memories ................................................................................................ 18 4.1 In-System Reprogrammable Flash Program Memory ......................................18 4.2 SRAM Data Memory .........................................................................................19 4.3 EEPROM Data Memory ....................................................................................22 4.4 I/O Memory .......................................................................................................27 4.5 External Memory Interface ................................................................................27 4.6 General Purpose I/O Registers .........................................................................36 System Clock ......................................................................................... 37 5.1 Clock Systems and their Distribution ................................................................37 5.2 Clock Sources ...................................................................................................38 5.3 Default Clock Source ........................................................................................38 5.4 Crystal Oscillator ...............................................................................................39 5.5 Low-frequency Crystal Oscillator ......................................................................40 5.6 Calibrated Internal RC Oscillator ......................................................................41 5.7 External Clock ...................................................................................................42 5.8 Clock Output Buffer ..........................................................................................43 421 7679H-CAN-08/08 6 7 8 9 5.9 Timer/Counter2 Oscillator .................................................................................43 5.10 System Clock Prescaler ....................................................................................44 Power Management and Sleep Modes ................................................. 46 6.1 Idle Mode ..........................................................................................................47 6.2 ADC Noise Reduction Mode .............................................................................47 6.3 Power-down Mode ............................................................................................47 6.4 Power-save Mode .............................................................................................47 6.5 Standby Mode ...................................................................................................48 6.6 Minimizing Power Consumption .......................................................................48 System Control and Reset .................................................................... 51 7.1 Reset ................................................................................................................51 7.2 Internal Voltage Reference ...............................................................................56 7.3 Watchdog Timer ...............................................................................................57 7.4 Timed Sequences for Changing the Configuration of the Watchdog Timer .....59 Interrupts ................................................................................................ 60 8.1 Interrupt Vectors in AT90CAN32/64/128 ..........................................................60 8.2 Moving Interrupts Between Application and Boot Space ..................................64 I/O-Ports .................................................................................................. 66 9.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................66 9.2 Ports as General Digital I/O ..............................................................................67 9.3 Alternate Port Functions ...................................................................................71 9.4 Register Description for I/O-Ports .....................................................................89 10 External Interrupts ................................................................................. 93 10.1 External Interrupt Register Description .............................................................93 11 Timer/Counter3/1/0 Prescalers ............................................................. 96 11.1 Overview ...........................................................................................................96 11.2 Timer/Counter0/1/3 Prescalers Register Description .......................................98 12 8-bit Timer/Counter0 with PWM ............................................................ 99 422 12.1 Features ............................................................................................................99 12.2 Overview ...........................................................................................................99 12.3 Timer/Counter Clock Sources .........................................................................100 12.4 Counter Unit ....................................................................................................100 12.5 Output Compare Unit ......................................................................................101 12.6 Compare Match Output Unit ...........................................................................103 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 12.7 Modes of Operation ........................................................................................104 12.8 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams .....................................................................108 12.9 8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description .......................................................109 13 16-bit Timer/Counter (Timer/Counter1 and Timer/Counter3) ........... 113 13.1 Features ..........................................................................................................113 13.2 Overview .........................................................................................................113 13.3 Accessing 16-bit Registers .............................................................................116 13.4 Timer/Counter Clock Sources .........................................................................119 13.5 Counter Unit ....................................................................................................120 13.6 Input Capture Unit ...........................................................................................121 13.7 Output Compare Units ....................................................................................123 13.8 Compare Match Output Unit ...........................................................................125 13.9 Modes of Operation ........................................................................................126 13.10 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams .....................................................................134 13.11 16-bit Timer/Counter Register Description .....................................................135 14 8-bit Timer/Counter2 with PWM and Asynchronous Operation ...... 145 14.1 Features ..........................................................................................................145 14.2 Overview .........................................................................................................145 14.3 Timer/Counter Clock Sources .........................................................................147 14.4 Counter Unit ....................................................................................................147 14.5 Output Compare Unit ......................................................................................148 14.6 Compare Match Output Unit ...........................................................................149 14.7 Modes of Operation ........................................................................................150 14.8 Timer/Counter Timing Diagrams .....................................................................155 14.9 8-bit Timer/Counter Register Description .......................................................157 14.10 Asynchronous operation of the Timer/Counter2 .............................................160 14.11 Timer/Counter2 Prescaler ...............................................................................163 15 Output Compare Modulator - OCM ..................................................... 165 15.1 Overview .........................................................................................................165 15.2 Description ......................................................................................................165 16 Serial Peripheral Interface - SPI ......................................................... 168 16.1 Features ..........................................................................................................168 16.2 SS Pin Functionality ........................................................................................172 16.3 Data Modes ....................................................................................................175 423 7679H-CAN-08/08 17 USART (USART0 and USART1) .......................................................... 177 17.1 Features ..........................................................................................................177 17.2 Overview .........................................................................................................177 17.3 Dual USART ...................................................................................................177 17.4 Clock Generation ............................................................................................179 17.5 Serial Frame ...................................................................................................181 17.6 USART Initialization ........................................................................................182 17.7 Data Transmission - USART Transmitter ......................................................183 17.8 Data Reception - USART Receiver ................................................................186 17.9 Asynchronous Data Reception .......................................................................190 17.10 Multi-processor Communication Mode ...........................................................193 17.11 USART Register Description ..........................................................................195 17.12 Examples of Baud Rate Setting ......................................................................200 18 Two-wire Serial Interface ..................................................................... 204 18.1 Features ..........................................................................................................204 18.2 Two-wire Serial Interface Bus Definition .........................................................204 18.3 Data Transfer and Frame Format ...................................................................205 18.4 Multi-master Bus Systems, Arbitration and Synchronization ..........................207 18.5 Overview of the TWI Module ..........................................................................209 18.6 TWI Register Description ................................................................................212 18.7 Using the TWI .................................................................................................215 18.8 Transmission Modes .......................................................................................218 18.9 Multi-master Systems and Arbitration .............................................................232 19 Controller Area Network - CAN ........................................................... 234 19.1 Features ..........................................................................................................234 19.2 CAN Protocol ..................................................................................................234 19.3 CAN Controller ................................................................................................240 19.4 CAN Channel ..................................................................................................241 19.5 Message Objects ............................................................................................243 19.6 CAN Timer ......................................................................................................247 19.7 Error Management ..........................................................................................248 19.8 Interrupts .........................................................................................................249 19.9 CAN Register Description ...............................................................................251 19.10 General CAN Registers ..................................................................................252 19.11 MOb Registers ................................................................................................261 424 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 19.12 Examples of CAN Baud Rate Setting .............................................................266 20 Analog Comparator ............................................................................. 269 20.1 Overview .........................................................................................................269 20.2 Analog Comparator Register Description .......................................................269 20.3 Analog Comparator Multiplexed Input ............................................................271 21 Analog to Digital Converter - ADC ..................................................... 273 21.1 Features ..........................................................................................................273 21.2 Operation ........................................................................................................274 21.3 Starting a Conversion .....................................................................................275 21.4 Prescaling and Conversion Timing .................................................................276 21.5 Changing Channel or Reference Selection ....................................................279 21.6 ADC Noise Canceler .......................................................................................280 21.7 ADC Conversion Result ..................................................................................284 21.8 ADC Register Description ...............................................................................287 22 JTAG Interface and On-chip Debug System ..................................... 293 22.1 Features ..........................................................................................................293 22.2 Overview .........................................................................................................293 22.3 Test Access Port - TAP ..................................................................................293 22.4 TAP Controller ................................................................................................296 22.5 Using the Boundary-scan Chain .....................................................................297 22.6 Using the On-chip Debug System ..................................................................297 22.7 On-chip Debug Specific JTAG Instructions ....................................................298 22.8 On-chip Debug Related Register in I/O Memory ............................................299 22.9 Using the JTAG Programming Capabilities ....................................................299 22.10 Bibliography ....................................................................................................299 23 Boundary-scan IEEE 1149.1 (JTAG) ................................................... 300 23.1 Features ..........................................................................................................300 23.2 System Overview ............................................................................................300 23.3 Data Registers ................................................................................................300 23.4 Boundary-scan Specific JTAG Instructions ....................................................302 23.5 Boundary-scan Related Register in I/O Memory ............................................304 23.6 Boundary-scan Chain .....................................................................................304 23.7 AT90CAN32/64/128 Boundary-scan Order ....................................................314 23.8 Boundary-scan Description Language Files ...................................................320 425 7679H-CAN-08/08 24 Boot Loader Support - Read-While-Write Self-Programming ......... 321 24.1 Features ..........................................................................................................321 24.2 Application and Boot Loader Flash Sections ..................................................321 24.3 Read-While-Write and No Read-While-Write Flash Sections .........................321 24.4 Boot Loader Lock Bits .....................................................................................324 24.5 Entering the Boot Loader Program .................................................................325 24.6 Addressing the Flash During Self-Programming ............................................327 24.7 Self-Programming the Flash ...........................................................................328 25 Memory Programming ......................................................................... 336 25.1 Program and Data Memory Lock Bits .............................................................336 25.2 Fuse Bits .........................................................................................................337 25.3 Signature Bytes ..............................................................................................339 25.4 Calibration Byte ..............................................................................................339 25.5 Parallel Programming Overview .....................................................................339 25.6 Parallel Programming .....................................................................................342 25.7 SPI Serial Programming Overview .................................................................348 25.8 SPI Serial Programming .................................................................................349 25.9 JTAG Programming Overview ........................................................................352 26 Electrical Characteristics (1) ............................................................................................... 365 26.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings* ...........................................................................365 26.2 DC Characteristics ..........................................................................................366 26.3 External Clock Drive Characteristics ..............................................................367 26.4 Maximum Speed vs. VCC ...............................................................................368 26.5 Two-wire Serial Interface Characteristics .......................................................369 26.6 SPI Timing Characteristics .............................................................................370 26.7 CAN Physical Layer Characteristics ...............................................................372 26.8 ADC Characteristics .......................................................................................373 26.9 External Data Memory Characteristics ...........................................................375 26.10 Parallel Programming Characteristics ............................................................380 27 Decoupling Capacitors ........................................................................ 383 28 AT90CAN32/64/128 Typical Characteristics ...................................... 384 426 28.1 Active Supply Current .....................................................................................384 28.2 Idle Supply Current .........................................................................................387 28.3 Power-down Supply Current ...........................................................................389 28.4 Power-save Supply Current ............................................................................390 AT90CAN32/64/128 7679H-CAN-08/08 AT90CAN32/64/128 28.5 Standby Supply Current ..................................................................................391 28.6 Pin Pull-up ......................................................................................................391 28.7 Pin Driver Strength .........................................................................................393 28.8 Pin Thresholds and Hysteresis .......................................................................395 28.9 BOD Thresholds and Analog Comparator Offset ...........................................397 28.10 Internal Oscillator Speed ................................................................................399 28.11 Current Consumption of Peripheral Units .......................................................401 28.12 Current Consumption in Reset and Reset Pulse Width ..................................403 29 Register Summary ............................................................................... 405 30 Instruction Set Summary .................................................................... 409 31 Ordering Information ........................................................................... 412 32 Packaging Information ........................................................................ 412 32.1 TQFP64 ..........................................................................................................413 32.2 QFN64 ............................................................................................................414 33 Errata ..................................................................................................... 416 33.1 Errata Summary ..............................................................................................416 33.2 Errata Description ...........................................................................................416 34 Datasheet Revision History for AT90CAN32/64/128 ......................... 420 34.1 Changes from 7679G - 03/08 to 7679H - 08/08 .............................................420 34.2 Changes from 7679F - 11/07 to 7679G - 03/08 ..............................................420 34.3 Changes from 7679E - 07/07 to 7679F - 11/07 ..............................................420 34.4 Changes from 7679D - 02/07 to 7679E - 07/07 ..............................................420 34.5 Changes from 7679C - 01/07 to 7679D - 02/07 ..............................................420 34.6 Changes from 7679B - 11/06 to 7679C - 01/07 ..............................................420 34.7 Changes from 7679A - 10/06 to 7679B - 11/06 ..............................................420 34.8 Document Creation .........................................................................................420 427 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