MC9S12XDT512CAA Freescale, MC9S12XDT512CAA Datasheet - Page 584

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MC9S12XDT512CAA

Manufacturer Part Number
MC9S12XDT512CAA
Description
Manufacturer
Freescale
Datasheet

Specifications of MC9S12XDT512CAA

Cpu Family
HCS12
Device Core Size
16b
Frequency (max)
40MHz
Interface Type
CAN/I2C/SCI/SPI
Total Internal Ram Size
32KB
# I/os (max)
59
Number Of Timers - General Purpose
12
Operating Supply Voltage (typ)
2.5/5V
Operating Supply Voltage (max)
2.75/5.5V
Operating Supply Voltage (min)
2.35/3.15V
On-chip Adc
8-chx10-bit
Instruction Set Architecture
CISC
Operating Temp Range
-40C to 85C
Operating Temperature Classification
Industrial
Mounting
Surface Mount
Pin Count
80
Package Type
PQFP
Program Memory Type
Flash
Program Memory Size
512KB
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Compliant

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Chapter 15 Background Debug Module (S12XBDMV2)
15.4.6
BDM Serial Interface
The BDM communicates with external devices serially via the BKGD pin. During reset, this pin is a mode
select input which selects between normal and special modes of operation. After reset, this pin becomes
the dedicated serial interface pin for the BDM.
The BDM serial interface is timed using the clock selected by the CLKSW bit in the status register see
Section 15.3.2.1, “BDM Status Register
(BDMSTS)”. This clock will be referred to as the target clock in
the following explanation.
The BDM serial interface uses a clocking scheme in which the external host generates a falling edge on
the BKGD pin to indicate the start of each bit time. This falling edge is sent for every bit whether data is
transmitted or received. Data is transferred most significant bit (MSB) first at 16 target clock cycles per
bit. The interface times out if 512 clock cycles occur between falling edges from the host.
The BKGD pin is a pseudo open-drain pin and has an weak on-chip active pull-up that is enabled at all
times. It is assumed that there is an external pull-up and that drivers connected to BKGD do not typically
drive the high level. Since R-C rise time could be unacceptably long, the target system and host provide
brief driven-high (speedup) pulses to drive BKGD to a logic 1. The source of this speedup pulse is the host
for transmit cases and the target for receive cases.
The timing for host-to-target is shown in
Figure 15-8
and that of target-to-host in
Figure 15-9
and
Figure
15-10. All four cases begin when the host drives the BKGD pin low to generate a falling edge. Since
the host and target are operating from separate clocks, it can take the target system up to one full clock
cycle to recognize this edge. The target measures delays from this perceived start of the bit time while the
host measures delays from the point it actually drove BKGD low to start the bit up to one target clock cycle
earlier. Synchronization between the host and target is established in this manner at the start of every bit
time.
Figure 15-8
shows an external host transmitting a logic 1 and transmitting a logic 0 to the BKGD pin of a
target system. The host is asynchronous to the target, so there is up to a one clock-cycle delay from the
host-generated falling edge to where the target recognizes this edge as the beginning of the bit time. Ten
target clock cycles later, the target senses the bit level on the BKGD pin. Internal glitch detect logic
requires the pin be driven high no later that eight target clock cycles after the falling edge for a logic 1
transmission.
Since the host drives the high speedup pulses in these two cases, the rising edges look like digitally driven
signals.
MC9S12XDP512 Data Sheet, Rev. 2.21
584
Freescale Semiconductor

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