Epson S1C33L03 Laptop User Manual


 
II CORE BLOCK: BCU (Bus Control Unit)
S1C33L03 FUNCTION PART EPSON B-II-4-13
A-1
B-II
BCU
Bus Operation
Data Arrangement in Memory
The S1C33 Family of devices handle data in bytes (8 bits), half-words (16 bits), and words (32 bits). When
accessing data in memory, it is necessary to specify a boundary address that conforms to the data size involved.
Specification of an invalid address causes an address error exception. For instructions (e.g., stack manipulation or
branch instructions) that rewrite the SP (stack pointer) or PC (program counter), the specified addresses are
forcibly modified to appropriate boundary addresses. Therefore, no address error exception occurs in this type of
instruction. For details about the address error exception, refer to the "S1C33000 Core CPU Manual".
Table 4.12 shows the data arrangement in memory, classified by data type.
Table 4.12 Data Arrangement in Memory
Data type Arranged location
Byte data Byte boundary address (all addresses)
Half-word data Half-word boundary address (A[0]="0")
Word data Word boundary address (A[1:0]="00")
The half-word and word data in memory area accessed in little-endian format by default. It can be changed to big-
endian format using AxxEC (D[7:0])/Access control register (0x48132). When "1" is written to AxxEC, the
corresponding area is accessed in big-endian method. The bit names and the corresponding areas are as follows:
A18EC (D7): Areas 17 and 18
A16EC (D6): Areas 15 and 16
A14EC (D5): Areas 13 and 14
A12EC (D4): Areas 11 and 12
A10EC (D3): Areas 9 and 10 ... Fixed at "0" (little-endian) for booting.
A8EC (D2):Areas 7 and 8
A6EC (D1):Area 6
A5EC (D0):Areas 4 and 5
To increase memory efficiency, try to locate the same type of data at continuous locations on exact boundary
addresses in order to minimize invalid areas.
Bus Operation of External Memory
The external data bus is 16-bits wide. For this reason, more than one bus operation occurs depending on the device
size and the data size of the instruction executed, as shown in Table 4.13.
Table 4.13 Number of Bus Operation Cycles
Data size to
be accessed
Devise
size
Number of bus
operation cycles
Remarks
32 bits 16 bits 2
16 bits 16 bits 1
8 bits 16 bits 1 In little-endian method, the low-order byte is accessed when the LSB of the
address (A[0]) is "0" or the #BSL signal is L. The high-order byte is accessed
when the LSB of the address (A[0]) is "1" or the #BSH signal is H.
In big-endian method, the high-order byte is accessed when the LSB of the
address (A[0]) is "0" or the #BSL signal is L. The low-order byte is accessed
when the LSB of the address (A[0]) is "1" or the #BSH signal is H.
32 bits 8 bits 4 In little-endian method, the 8-bit device must be connected to the low-order 8
bits of the data bus. In big-endian method, the 8-bit device must be connected
to the high-order 8 bits of the data bus.
16 bits 8 bits 2 In little-endian method, the 8-bit device must be connected to the low-order 8
bits of the data bus. In big-endian method, the 8-bit device must be
connected to the high-order 8 bits of the data bus.
8 bits 8 bits 1 In little-endian method, the 8-bit device must be connected to the low-order 8
bits of the data bus. In big-endian method, the 8-bit device must be
connected to the high-order 8 bits of the data bus.
These bus operations are shown in the figure below, taking the example of the A0 method.
With the BSL method, the following adjustments should be made when reading the figure.
(1) For data reads, the operation is as shown in the figure below.
(2) For little-endian data writes, read A0 as #BSC, and #WRH as #BSH.
(3) For big-endian data writes, read A0 as #BSL, and #WRL as #BSH.