SPRS727C August   2012  – April 2014 TMS320C5517

PRODUCTION DATA.  

  1. 1Device Overview
    1. 1.1 Features
    2. 1.2 Applications
    3. 1.3 Description
    4. 1.4 Functional Block Diagram
  2. 2Revision History
  3. 3Device Comparison
  4. 4Terminal Configuration and Functions
    1. 4.1 Pin Diagram
    2. 4.2 Signal Descriptions
      1. 4.2.1  Oscillator and PLL
      2. 4.2.2  Real-Time Clock (RTC)
      3. 4.2.3  RESET, Interrupts, and JTAG
      4. 4.2.4  External Memory Interface (EMIF)
      5. 4.2.5  Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C)
      6. 4.2.6  Inter-IC Sound (I2S)
      7. 4.2.7  Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP)
      8. 4.2.8  Multichannel Serial Port Interface (McSPI)
      9. 4.2.9  Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
      10. 4.2.10 Universal Asynchronous Receiver and Transmitter (UART)
      11. 4.2.11 Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0
      12. 4.2.12 Universal Host-Port Interface (UHPI)
      13. 4.2.13 MultiMedia Card (MMC)
      14. 4.2.14 Successive Approximation (SAR) Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC)
      15. 4.2.15 General-Purpose Input and Output (GPIO)
      16. 4.2.16 Regulators and Power Management
      17. 4.2.17 Supply Voltage
      18. 4.2.18 Ground
    3. 4.3 Pin Multiplexing
      1. 4.3.1 UHPI, SPI, UART, I2S2, I2S3, and GP[31:27, 20:12] Pin Multiplexing [EBSR.PPMODE Bits]
      2. 4.3.2 MMC1, McSPI, and GP[11:6] Pin Multiplexing [EBSR.SP1MODE Bits]
      3. 4.3.3 MMC0, I2S0, McBSP, and GP[5:0] Pin Multiplexing [EBSR.SP0MODE Bits]
      4. 4.3.4 EMIF EM_A[20:15] and GP[26:21] Pin Multiplexing [EBSR.Axx_MODE bits]
    4. 4.4 Connections for Unused Signals
  5. 5Specifications
    1. 5.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 5.2 Recommended Operating Conditions
    3. 5.3 Electrical Characteristics
      1. 5.3.1 Power Consumption
      2. 5.3.2 Electrical Characteristics
    4. 5.4 Handling Ratings
    5. 5.5 Thermal Characteristics
    6. 5.6 Power-On Hours
    7. 5.7 Timing and Switching Characteristics
      1. 5.7.1  Parameter Information
        1. 5.7.1.1 1.8-V, 2.75-V, and 3.3-V Signal Transition Levels
        2. 5.7.1.2 3.3-V Signal Transition Rates
        3. 5.7.1.3 Timing Parameters and Board Routing Analysis
      2. 5.7.2  Power Supplies
        1. 5.7.2.1 Power Considerations
          1. 5.7.2.1.1 LDO Configuration
            1. 5.7.2.1.1.1 LDO Inputs
            2. 5.7.2.1.1.2 LDO Outputs
              1. 5.7.2.1.1.2.1 LDO Control
        2. 5.7.2.2 Power-Supply Sequencing
        3. 5.7.2.3 Digital I/O Behavior When Core Power (CVDD) is Down
        4. 5.7.2.4 Power-Supply Design Considerations
        5. 5.7.2.5 Power-Supply Decoupling
        6. 5.7.2.6 LDO Input Decoupling
        7. 5.7.2.7 LDO Output Decoupling
      3. 5.7.3  Reset
        1. 5.7.3.1 Power-On Reset (POR) Circuits
          1. 5.7.3.1.1 RTC Power-On Reset (POR)
          2. 5.7.3.1.2 Main Power-On Reset (POR)
          3. 5.7.3.1.3 Reset Pin (RESET)
        2. 5.7.3.2 Pin Behavior at Reset
        3. 5.7.3.3 Reset Electrical Data and Timing
        4. 5.7.3.4 Configurations at Reset
          1. 5.7.3.4.1 Device and Peripheral Configurations at Device Reset
          2. 5.7.3.4.2 BootMode Implementation and Requirements
        5. 5.7.3.5 Configurations After Reset
          1. 5.7.3.5.1 External Bus Selection Register (EBSR)
          2. 5.7.3.5.2 LDO Control Register [7004h]
          3. 5.7.3.5.3 EMIF and USB System Control Registers (ESCR and USBSCR) [1C33h and 1C32h]
          4. 5.7.3.5.4 Peripheral Clock Gating Control Registers (PCGCR1 and PCGCR2) [1C02h and 1C03h]
          5. 5.7.3.5.5 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Registers (PUDINHIBR1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7) [1C17h, 1C18h, 1C19h, 1C4Ch, 1C4Dh, 1C4Fh, and 1C50h, respectively]
          6. 5.7.3.5.6 Output Slew Rate Control Register (OSRCR) [1C16h]
      4. 5.7.4  Clock Specifications
        1. 5.7.4.1 Recommended Clock and Control Signal Transition Behavior
        2. 5.7.4.2 Clock Considerations
          1. 5.7.4.2.1 Clock Configurations After Device Reset
            1. 5.7.4.2.1.1 Device Clock Frequency
            2. 5.7.4.2.1.2 Peripheral Clock State
            3. 5.7.4.2.1.3 USB Oscillator Control
        3. 5.7.4.3 PLLs
          1. 5.7.4.3.1 PLL Device-Specific Information
          2. 5.7.4.3.2 Clock PLL Considerations With External Clock Sources
          3. 5.7.4.3.3 External Clock Input From RTC_XI, CLKIN, and USB_MXI Pins
            1. 5.7.4.3.3.1 USB On-Chip Oscillator With External Crystal
            2. 5.7.4.3.3.2 Real-Time Clock (RTC) On-Chip Oscillator With External Crystal
            3. 5.7.4.3.3.3 CLKIN Pin With LVCMOS-Compatible Clock Input (Optional)
        4. 5.7.4.4 Input and Output Clocks Electrical Data and Timing
        5. 5.7.4.5 Wake-up Events, Interrupts, and XF
          1. 5.7.4.5.1 Interrupts Electrical Data and Timing
          2. 5.7.4.5.2 Wake-Up From IDLE Electrical Data and Timing
          3. 5.7.4.5.3 XF Electrical Data and Timing
      5. 5.7.5  Direct Memory Access (DMA) Controller
        1. 5.7.5.1 DMA Channel Synchronization Events
      6. 5.7.6  External Memory Interface (EMIF)
        1. 5.7.6.1 EMIF Asynchronous Memory Support
        2. 5.7.6.2 EMIF Non-Mobile and Mobile Synchronous DRAM Memory Supported
        3. 5.7.6.3 EMIF Electrical Data and Timing CVDD = 1.05 V, DVDDEMIF = 3.3/2.75/1.8 V
        4. 5.7.6.4 EMIF Electrical Data and Timing CVDD = 1.3/1.4 V, DVDDEMIF = 3.3/2.75/1.8 V
      7. 5.7.7  General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO)
        1. 5.7.7.1 GPIO Peripheral Input/Output Electrical Data and Timing
        2. 5.7.7.2 GPIO Peripheral Input Latency Electrical Data and Timing
      8. 5.7.8  Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C)
        1. 5.7.8.1 I2C Electrical Data and Timing
      9. 5.7.9  Inter-IC Sound (I2S)
        1. 5.7.9.1 Inter-IC Sound (I2S) Electrical Data and Timing
      10. 5.7.10 Multichannel Serial Port Interface (McSPI)
        1. 5.7.10.1 McSPI Electrical Data and Timing
          1. 5.7.10.1.1 McSPI in Slave Mode
          2. 5.7.10.1.2 McSPI in Master Mode
      11. 5.7.11 Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP)
        1. 5.7.11.1 McBSP Electrical Data and Timing
      12. 5.7.12 Multimedia Card and Secure Digital (eMMC, MMC, SD, and SDHC)
        1. 5.7.12.1 MMC and SD Electrical Data and Timing
      13. 5.7.13 Real-Time Clock (RTC)
        1. 5.7.13.1 RTC Electrical Data and Timing
      14. 5.7.14 SAR ADC (10-Bit)
        1. 5.7.14.1 SAR ADC Electrical Data and Timing
      15. 5.7.15 Serial Port Interface (SPI)
        1. 5.7.15.1 SPI Electrical Data and Timing
      16. 5.7.16 Timers
      17. 5.7.17 Universal Asynchronous Receiver and Transmitter (UART)
        1. 5.7.17.1 UART Electrical Data and Timing [Receive and Transmit]
      18. 5.7.18 Universal Host-Port Interface (UHPI)
        1. 5.7.18.1 UHPI Electrical Data and Timing
      19. 5.7.19 Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0 Controller
        1. 5.7.19.1 USB 2.0 Electrical Data and Timing
      20. 5.7.20 Emulation and Debug
        1. 5.7.20.1 Debugging Considerations
          1. 5.7.20.1.1 Pullup and Pulldown Resistors
          2. 5.7.20.1.2 Bus Holders
          3. 5.7.20.1.3 CLKOUT Pin
      21. 5.7.21 IEEE 1149.1 JTAG
        1. 5.7.21.1 JTAG Test_port Electrical Data and Timing
  6. 6Detailed Description
    1. 6.1 CPU
    2. 6.2 Memory
      1. 6.2.1 Internal Memory
        1. 6.2.1.1 On-Chip Dual-Access RAM (DARAM)
        2. 6.2.1.2 On-Chip Single-Access RAM (SARAM)
        3. 6.2.1.3 On-Chip Read-Only Memory (ROM)
        4. 6.2.1.4 I/O Memory
      2. 6.2.2 External Memory
      3. 6.2.3 Memory Map
      4. 6.2.4 Register Map
        1. 6.2.4.1  DMA Peripheral Register Description
        2. 6.2.4.2  EMIF Peripheral Register Description
        3. 6.2.4.3  GPIO Peripheral Register Description
        4. 6.2.4.4  I2C Peripheral Register Description
        5. 6.2.4.5  I2S Peripheral Register Description
        6. 6.2.4.6  McBSP Peripheral Register Descriptions
        7. 6.2.4.7  McSPI Peripheral Register Descriptions
        8. 6.2.4.8  MMC and SD Peripheral Register Description
        9. 6.2.4.9  RTC Peripheral Register Description
        10. 6.2.4.10 SAR ADC Peripheral Register Description
        11. 6.2.4.11 SPI Peripheral Register Descriptions
        12. 6.2.4.12 System Registers
        13. 6.2.4.13 Timers Peripheral Register Description
        14. 6.2.4.14 UART Peripheral Register Description
        15. 6.2.4.15 UHPI Peripheral Register Descriptions
        16. 6.2.4.16 USB2.0 Peripheral Register Descriptions
    3. 6.3 Identification
      1. 6.3.1 JTAG Identification
    4. 6.4 Boot Modes
      1. 6.4.1 Invocation Sequence
      2. 6.4.2 DSP Resources Used By the Bootloader
  7. 7Device and Documentation Support
    1. 7.1 Device Support
      1. 7.1.1 Development Support
      2. 7.1.2 Device Nomenclature
    2. 7.2 Documentation Support
      1. 7.2.1 Related Documentation
    3. 7.3 Community Resources
    4. 7.4 Trademarks
    5. 7.5 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    6. 7.6 Glossary
  8. 8Mechanical Packaging and Orderable Information

Package Options

Refer to the PDF data sheet for device specific package drawings

Mechanical Data (Package|Pins)
  • ZCH|196
Thermal pad, mechanical data (Package|Pins)
Orderable Information

6 Detailed Description

6.1 CPU

This fixed-point digital signal processor (DSP) is based on the C55x CPU 3.3 generation processor core. The C55x DSP architecture achieves high performance and low power through increased parallelism and total focus on power savings. The CPU supports an internal bus structure that is composed of one program bus, three data read buses (one 32-bit data read bus and two 16-bit data read buses), two 16-bit data write buses, and additional buses dedicated to peripheral and DMA activity. These buses provide the ability to perform up to four data reads and two data writes in a single cycle. Each DMA controller can perform one 32-bit data transfer per cycle, in parallel and independent of the CPU activity.

The C55x CPU provides two multiply-accumulate (MAC) units, each capable of 17-bit x 17-bit multiplication in a single cycle. A central 40-bit arithmetic and logic unit (ALU) is supported by an additional 16-bit ALU. Use of the ALUs is under instruction set control, providing the ability to optimize parallel activity and power consumption. These resources are managed in the Address Unit (AU) and Data Unit (DU) of the C55x CPU.

The C55x DSP generation supports a variable byte width instruction set for improved code density. The Instruction Unit (IU) performs 32-bit program fetches from internal or external memory, stores them in a 128-byte Instruction Buffer Queue, and queues instructions for the Program Unit (PU). The Program Unit decodes the instructions, directs tasks to AU and DU resources, and manages the fully protected pipeline. Predictive branching capability avoids pipeline flushes on execution of conditional instruction calls.

For more detailed information on the CPU, see the C55x CPU 3.0 CPU Reference Guide [literature number SWPU073].

The C55x core of the device can address 16M bytes of unified data and program space. The core also addresses 64K words of I/O space and includes three types of on-chip memory: 128 KB read-only memory (ROM), 256 KB single-access random access memory (SARAM), 64 KB dual-access random access memory (DARAM). The memory map is shown in Figure 6-1.

6.2 Memory

6.2.1 Internal Memory

6.2.1.1 On-Chip Dual-Access RAM (DARAM)

The DARAM is located in the byte address range 000000h - 00FFFFh and is composed of eight blocks of 4K words each (see Table 6-1). Each DARAM block can support two accesses per cycle (two reads, two writes, or a read and a write). The DARAM can be accessed by the internal program, data, or DMA buses.

Table 6-1 DARAM Blocks

CPU
BYTE ADDRESS RANGE
DMA CONTROLLER
BYTE ADDRESS RANGE
MEMORY BLOCK
000000h – 001FFFh 0001 0000h – 0001 1FFFh DARAM 0(1)
002000h – 003FFFh 0001 2000h – 0001 3FFFh DARAM 1
004000h – 005FFFh 0001 4000h – 0001 5FFFh DARAM 2
006000h – 007FFFh 0001 6000h – 0001 7FFFh DARAM 3
008000h – 009FFFh 0001 8000h – 0001 9FFFh DARAM 4
00A000h – 00BFFFh 0001 A000h – 0001 BFFFh DARAM 5
00C000h – 00DFFFh 0001 C000h – 0001 DFFFh DARAM 6
00E000h – 00FFFFh 0001 E000h – 0001 FFFFh DARAM 7
(1) The first 192 bytes are reserved for memory-mapped registers (MMRs). See Figure 6-1, Memory Map Summary.

6.2.1.2 On-Chip Single-Access RAM (SARAM)

The SARAM is located at the byte address range 010000h – 04FFFFh and is composed of 32 blocks of 4K words each (see Table 6-2). Each SARAM block can support one access per cycle (one read or one write). SARAM can be accessed by the internal program, data, or DMA buses. SARAM is also accessed by the USB DMA buses.

Table 6-2 SARAM Blocks

CPU
BYTE ADDRESS RANGE
DMA and USB CONTROLLER
BYTE ADDRESS RANGE
MEMORY BLOCK
010000h - 011FFFh 0009 0000h – 0009 1FFFh SARAM 0
012000h - 013FFFh 0009 2000h – 0009 3FFFh SARAM 1
014000h - 015FFFh 0009 4000h – 0009 5FFFh SARAM 2
016000h - 017FFFh 0009 6000h – 0009 7FFFh SARAM 3
018000h - 019FFFh 0009 8000h – 0009 9FFFh SARAM 4
01A000h - 01BFFFh 0009 A000h – 0009 BFFFh SARAM 5
01C000h - 01DFFFh 0009 C000h – 0009 DFFFh SARAM 6
01E000h - 01FFFFh 0009 E000h – 0009 FFFFh SARAM 7
020000h - 021FFFh 000A 0000h – 000A 1FFFh SARAM 8
022000h - 023FFFh 000A 2000h – 000A 3FFFh SARAM 9
024000h - 025FFFh 000A 4000h – 000A 5FFFh SARAM 10
026000h - 027FFFh 000A 6000h – 000A 7FFFh SARAM 11
028000h - 029FFFh 000A 8000h – 000A 9FFFh SARAM 12
02A000h - 02BFFFh 000A A000h – 000A BFFFh SARAM 13
02C000h - 02DFFFh 000A C000h – 000A DFFFh SARAM 14
02E000h - 02FFFFh 000A E000h – 000A FFFFh SARAM 15
030000h - 031FFFh 000B 0000h – 000B 1FFFh SARAM 16
032000h - 033FFFh 000B 2000h – 000B 3FFFh SARAM 17
034000h - 035FFFh 000B 4000h – 000B 5FFFh SARAM 18
036000h - 037FFFh 000B 6000h – 000B 7FFFh SARAM 19
038000h - 039FFFh 000B 8000h – 000B 9FFFh SARAM 20
03A000h - 03BFFFh 000B A000h – 000B BFFFh SARAM 21
03C000h - 03DFFFh 000B C000h – 000B DFFFh SARAM 22
03E000h - 03FFFFh 000B E000h – 000B FFFFh SARAM 23
040000h – 041FFFh 000C 0000h – 000C 1FFFh SARAM 24
042000h – 043FFFh 000C 2000h – 000C 3FFFh SARAM 25
044000h – 045FFFh 000C 4000h – 000C 5FFFh SARAM 26
046000h – 047FFFh 000C 6000h – 000C 7FFFh SARAM 27
048000h – 049FFFh 000C 8000h – 000C 9FFFh SARAM 28
04A000h – 04BFFFh 000C A000h – 000C BFFFh SARAM 29
04C000h – 04DFFFh 000C C000h – 000C DFFFh SARAM 30
04E000h – 04FFFFh 000C E000h – 000C FFFFh SARAM 31(1)
(1) SARAM31 (byte address range: 0x4E000 – 0x4EFFF) is reserved for the bootloader. After the boot process is complete, this memory space can be used.

6.2.1.3 On-Chip Read-Only Memory (ROM)

The zero-wait-state ROM is located at the byte address range FE0000h – FFFFFFh. The ROM is composed of four 16K-word blocks, for a total of 128K bytes of ROM. Each on-chip ROM block can support one read per cycle. The ROM address space can be mapped by software to the EMIF external memory or to the internal ROM.

The standard device includes a Bootloader program resident in the ROM.

When the MPNMC bit field of the ST3 status register is cleared (by default), the byte address range FE0000h – FFFFFFh is used for the on-chip ROM. When the MPNMC bit field of the ST3 status register is set through software, the on-chip ROM is disabled and not present in the memory map, and byte address range FE0000h – FFFFFFh is directed to the EMIF's external memory space on EM_CS5. A hardware reset always clears the MPNMC bit, so it is not possible to disable the ROM at reset. However, the software reset instruction does not affect the MPNMC bit. The ROM can be accessed by the CPU program and data buses.

6.2.1.4 I/O Memory

The device includes a 64K byte I/O space for the memory-mapped registers of the DSP peripherals and system registers used for idle control, status monitoring and system configuration. I/O space is separate from program and memory space and is accessed with separate instruction opcodes or via the DMA's.

Table 6-3 lists the memory-mapped registers of the device. Note that not all addresses in the 64K byte I/O space are used; these addresses should be treated as RESERVED and not accessed by the CPU nor DMA. For the expanded tables of each peripheral, see Section 6.2.4, Register Map.

Some of the DMA controllers have access to the I/O-Space memory-mapped registers of the following peripherals registers: I2C, UART, I2S, MMC and SD, EMIF, McBSP, McSPI, USB, and SAR ADC.

Before accessing any peripheral memory-mapped register, make sure the peripheral being accessed is not held in reset via the Peripheral Reset Control Register (PRCR) and its internal clock is enabled via the Peripheral Clock Gating Control Registers (PCGCR1 and PCGCR2).

Table 6-3 Peripheral I/O-Space Control Registers

WORD ADDRESS PERIPHERAL
0x0000 – 0x0004 Idle Control
0x0005 – 0x0BFF Reserved
0x0C00 – 0x0C7F DMA0
0x0C80 – 0x0CFF Reserved
0x0D00 – 0x0D7F DMA1
0x0D80 – 0x0DFF Reserved
0x0E00 – 0x0E7F DMA2
0x0E80 – 0x0EFF Reserved
0x0F00 – 0x0F7F DMA3
0x0F80 – 0x0FFF Reserved
0x1000 – 0x10DD EMIF
0x10DE – 0x17FF Reserved
0x1800 – 0x181F Timer0
0x1820 – 0x183F Reserved
0x1840 – 0x185F Timer1
0x1860 – 0x187F Reserved
0x1880 – 0x189F Timer2
0x18A0 – 0x18FF Reserved
0x1900 – 0x197F RTC
0x1980 – 0x19FF Reserved
0x1A00 – 0x1A6C I2C
0x1A6D – 0x1AFF Reserved
0x1B00 – 0x1B1F UART
0x1B20 – 0x1BFF Reserved
0x1C00 – 0x1CFF System Control
0x1D00 – 0x1FFF through 0x2600 – 0x27FF Reserved
0x2800 – 0x2840 I2S0
0x2841 – 0x29FF Reserved
0x2A00 – 0x2A40 I2S2
0x2A41 – 0x2AFF Reserved
0x2B00 – 0x2B40 I2S3
0x2B41 – 0x2DFF Reserved
0x2E00 – 0x2E81 UHPI
0x2E82 – 0x2FFF Reserved
0x3000 – 0x300F SPI
0x3010 – 0x33FF Reserved
0x3400 – 0x3749 McSPI
0x3750 –0x39FF Reserved
0x3A00 – 0x3A7F MMC0 and SD0
0x3A80 – 0x3AFF Reserved
0x3B00 – 0x3B7F MMC1 and SD1
0x3B80 – 0x3FFF Reserved
0x4000 – 0x407F McBSP
0x4080 – 0x5FFF Reserved
0x6000 – 0x60FF McBSP DMA
0x6100 – 0x6FFF Reserved
0x7000 – 0x70FF SAR and Analog Control Registers
0x7100 – 0x7FFF Reserved
0x8000 – 0xFFFF USB

6.2.2 External Memory

The external memory space of the device is located at the byte address range 050000h – FFFFFFh. The external memory space is divided into five chip select spaces: one dedicated to SDRAM and mobile SDRAM (EMIF CS0 or CS[1:0] space), and the remainder (EMIF CS2 through CS5 space) dedicated to asynchronous devices including flash. Each chip select space has a corresponding chip select pin (called EM_CSx) that is activated during an access to the chip select space.

The external memory interface (EMIF) provides the means for the DSP to access external memories and other devices including: mobile single data rate (SDR) synchronous dynamic RAM (SDRAM and mSDRAM), NOR Flash, NAND Flash, and asynchronous static RAM (SRAM). Before accessing external memory, you must configure the EMIF through its memory-mapped registers.

The EMIF provides a configurable 16- or 8-bit data bus, an address bus width of up to 21-bits, and 5 dedicated chip selects, along with memory control signals. To maximize power savings, the I/O pins of the EMIF can be operated at an independent voltage from the other I/O pins on the device.

6.2.3 Memory Map

The device provides 16M bytes of total memory space composed of on-chip RAM, on-chip ROM, and external memory space supporting a variety of memory types. The on-chip, dual-access RAM allows two accesses to a given block during the same cycle. There are 8 blocks of 8K bytes of dual-access RAM. The on-chip, single-access RAM allows one access to a given block per cycle. In addition, there are 32 blocks of 8K bytes of single-access RAM.

The remainder of the memory map is divided into five external spaces, and on-chip ROM. Each external space has a chip select decode signal (called EM_CS0, EM_CS[2:5]) that indicates an access to the selected space. The external memory interface (EMIF) supports access to asynchronous memories such as SRAM, NAND, or NOR and Flash, and mobile single data rate (mSDR) and single data rate (SDR) SDRAM.

The DSP memory is accessible by different master modules within the DSP, including the C55x CPU, the four DMA controllers, the UHPI, and the CDMA of USB (see Figure 6-1). However, only the UHPI and USB CDMA can access the SARAM.

memmapsum_prs727.gif
A. Address shown represents the first byte address in each block.
B. The first 192 bytes are reserved for memory-mapped registers (MMRs).
C. Out of the four DMA controllers, only DMA controller 3 has access to the external memory space.
D. The USB controller and UHPI do not have access to DARAM.
E. The CS0 space can be accessed by CS0 only or by CS0 and CS1.
Figure 6-1 Memory Map

6.2.4 Register Map

6.2.4.1 DMA Peripheral Register Description

The following tables show the registers associated with the four direct memory access (DMA) controllers.

Table 6-4 System Registers Related to the DMA Controllers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1C30h DMAIFR DMA Interrupt Flag Register
1C31h DMAIER DMA Interrupt Enable Register
1C1Ah DMA0CESRL DMA0 Channel Event Source Register Lower
1C1Bh DMA0CESRU DMA0 Channel Event Source Register Upper
1C1Ch DMA1CESRL DMA1 Channel Event Source Register Lower
1C1Dh DMA1CESRU DMA1 Channel Event Source Register Upper
1C36h DMA2CESRL DMA2 Channel Event Source Register Lower
1C37h DMA2CESRU DMA2 Channel Event Source Register Upper
1C38h DMA3CESRL DMA3 Channel Event Source Register Lower
1C39h DMA3CESRU DMA3 Channel Event Source Register Upper

Table 6-5 DMA Controller 0 (DMA0) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
0C00h DMACH0SSAL Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Lower
0C01h DMACH0SSAU Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Upper
0C02h DMACH0DSAL Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0C03h DMACH0DSAU Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0C04h DMACH0TCRL Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Lower
0C05h DMACH0TCRU Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Upper
0C20h DMACH1SSAL Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Lower
0C21h DMACH1SSAU Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Upper
0C22h DMACH1DSAL Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0C23h DMACH1DSAU Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0C24h DMACH1TCRL Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Lower
0C25h DMACH1TCRU Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Upper
0C40h DMACH2SSAL Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Lower
0C41h DMACH2SSAU Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Upper
0C42h DMACH2DSAL Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0C43h DMACH2DSAU Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0C44h DMACH2TCRL Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Lower
0C45h DMACH2TCRU Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Upper
0C60h DMACH3SSAL Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Lower
0C61h DMACH3SSAU Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Upper
0C62h DMACH3DSAL Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0C63h DMACH3DSAU Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0C64h DMACH3TCRL Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Lower
0C65h DMACH3TCRU Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Upper

Table 6-6 DMA Controller 1 (DMA1) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
0D00h DMACH0SSAL Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Lower
0D01h DMACH0SSAU Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Upper
0D02h DMACH0DSAL Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0D03h DMACH0DSAU Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0D04h DMACH0TCRL Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Lower
0D05h DMACH0TCRU Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Upper
0D20h DMACH1SSAL Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Lower
0D21h DMACH1SSAU Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Upper
0D22h DMACH1DSAL Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0D23h DMACH1DSAU Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0D24h DMACH1TCRL Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Lower
0D25h DMACH1TCRU Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Upper
0D40h DMACH2SSAL Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Lower
0D41h DMACH2SSAU Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Upper
0D42h DMACH2DSAL Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0D43h DMACH2DSAU Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0D44h DMACH2TCRL Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Lower
0D45h DMACH2TCRU Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Upper
0D60h DMACH3SSAL Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Lower
0D61h DMACH3SSAU Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Upper
0D62h DMACH3DSAL Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0D63h DMACH3DSAU Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0D64h DMACH3TCRL Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Lower
0D65h DMACH3TCRU Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Upper

Table 6-7 DMA Controller 2 (DMA2) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
0E00h DMACH0SSAL Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Lower
0E01h DMACH0SSAU Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Upper
0E02h DMACH0DSAL Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0E03h DMACH0DSAU Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0E04h DMACH0TCRL Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Lower
0E05h DMACH0TCRU Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Upper
0E20h DMACH1SSAL Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Lower
0E21h DMACH1SSAU Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Upper
0E22h DMACH1DSAL Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0E23h DMACH1DSAU Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0E24h DMACH1TCRL Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Lower
0E25h DMACH1TCRU Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Upper
0E40h DMACH2SSAL Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Lower
0E41h DMACH2SSAU Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Upper
0E42h DMACH2DSAL Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0E43h DMACH2DSAU Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0E44h DMACH2TCRL Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Lower
0E45h DMACH2TCRU Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Upper
0E60h DMACH3SSAL Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Lower
0E61h DMACH3SSAU Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Upper
0E62h DMACH3DSAL Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0E63h DMACH3DSAU Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0E64h DMACH3TCRL Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Lower
0E65h DMACH3TCRU Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Upper

Table 6-8 DMA Controller 3 (DMA3) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
0F00h DMACH0SSAL Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Lower
0F01h DMACH0SSAU Channel 0 Source Start Address Register Upper
0F02h DMACH0DSAL Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0F03h DMACH0DSAU Channel 0 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0F04h DMACH0TCRL Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Lower
0F05h DMACH0TCRU Channel 0 Transfer Control Register Upper
0F20h DMACH1SSAL Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Lower
0F21h DMACH1SSAU Channel 1 Source Start Address Register Upper
0F22h DMACH1DSAL Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0F23h DMACH1DSAU Channel 1 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0F24h DMACH1TCRL Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Lower
0F25h DMACH1TCRU Channel 1 Transfer Control Register Upper
0F40h DMACH2SSAL Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Lower
0F41h DMACH2SSAU Channel 2 Source Start Address Register Upper
0F42h DMACH2DSAL Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0F43h DMACH2DSAU Channel 2 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0F44h DMACH2TCRL Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Lower
0F45h DMACH2TCRU Channel 2 Transfer Control Register Upper
0F60h DMACH3SSAL Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Lower
0F61h DMACH3SSAU Channel 3 Source Start Address Register Upper
0F62h DMACH3DSAL Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Lower
0F63h DMACH3DSAU Channel 3 Destination Start Address Register Upper
0F64h DMACH3TCRL Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Lower
0F65h DMACH3TCRU Channel 3 Transfer Control Register Upper

6.2.4.2 EMIF Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-9 shows the EMIF registers.

Table 6-9 External Memory Interface (EMIF) Peripheral Registers(1)

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1000h REV Revision Register
1001h STATUS Status Register
1004h AWCCR1 Asynchronous Wait Cycle Configuration Register 1
1005h AWCCR2 Asynchronous Wait Cycle Configuration Register 2
1008h SDCR1 SDRAM and mSDRAM Configuration Register 1
1009h SDCR2 SDRAM and mSDRAM Configuration Register 2
100Ch SDRCR SDRAM and mSDRAM Refresh Control Register
1010h ACS2CR1 Asynchronous CS2 Configuration Register 1
1011h ACS2CR2 Asynchronous CS2 Configuration Register 2
1014h ACS3CR1 Asynchronous CS3 Configuration Register 1
1015h ACS3CR2 Asynchronous CS3 Configuration Register 2
1018h ACS4CR1 Asynchronous CS4 Configuration Register 1
1019h ACS4CR2 Asynchronous CS4 Configuration Register 2
101Ch ACS5CR1 Asynchronous CS5 Configuration Register 1
101Dh ACS5CR2 Asynchronous CS5 Configuration Register 2
1020h SDTIMR1 SDRAM and mSDRAM Timing Register 1
1021h SDTIMR2 SDRAM and mSDRAM Timing Register 2
103Ch SDSRETR SDRAM and mSDRAM Self Refresh Exit Timing Register
1040h EIRR EMIF Interrupt Raw Register
1044h EIMR EMIF Interrupt Mask Register
1048h EIMSR EMIF Interrupt Mask Set Register
104Ch EIMCR EMIF Interrupt Mask Clear Register
1060h NANDFCR NAND Flash Control Register
1064h NANDFSR1 NAND Flash Status Register 1
1065h NANDFSR2 NAND Flash Status Register 2
1068h PAGEMODCTRL1 Page Mode Control Register 1
1069h PAGEMODCTRL2 Page Mode Control Register 2
1070h NCS2ECC1 NAND Flash CS2 1-Bit ECC Register 1
1071h NCS2ECC2 NAND Flash CS2 1-Bit ECC Register 2
1074h NCS3ECC1 NAND Flash CS3 1-Bit ECC Register 1
1075h NCS3ECC2 NAND Flash CS3 1-Bit ECC Register 2
1078h NCS4ECC1 NAND Flash CS4 1-Bit ECC Register 1
1079h NCS4ECC2 NAND Flash CS4 1-Bit ECC Register 2
107Ch NCS5ECC1 NAND Flash CS5 1-Bit ECC Register 1
107Dh NCS5ECC2 NAND Flash CS5 1-Bit ECC Register 2
10BCh NAND4BITECCLOAD NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Load Register
10C0h NAND4BITECC1 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 1
10C1h NAND4BITECC2 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 2
10C4h NAND4BITECC3 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 3
10C5h NAND4BITECC4 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 4
10C8h NAND4BITECC5 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 5
10C9h NAND4BITECC6 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 6
10CCh NAND4BITECC7 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 7
10CDh NAND4BITECC8 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Register 8
10D0h NANDERRADD1 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Address Register 1
10D1h NANDERRADD2 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Address Register 2
10D4h NANDERRADD3 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Address Register 3
10D5h NANDERRADD4 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Address Register 4
10D8h NANDERRVAL1 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Value Register 1
10D9h NANDERRVAL2 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Value Register 2
10DCh NANDERRVAL3 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Value Register 3
10DDh NANDERRVAL4 NAND Flash 4-Bit ECC Error Value Register 4
(1) Before reading or writing to the EMIF registers, be sure to set the BYTEMODE bits to 00b in the EMIF system control register to enable word accesses to the EMIF registers.

6.2.4.3 GPIO Peripheral Register Description

The external parallel port interface includes a 16-bit general purpose I/O that can be individually programmed as input or output with interrupt capability. Control of the general purpose I/O is maintained through a set of I/O memory-mapped registers shown in Table 6-10.

Table 6-10 GPIO Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1C06h IODIR1 GPIO Direction Register 1
1C07h IODIR2 GPIO Direction Register 2
1C08h IOINDATA1 GPIO Data In Register 1
1C09h IOINDATA2 GPIO Data In Register 2
1C0Ah IODATAOUT1 GPIO Data Out Register 1
1C0Bh IODATAOUT2 GPIO Data Out Register 2
1C0Ch IOINTEDG1 GPIO Interrupt Edge Trigger Enable Register 1
1C0Dh IOINTEDG2 GPIO Interrupt Edge Trigger Enable Register 2
1C0Eh IOINTEN1 GPIO Interrupt Enable Register 1
1C0Fh IOINTEN2 GPIO Interrupt Enable Register 2
1C10h IOINTFLG1 GPIO Interrupt Flag Register 1
1C11h IOINTFLG2 GPIO Interrupt Flag Register 2

6.2.4.4 I2C Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-11 shows the Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C) registers.

Table 6-11 Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1A00h ICOAR I2C Own Address Register
1A04h ICIMR I2C Interrupt Mask Register
1A08h ICSTR I2C Interrupt Status Register
1A0Ch ICCLKL I2C Clock Low-Time Divider Register
1A10h ICCLKH I2C Clock High-Time Divider Register
1A14h ICCNT I2C Data Count Register
1A18h ICDRR I2C Data Receive Register
1A1Ch ICSAR I2C Slave Address Register
1A20h ICDXR I2C Data Transmit Register
1A24h ICMDR I2C Mode Register
1A28h ICIVR I2C Interrupt Vector Register
1A2Ch ICEMDR I2C Extended Mode Register
1A30h ICPSC I2C Prescaler Register
1A34h ICPID1 I2C Peripheral Identification Register 1
1A38h ICPID2 I2C Peripheral Identification Register 2

6.2.4.5 I2S Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-12 through Table 6-14 show the I2S0, I2S2, and I2S3 registers.

Table 6-12 I2S0 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
2800h I2S0SCTRL I2S0 Serializer Control Register
2804h I2S0SRATE I2S0 Sample Rate Generator Register
2808h I2S0TXLT1 I2S0 Transmit Left Data Register 1
2809h I2S0TXLT2 I2S0 Transmit Left Data Register 2
280Ch I2S0TXRT1 I2S0 Transmit Right Data Register 1
280Dh I2S0TXRT2 I2S0 Transmit Right Data Register 2
2810h I2S0INTFL I2S0 Interrupt Flag Register
2814h I2S0INTMASK I2S0 Interrupt Mask Register
2828h I2S0RXLT1 I2S0 Receive Left Data Register 1
2829h I2S0RXLT2 I2S0 Receive Left Data Register 2
282Ch I2S0RXRT1 I2S0 Receive Right Data Register 1
282Dh I2S0RXRT2 I2S0 Receive Right Data Register 2

Table 6-13 I2S2 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
2A00h I2S2SCTRL I2S2 Serializer Control Register
2A04h I2S2SRATE I2S2 Sample Rate Generator Register
2A08h I2S2TXLT1 I2S2 Transmit Left Data Register 1
2A09h I2S2TXLT2 I2S2 Transmit Left Data Register 2
2A0Ch I2S2TXRT1 I2S2 Transmit Right Data Register 1
2A0Dh I2S2TXRT2 I2S2 Transmit Right Data Register 2
2A10h I2S2INTFL I2S2 Interrupt Flag Register
2A14h I2S2INTMASK I2S2 Interrupt Mask Register
2A28h I2S2RXLT1 I2S2 Receive Left Data Register 1
2A29h I2S2RXLT2 I2S2 Receive Left Data Register 2
2A2Ch I2S2RXRT1 I2S2 Receive Right Data Register 1
2A2Dh I2S2RXRT2 I2S2 Receive Right Data Register 2

Table 6-14 I2S3 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
2B00h I2S3SCTRL I2S3 Serializer Control Register
2B04h I2S3SRATE I2S3 Sample Rate Generator Register
2B08h I2S3TXLT1 I2S3 Transmit Left Data Register 1
2B09h I2S3TXLT2 I2S3 Transmit Left Data Register 2
2B0Ch I2S3TXRT1 I2S3 Transmit Right Data Register 1
2B0Dh I2S3TXRT2 I2S3 Transmit Right Data Register 2
2B10h I2S3INTFL I2S3 Interrupt Flag Register
2B14h I2S3INTMASK I2S3 Interrupt Mask Register
2B28h I2S3RXLT1 I2S3 Receive Left Data Register 1
2B29h I2S3RXLT2 I2S3 Receive Left Data Register 2
2B2Ch I2S3RXRT1 I2S3 Receive Right Data Register 1
2B2Dh I2S3RXRT2 I2S3 Receive Right Data Register 2

6.2.4.6 McBSP Peripheral Register Descriptions

Table 6-15 shows the McBSP peripheral registers.

Table 6-15 McBSP Module Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
4000h DRRL Data Receive Register Lower
4001h DRRU Data Receive Register Upper
4004h DXRL Data Transmit Register Lower
4005h DXRU Data Transmit Register Upper
4008h SPCRL Serial Port Control Register Lower
4009h SPCRU Serial Port Control Register Upper
400Ch RCRL Receive Control Register Lower
400Dh RCRU Receive Control Register Upper
4010h XCRL Transmit Control Register Lower
4011h XCRU Transmit Control Register Upper
4014h SRGRL Sample Rate Generator Register Lower
4015h SRGRU Sample Rate Generator Register Upper
4018h MCRL Multichannel Control Register Lower
4019h MCRU Multichannel Control Register Upper
401Ch RCERA Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition A
401Dh RCERB Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition B
4020h XCERA Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition A
4021h XCERB Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition B
4024h PCRL Pin Control Register Lower
4025h PCRU Pin Control Register Upper
4028h RCERC Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition C
4029h RCERD Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition D
402Ch XCERC Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition C
402Dh XCERD Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition D
4030h RCERE Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition E
4031h RCERF Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition F
4034h XCERE Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition E
4035h XCERF Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition F
4038h RCERG Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition G
4039h RCERH Enhanced Receive Channel Enable Register Partition H
403Ch XCERG Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition G
403Dh XCERH Enhanced Transmit Channel Enable Register Partition H

6.2.4.7 McSPI Peripheral Register Descriptions

Table 6-16 shows the McSPI peripheral registers.

Table 6-16 McSPI Module Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
3500h REVISIONL Revision Register Lower
3510h SYSCONFIGL System Configuration Register Lower
3514h SYSSTATUSL System Status Register Lower
3518h IRQSTATUSL Interrupt Status Register Lower
3519h IRQSTATUSU Interrupt Status Register Upper
351Ch IRQENABLEL Interrupt Enable Register Lower
351Dh IRQENABLEU Interrupt Enable Register Upper
3520h WAKEUPENABLEL Wakeup Enable Register Lower
3528h MODULCTRLL Module Control Register Lower
352Ch CH0CONFL Channel 0 Configuration Register Lower
352Dh CH0CONFU Channel 0 Configuration Register Upper
3530h CH0STATL Channel 0 Status Register Lower
3534h CH0CTRLL Channel 0 Control Register Lower
3538h CH0TXL Channel 0 Transmitter Register Lower
3539h CH0TXU Channel 0 Transmitter Register Upper
353Ch CH0RXL Channel 0 Receiver Register Lower
353Dh CH0RXU Channel 0 Receiver Register Upper
3540h CH1CONFL Channel 1 Configuration Register Lower
3541h CH1CONFU Channel 1 Configuration Register Upper
3544h CH1STATL Channel 1 Status Register Lower
3548h CH1CTRLL Channel 1 Control Register Lower
354Ch CH1TXL Channel 1 Transmitter Register Lower
354Dh CH1TXU Channel 1 Transmitter Register Upper
3550h CH1RXL Channel 1 Receiver Register Lower
3551h CH1RXU Channel 1 Receiver Register Upper
3554h CH2CONFL Channel 2 Configuration Register Lower
3555h CH2CONFU Channel 2 Configuration Register Upper
3558h CH2STATL Channel 2 Status Register Lower
355Ch CH2CTRLL Channel 2 Control Register Lower
3560h CH2TXL Channel 2 Transmitter Register Lower
3561h CH2TXU Channel 2 Transmitter Register Upper
3564h CH2RXL Channel 2 Receiver Register Lower
3565h CH2RXU Channel 2 Receiver Register Upper
357Ch XFERLEVELL Transfer Levels Register Lower
357Dh XFERLEVELU Transfer Levels Register Upper
3580h DAFTXL DMA Address Aligned FIFO Transmitter Register Lower
3581h DAFTXU DMA Address Aligned FIFO Transmitter Register Upper
35A0h DAFRXL DMA Address Aligned FIFO Receiver Register Lower
35A1h DAFRXU DMA Address Aligned FIFO Receiver Register Upper

6.2.4.8 MMC and SD Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-17 and Table 6-18 show the MMC and SD registers. The MMC0 and SD0 registers start at address 0x3A00 and the MMC1 and SD1 registers start at address 0x3B00.

Table 6-17 MMC0 and SD0 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
3A00h MMCCTL MMC Control Register
3A04h MMCCLK MMC Memory Clock Control Register
3A08h MMCST0 MMC Status Register 0
3A0Ch MMCST1 MMC Status Register 1
3A10h MMCIM MMC Interrupt Mask Register
3A14h MMCTOR MMC Response Time-Out Register
3A18h MMCTOD MMC Data Read Time-Out Register
3A1Ch MMCBLEN MMC Block Length Register
3A20h MMCNBLK MMC Number of Blocks Register
3A24h MMCNBLC MMC Number of Blocks Counter Register
3A28h MMCDRRL MMC Data Receive Register Lower
3A29h MMCDRRU MMC Data Receive Register Upper
3A2Ch MMCDXRL MMC Data Transmit Register Lower
3A2Dh MMCDXRU MMC Data Transmit Register Upper
3A30h MMCCMDL MMC Command Register Lower
3A31h MMCCMDU MMC Command Register Upper
3A34h MMCARGL MMC Argument Register Lower
3A35h MMCARGU MMC Argument Register Upper
3A38h MMCRSP0 MMC Response Register 0
3A39h MMCRSP1 MMC Response Register 1
3A3Ch MMCRSP2 MMC Response Register 2
3A3Dh MMCRSP3 MMC Response Register 3
3A40h MMCRSP4 MMC Response Register 4
3A41h MMCRSP5 MMC Response Register 5
3A44h MMCRSP6 MMC Response Register 6
3A45h MMCRSP7 MMC Response Register 7
3A48h MMCDRSP MMC Data Response Register
3A50h MMCCIDX MMC Command Index Register
3A64h SDIOCTL SDIO Control Register
3A68h SDIOST0 SDIO Status Register 0
3A6Ch SDIOIEN SDIO Interrupt Enable Register
3A70h SDIOIST SDIO Interrupt Status Register
3A74h MMCFIFOCTL MMC FIFO Control Register

Table 6-18 MMC1 and SD1 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
3B00h MMCCTL MMC Control Register
3B04h MMCCLK MMC Memory Clock Control Register
3B08h MMCST0 MMC Status Register 0
3B0Ch MMCST1 MMC Status Register 1
3B10h MMCIM MMC Interrupt Mask Register
3B14h MMCTOR MMC Response Time-Out Register
3B18h MMCTOD MMC Data Read Time-Out Register
3B1Ch MMCBLEN MMC Block Length Register
3B20h MMCNBLK MMC Number of Blocks Register
3B24h MMCNBLC MMC Number of Blocks Counter Register
3B28h MMCDRRL MMC Data Receive Register Lower
3B29h MMCDRRU MMC Data Receive Register Upper
3B2Ch MMCDXRL MMC Data Transmit Register Lower
3B2Dh MMCDXRU MMC Data Transmit Register Upper
3B30h MMCCMDL MMC Command Register Lower
3B31h MMCCMDU MMC Command Register Upper
3B34h MMCARGL MMC Argument Register Lower
3B35h MMCARGU MMC Argument Register Upper
3B38h MMCRSP0 MMC Response Register 0
3B39h MMCRSP1 MMC Response Register 1
3B3Ch MMCRSP2 MMC Response Register 2
3B3Dh MMCRSP3 MMC Response Register 3
3B40h MMCRSP4 MMC Response Register 4
3B41h MMCRSP5 MMC Response Register 5
3B44h MMCRSP6 MMC Response Register 6
3B45h MMCRSP7 MMC Response Register 7
3B48h MMCDRSP MMC Data Response Register
3B50h MMCCIDX MMC Command Index Register
3B64h SDIOCTL SDIO Control Register
3B68h SDIOST0 SDIO Status Register 0
3B6Ch SDIOIEN SDIO Interrupt Enable Register
3B70h SDIOIST SDIO Interrupt Status Register
3B74h MMCFIFOCTL MMC FIFO Control Register

6.2.4.9 RTC Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-19 shows the RTC registers.

Table 6-19 Real-Time Clock (RTC) Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1900h RTCINTEN RTC Interrupt Enable Register
1901h RTCUPDATE RTC Update Register
1904h RTCMIL Milliseconds Register
1905h RTCMILA Milliseconds Alarm Register
1908h RTCSEC Seconds Register
1909h RTCSECA Seconds Alarm Register
190Ch RTCMIN Minutes Register
190Dh RTCMINA Minutes Alarm Register
1910h RTCHOUR Hours Register
1911h RTCHOURA Hours Alarm Register
1914h RTCDAY Days Register
1915h RTCDAYA Days Alarm Register
1918h RTCMONTH Months Register
1919h RTCMONTHA Months Alarm Register
191Ch RTCYEAR Years Register
191Dh RTCYEARA Years Alarm Register
1920h RTCINTFL RTC Interrupt Flag Register
1921h RTCNOPWR RTC Lost Power Status Register
1924h RTCINTREG RTC Interrupt Register
1928h RTCDRIFT RTC Compensation Register
192Ch RTCOSC RTC Oscillator Register
1930h RTCPMGT RTC Power Management Register
1960h RTCSCR1 RTC LSW Scratch Register 1
1961h RTCSCR2 RTC MSW Scratch Register 2
1964h RTCSCR3 RTC LSW Scratch Register 3
1965h RTCSCR4 RTC MSW Scratch Register 4
196Ch RGKR_LSW RTC LSW Gate-Keeper Register
196Dh RGKR_MSW RTC MSW Gate-Keeper Register

6.2.4.10 SAR ADC Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-20 shows the SAR ADC peripheral registers.

Table 6-20 SAR Analog Control Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
7012h SARCTRL SAR A/D Control Register
7014h SARDATA SAR A/D Data Register
7016h SARCLKCTRL SAR A/D Clock Control Register
7018h SARPINCTRL SAR A/D Reference and Pin Control Register
701Ah SARGPOCTRL SAR A/D GPO Control Register

6.2.4.11 SPI Peripheral Register Descriptions

Table 6-21 shows the SPI registers.

Table 6-21 SPI Module Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
3000h SPICDR Clock Divider Register
3001h SPICCR Clock Control Register
3002h SPIDCR1 Device Configuration Register 1
3003h SPIDCR2 Device Configuration Register 2
3004h SPICMD1 Command Register 1
3005h SPICMD2 Command Register 2
3006h SPISTAT1 Status Register 1
3007h SPISTAT2 Status Register 2
3008h SPIDAT1 Data Register 1
3009h SPIDAT2 Data Register 2

6.2.4.12 System Registers

The system registers are used to configure the device and monitor its status. Brief descriptions of the various system registers are shown in Table 6-22.

Table 6-22 Idle Control, Status, and System Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM Register Description COMMENTS
0001h ICR Idle Control Register
0002h ISTR Idle Status Register
1C00h EBSR External Bus Selection Register see Section 5.7.3.5.1 of this document.
1C02h PCGCR1 Peripheral Clock Gating Control Register 1
1C03h PCGCR2 Peripheral Clock Gating Control Register 2
1C04h PSRCR Peripheral Software Reset Counter Register
1C05h PRCR Peripheral Reset Control Register
1C14h TIAFR Timer Interrupt Aggregation Flag Register
1C15h MSIAFR McSPI Interrupt Aggregation Flag Register
1C16h OSRCR Output Slew Rate Control Register
1C17h PUDINHIBR1 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 1
1C18h PUDINHIBR2 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 2
1C19h PUDINHIBR3 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 3
1C1Ah DMA0CESR1 DMA0 Channel Event Source Register 1
1C1Bh DMA0CESR2 DMA0 Channel Event Source Register 2
1C1Ch DMA1CESR1 DMA1 Channel Event Source Register 1
1C1Dh DMA1CESR2 DMA1 Channel Event Source Register 2
1C1Eh CCR1 Clock Configuration Register 1
1C1Fh CCR2 Clock Configuration Register 2
1C20h PMR PLL Multiplier Register
1C21h PICR PLL Input Control Register
1C22h PCR PLL Control Register
1C23h PODCR PLL Output Divider Control Register
1C24h CLKOUTCR CLKOUT Configuration Register
1C26h ECDR EMIF Clock Divider Register
1C27h RSCR RTC System Control Register
1C28h RAMSLPMDCNTLR1 RAM Sleep Mode Control Register 1
1C2Ah RAMSLPMDCNTLR2 RAM Sleep Mode Control Register 2
1C2Bh RAMSLPMDCNTLR3 RAM Sleep Mode Control Register 3
1C2Ch RAMSLPMDCNTLR4 RAM Sleep Mode Control Register 4
1C2Dh RAMSLPMDCNTLR5 RAM Sleep Mode Control Register 5
1C2Eh PLLSSCR1 PLL Spread Spectrum Control Register 1
1C2Fh PLLSSCR2 PLL Spread Spectrum Control Register 2
1C30h DMAIFR DMA Interrupt Flag Aggregation Register
1C31h DMAIER DMA Interrupt Enable Register
1C32h USBSCR USB System Control Register
1C33h ESCR EMIF System Control Register
1C34h BMR BootMode Register
1C36h DMA2CESR1 DMA2 Channel Event Source Register 1
1C37h DMA2CESR2 DMA2 Channel Event Source Register 2
1C38h DMA3CESR1 DMA3 Channel Event Source Register 1
1C39h DMA3CESR2 DMA3 Channel Event Source Register 2
1C3Ah CLKSTOP1 Peripheral Clock Stop Request and Acknowledge Register 1
1C3Bh CLKSTOP2 Peripheral Clock Stop Request and Acknowledge Register 2
1C3Ch MSPIFCDR McSPI Reference Clock Divider Register
1C3Dh MSIAER McSPI Aggregation Interrupt Mask Register
1C3Eh TISR Timer Interrupt Selection Register
1C40h DIEIDR0 Die ID Register 0
1C41h DIEIDR1 Die ID Register 1
1C42h DIEIDR2 Die ID Register 2
1C43h DIEIDR3 Die ID Register 3
1C44h DIEIDR4 Die ID Register 4
1C45h DIEIDR5 Die ID Register 5
1C46h DIEIDR6 Die ID Register 6
1C47h DIEIDR7 Die ID Register 7
1C4Ch PUDINHIBR4 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 4
1C4Dh PUDINHIBR5 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 5
1C4Eh UHPICR UHPI Configuration Register
1C4Fh PUDINHIBR6 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 6
1C50h PUDINHIBR7 Pullup and Pulldown Inhibit Register 7
1C58h JTAGIDLSW JTAG ID Code LSW Register
1C59h JTAGIDMSW JTAG ID Code MSW Register
7004h LDOCNTL LDO Control Register see Section 5.7.2.1.1.2.1 of this document.

6.2.4.13 Timers Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-23 through Table 6-26 show the Timer and Watchdog registers.

Table 6-23 Watchdog Timer Registers (Timer2 only)

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
1880h WDKCKLK Watchdog Kick Lock Register
1882h WDKICK Watchdog Kick Register
1884h WDSVLR Watchdog Start Value Lock Register
1886h WDSVR Watchdog Start Value Register
1888h WDENLOK Watchdog Enable Lock Register
188Ah WDEN Watchdog Enable Register
188Ch WDPSLR Watchdog Prescaler Lock Register
188Eh WDPS Watchdog Prescaler Register

Table 6-24 General-Purpose Timer 0 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
1810h T0CR Timer 0 Control Register
1812h TIM0PRD1 Timer 0 Period Register 1
1813h TIM0PRD2 Timer 0 Period Register 2
1814h TIM0CNT1 Timer 0 Counter Register 1
1815h TIM0CNT2 Timer 0 Counter Register 2
1816h T0INSR Timer 0 Input Selection Register

Table 6-25 General-Purpose Timer 1 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
1850h T1CR Timer 1 Control Register
1852h TIM1PRD1 Timer 1 Period Register 1
1853h TIM1PRD2 Timer 1 Period Register 2
1854h TIM1CNT1 Timer 1 Counter Register 1
1855h TIM1CNT2 Timer 1 Counter Register 2
1856h T1INSR Timer 1 Input Selection Register

Table 6-26 General-Purpose Timer 2 Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
1890h T2CR Timer 2 Control Register
1892h TIM2PRD1 Timer 2 Period Register 1
1893h TIM2PRD2 Timer 2 Period Register 2
1894h TIM2CNT1 Timer 2 Counter Register 1
1895h TIM2CNT2 Timer 2 Counter Register 2
1896h T2INSR Timer 2 Input Selection Register

Table 6-27 Timer Interrupt Selection Register

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
1C3Eh TISR Timer Interrupt Selection Register

6.2.4.14 UART Peripheral Register Description

Table 6-28 shows the UART registers.

Table 6-28 UART Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
1B00h RBR Receiver Buffer Register (read only)
1B00h THR Transmitter Holding Register (write only)
1B02h IER Interrupt Enable Register
1B04h IIR Interrupt Identification Register (read only)
1B04h FCR FIFO Control Register (write only)
1B06h LCR Line Control Register
1B08h MCR Modem Control Register
1B0Ah LSR Line Status Register
1B0Eh SCR Scratch Register
1B10h DLL Divisor LSB Latch
1B12h DLH Divisor MSB Latch
1B18h PWREMU_MGMT Power and Emulation Management Register

6.2.4.15 UHPI Peripheral Register Descriptions

Table 6-29 shows the UHPI peripheral registers.

Table 6-29 UHPI Module Registers

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME
2E00h PIDL Peripheral Identification Register Lower
2E01h PIDU Peripheral Identification Register Upper
2E04h PWREMU_MGMT Power Management and Emulation Register
2E08h GPINT_CTRLL GPINT Control Register Lower
2E09h GPINT_CTRLU GPINT Control Register Upper
2E0Ch GPIO_ENL GPIO Enable Register Lower
2E0Dh GPIO_ENU GPIO Enable Register Upper
2E10h GPIO_DIR1L GPIO Direction Register 1 Lower
2E11h GPIO_DIR1U GPIO Direction Register 1 Upper
2E14h GPIO_DAT1L GPIO Data Register 1 Lower
2E15h GPIO_DAT1U GPIO Data Register 1 Upper
2E18h GPIO_DIR2L GPIO Direction Register 2 Lower
2E19h GPIO_DIR2U GPIO Direction Register 2 Upper
2E1Ch GPIO_DAT2L GPIO Data Register 2 Lower
2E1Dh GPIO_DAT2U GPIO Data Register 2 Upper
2E20h GPIO_DIR3L GPIO Direction Register 3 Lower
2E21h GPIO_DIR3U GPIO Direction Register 3 Upper
2E24h GPIO_DAT3L GPIO Data Register 3 Lower
2E25h GPIO_DAT3U GPIO Data Register 3 Upper
2E30h UHPICL Universal Host-Port Interface Control Register
2E34h UHPIAWL Universal Host-Port Interface Write Address Register Lower
2E35h UHPIAWU Universal Host-Port Interface Write Address Register Upper
2E38h UHPIARL Universal Host-Port Interface Read Address Register Lower
2E39h UHPIARU Universal Host-Port Interface Read Address Register Upper

6.2.4.16 USB2.0 Peripheral Register Descriptions

Table 6-30 lists of the USB2.0 peripheral registers.

Table 6-30 Universal Serial Bus (USB) Registers(1)

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER DESCRIPTION
8000h REVID1 Revision Identification Register 1
8001h REVID2 Revision Identification Register 2
8004h CTRLR Control Register
800Ch EMUR Emulation Register
8010h MODE1 Mode Register 1
8011h MODE2 Mode Register 2
8014h AUTOREQ Auto Request Register
801Ch TEARDOWN1 Teardown Register 1
801Dh TEARDOWN2 Teardown Register 2
8020h INTSRCR1 USB Interrupt Source Register 1
8021h INTSRCR2 USB Interrupt Source Register 2
8024h INTSETR1 USB Interrupt Source Set Register 1
8025h INTSETR2 USB Interrupt Source Set Register 2
8028h INTCLRR1 USB Interrupt Source Clear Register 1
8029h INTCLRR2 USB Interrupt Source Clear Register 2
802Ch INTMSKR1 USB Interrupt Mask Register 1
802Dh INTMSKR2 USB Interrupt Mask Register 2
8030h INTMSKSETR1 USB Interrupt Mask Set Register 1
8031h INTMSKSETR2 USB Interrupt Mask Set Register 2
8034h INTMSKCLRR1 USB Interrupt Mask Clear Register 1
8035h INTMSKCLRR2 USB Interrupt Mask Clear Register 2
8038h INTMASKEDR1 USB Interrupt Source Masked Register 1
8039h INTMASKEDR2 USB Interrupt Source Masked Register 2
803Ch EOIR USB End of Interrupt Register
8040h INTVECTR1 USB Interrupt Vector Register 1
8041h INTVECTR2 USB Interrupt Vector Register 2
8050h GREP1SZR1 Generic RNDIS EP1Size Register 1
8051h GREP1SZR2 Generic RNDIS EP1Size Register 2
8054h GREP2SZR1 Generic RNDIS EP2 Size Register 1
8055h GREP2SZR2 Generic RNDIS EP2 Size Register 2
8058h GREP3SZR1 Generic RNDIS EP3 Size Register 1
8059h GREP3SZR2 Generic RNDIS EP3 Size Register 2
805Ch GREP4SZR1 Generic RNDIS EP4 Size Register 1
805Dh GREP4SZR2 Generic RNDIS EP4 Size Register 2
Common USB Registers
8401h FADDR_POWER Function Address Register, Power Management Register
8402h INTRTX Interrupt Register for Endpoint 0 plus Transmit Endpoints 1 to 4
8405h INTRRX Interrupt Register for Receive Endpoints 1 to 4
8406h INTRTXE Interrupt enable register for INTRTX
8409h INTRRXE Interrupt Enable Register for INTRRX
840Ah INTRUSB_INTRUSBE Interrupt Register for Common USB Interrupts, Interrupt Enable Register
840Dh FRAME Frame Number Register
840Eh INDEX_TESTMODE Index Register for Selecting the Endpoint Status and Control Registers, Register to Enable the USB 2.0 Test Modes
USB Indexed Registers
8411h TXMAXP_INDX Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Transmit Endpoint. (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8412h PERI_CSR0_INDX Control Status Register for Endpoint 0 in Peripheral Mode. (Index register set to select Endpoint 0)
PERI_TXCSR_INDX Control Status Register for Peripheral Transmit Endpoint. (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8415h RXMAXP_INDX Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Receive Endpoint. (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8416h PERI_RXCSR_INDX Control Status Register for Peripheral Receive Endpoint. (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8419h COUNT0_INDX Number of Received Bytes in Endpoint 0 FIFO. (Index register set to select Endpoint 0)
RXCOUNT_INDX Number of Bytes in Host Receive Endpoint FIFO. (Index register set to select Endpoints 1- 4)
841Ah - Reserved
841Dh - Reserved
841Eh CONFIGDATA_INDC
(Upper byte of 841Eh)
Returns details of core configuration. (index register set to select Endpoint 0)
USB FIFO Registers
8421h FIFO0R1 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 1 for Endpoint 0
8422h FIFO0R2 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 2 for Endpoint 0
8425h FIFO1R1 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 1 for Endpoint 1
8426h FIFO1R2 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 2 for Endpoint 1
8429h FIFO2R1 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 1 for Endpoint 2
842Ah FIFO2R2 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 2 for Endpoint 2
842Dh FIFO3R1 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 1 for Endpoint 3
842Eh FIFO3R2 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 2 for Endpoint 3
8431h FIFO4R1 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 1 for Endpoint 4
8432h FIFO4R2 Transmit and Receive FIFO Register 2 for Endpoint 4
Dynamic FIFO Control Registers
8461h - Reserved
8462h TXFIFOSZ_RXFIFOSZ Transmit Endpoint FIFO Size, Receive Endpoint FIFO Size (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8465h TXFIFOADDR Transmit Endpoint FIFO Address (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
8466h RXFIFOADDR Receive Endpoint FIFO Address (Index register set to select Endpoints 1-4)
846Dh HWVERS Hardware Version Register (See TMS320C5517 Digital Signal Processor Technical Reference Manual [SPRUH16].)
Control and Status Register for Endpoint 0
8501h - Reserved
8502h PERI_CSR0 Control Status Register for Peripheral Endpoint 0
8505h - Reserved
8506h - Reserved
8509h COUNT0 Number of Received Bytes in Endpoint 0 FIFO
850Ah - Reserved
850Dh - Reserved
850Eh CONFIGDATA
(Upper byte of 850Eh)
Returns details of core configuration.
Control and Status Register for Endpoint 1
8511h TXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Transmit Endpoint
8512h PERI_TXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Transmit Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8515h RXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Receive Endpoint
8516h PERI_RXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Receive Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8519h RXCOUNT Number of Bytes in the Receiving Endpoint's FIFO
851Ah - Reserved
851Dh - Reserved
851Eh - Reserved
Control and Status Register for Endpoint 2
8521h TXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Transmit Endpoint
8522h PERI_TXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Transmit Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8525h RXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Receive Endpoint
8526h PERI_RXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Receive Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8529h RXCOUNT Number of Bytes in Host Receive endpoint FIFO
852Ah - Reserved
852Dh - Reserved
852Eh - Reserved
Control and Status Register for Endpoint 3
8531h TXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Transmit Endpoint
8532h PERI_TXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Transmit Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8535h RXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Receive Endpoint
8536h PERI_RXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Receive Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8539h RXCOUNT Number of Bytes in Host Receive endpoint FIFO
853Ah - Reserved
853Dh - Reserved
853Eh - Reserved
Control and Status Register for Endpoint 4
8541h TXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Transmit Endpoint
8542h PERI_TXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Transmit Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8545h RXMAXP Maximum Packet Size for Peripheral and Host Receive Endpoint
8546h PERI_RXCSR Control Status Register for Peripheral Receive Endpoint (peripheral mode)
8549h RXCOUNT Number of Bytes in Host Receive endpoint FIFO
854Ah - Reserved
854Dh - Reserved
854Eh - Reserved
CPPI DMA (CMDA) Registers
9000h DMAREVID1 CDMA Revision Identification Register 1
9001h DMAREVID2 CDMA Revision Identification Register 2
9004h TDFDQ CDMA Teardown Free Descriptor Queue Control Register
9008h DMAEMU CDMA Emulation Control Register
9800h TXGCR1[0] Transmit Channel 0 Global Configuration Register 1
9801h TXGCR2[0] Transmit Channel 0 Global Configuration Register 2
9808h RXGCR1[0] Receive Channel 0 Global Configuration Register 1
9809h RXGCR2[0] Receive Channel 0 Global Configuration Register 2
980Ch RXHPCR1A[0] Receive Channel 0 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 A
980Dh RXHPCR2A[0] Receive Channel 0 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 A
9810h RXHPCR1B[0] Receive Channel 0 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 B
9811h RXHPCR2B[0] Receive Channel 0 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 B
9820h TXGCR1[1] Transmit Channel 1 Global Configuration Register 1
9821h TXGCR2[1] Transmit Channel 1 Global Configuration Register 2
9828h RXGCR1[1] Receive Channel 1 Global Configuration Register 1
9829h RXGCR2[1] Receive Channel 1 Global Configuration Register 2
982Ch RXHPCR1A[1] Receive Channel 1 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 A
982Dh RXHPCR2A[1] Receive Channel 1 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 A
9830h RXHPCR1B[1] Receive Channel 1 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 B
9831h RXHPCR2B[1] Receive Channel 1 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 B
9840h TXGCR1[2] Transmit Channel 2 Global Configuration Register 1
9841h TXGCR2[2] Transmit Channel 2 Global Configuration Register 2
9848h RXGCR1[2] Receive Channel 2 Global Configuration Register 1
9849h RXGCR2[2] Receive Channel 2 Global Configuration Register 2
984Ch RXHPCR1A[2] Receive Channel 2 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 A
984Dh RXHPCR2A[2] Receive Channel 2 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 A
9850h RXHPCR1B[2] Receive Channel 2 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 B
9851h RXHPCR2B[2] Receive Channel 2 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 B
9860h TXGCR1[3] Transmit Channel 3 Global Configuration Register 1
9861h TXGCR2[3] Transmit Channel 3 Global Configuration Register 2
9868h RXGCR1[3] Receive Channel 3 Global Configuration Register 1
9869h RXGCR2[3] Receive Channel 3 Global Configuration Register 2
986Ch RXHPCR1A[3] Receive Channel 3 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 A
986Dh RXHPCR2A[3] Receive Channel 3 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 A
9870h RXHPCR1B[3] Receive Channel 3 Host Packet Configuration Register 1 B
9871h RXHPCR2B[3] Receive Channel 3 Host Packet Configuration Register 2 B
A000h DMA_SCHED_CTRL1 CDMA Scheduler Control Register 1
A001h DMA_SCHED_CTRL2 CDMA Scheduler Control Register 1
A800h + 4 × N ENTRYLSW[N] CDMA Scheduler Table Word N Registers LSW (N = 0 to 63)
A801h + 4 × N ENTRYMSW[N] CDMA Scheduler Table Word N Registers MSW (N = 0 to 63)
Queue Manager (QMGR) Registers
C000h QMGRREVID1 Queue Manager Revision Identification Register 1
C001h QMGRREVID2 Queue Manager Revision Identification Register 2
C008h DIVERSION1 Queue Manager Queue Diversion Register 1
C009h DIVERSION2 Queue Manager Queue Diversion Register 2
C020h FDBSC0 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 0
C021h FDBSC1 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 1
C024h FDBSC2 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 2
C025h FDBSC3 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 3
C028h FDBSC4 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 4
C029h FDBSC5 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 5
C02Ch FDBSC6 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 6
C02Dh FDBSC7 Queue Manager Free Descriptor and Buffer Starvation Count Register 7
C080h LRAM0BASE1 Queue Manager Linking RAM Region 0 Base Address Register 1
C081h LRAM0BASE2 Queue Manager Linking RAM Region 0 Base Address Register 2
C084h LRAM0SIZE Queue Manager Linking RAM Region 0 Size Register
C085h - Reserved
C088h LRAM1BASE1 Queue Manager Linking RAM Region 1 Base Address Register 1
C089h LRAM1BASE2 Queue Manager Linking RAM Region 1 Base Address Register 2
C090h PEND0 Queue Manager Queue Pending 0
C091h PEND1 Queue Manager Queue Pending 1
C094h PEND2 Queue Manager Queue Pending 2
C095h PEND3 Queue Manager Queue Pending 3
C098h PEND4 Queue Manager Queue Pending 4
C099h PEND5 Queue Manager Queue Pending 5
D000h + 16 × R QMEMRBASE1[R] Queue Manager Memory Region R Base Address Register 1 (R = 0 to 15)
D001h + 16 × R QMEMRBASE2[R] Queue Manager Memory Region R Base Address Register 2 (R = 0 to 15)
D004h + 16 × R QMEMRCTRL1[R] Queue Manager Memory Region R Control Register 1 (R = 0 to 15)
D005h + 16 × R QMEMRCTRL2[R] Queue Manager Memory Region R Control Register 2 (R = 0 to 15)
E000h + 16 × N CTRL1A Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 1A (N = 0 to 63)
E001h + 16 × N CTRL2A Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 2A (N = 0 to 63)
E004h + 16 × N CTRL1B Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 1B (N = 0 to 63)
E005h + 16 × N CTRL2B Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 2B (N = 0 to 63)
E008h + 16 × N CTRL1C Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 1C (N = 0 to 63)
E009h + 16 × N CTRL2C Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 2C (N = 0 to 63)
E00Ch + 16 × N CTRL1D Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 1D (N = 0 to 63)
E00Dh + 16 × N CTRL2D Queue Manager Queue N Control Register 2D (N = 0 to 63)
E800h + 16 × N QSTAT1A Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 1A (N = 0 to 63)
E801h + 16 × N QSTAT2A Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 2A (N = 0 to 63)
E804h + 16 × N QSTAT1B Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 1B (N = 0 to 63)
E805h + 16 × N QSTAT2B Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 2B (N = 0 to 63)
E808h + 16 × N QSTAT1C Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 1C (N = 0 to 63)
E809h + 16 × N QSTAT2C Queue Manager Queue N Status Register 2C (N = 0 to 63)
(1) Before reading or writing to the USB registers, be sure to set the BYTEMODE bits to "00b" in the USB system control register to enable word accesses to the USB registers .

6.3 Identification

6.3.1 JTAG Identification

Table 6-31 JTAG Identification Register

CPU WORD ADDRESS ACRONYM REGISTER NAME COMMENTS
N/A JTAGID JTAG Identification Register Read-only. Provides 32-bit
JTAG ID of the device.

The JTAG ID register is a read-only register that identifies to the customer the JTAG and Device ID. The register hex value for the device is: 0x0B95 602F. For the actual register bit names and their associated bit field descriptions, see Figure 6-2 and Table 6-32.

31-28 27-12 11-1 0
VARIANT (4-Bit) PART NUMBER (16-Bit) MANUFACTURER (11-Bit) LSB
R-0000 R-1011 1001 0101 0110 R-0000 0010 111 R-1
LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value at reset
Figure 6-2 JTAG ID Register Description - Register Value - 0x0B95 602F

Table 6-32 JTAG Identification Register Selection Bit Descriptions

BIT NAME DESCRIPTION
31:28 VARIANT Variant (4-Bit) value: 0000
27:12 PART NUMBER Part Number (16-Bit) value: 1011 1001 0101 0110
11:1 MANUFACTURER Manufacturer (11-Bit) value: 0000 0010 111
0 LSB LSB. This bit is read as a "1".

6.4 Boot Modes

The device supports the following boot modes:

  • NOR Flash
  • NAND Flash
  • SPI 16- and 24-bit EEPROM or Flash
  • I2C 16-bit EEPROM
  • eMMC Controller/MMC/SD/SDHC Card
  • USB
  • UART
  • McSPI
  • UHPI

The boot mode or method is determined by checking the value of the BootMode[5:0] bits in the BootMode register ([1C34h]) and the CLKSELSTAT bit in the CCR2 register ([1C1Fh]), which reflect the configurations of the EM_A[20:15] or GP[26:21] pins and CLK_SEL pin at reset. See Section 5.7.3.4.2, BootMode Implementation and Requirements.

Figure 6-3 BootMode Register [1C34h]
15 11 10 5 4 0
Reserved BootMode[5:0] Reserved
R-0 R-EM_A[20:15]/GP[26:21] R-0
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset

Table 6-33 BootMode Register Field Descriptions

Bit Name Description
15:11 Reserved Reserved
10:9 BootMode[5:4]

Read-only bits that reflect the latched state of the EM_A[20:19] or GP[26:25] pins on the 10th clock edge after RESET pin goes high.(1) The Bootloader reads this register value to determine the frequency of the clock input to the system clock generator. The bootloader requires this frequency to appropriately program the system clock generator and other peripheral clock dividers.

00:

CLK_SEL = 0: 12 MHz via the on-chip USB oscillator

CLK_SEL = 1: 11.2896 MHz via the CLK_IN pin

01:

CLK_SEL = 0: 12 MHz via the on-chip USB oscillator

CLK_SEL = 1: 12.00 MHz or 12.288 MHz via the CLK_IN pin

10:

CLK_SEL = 0: 12 MHz via the on-chip USB oscillator

CLK_SEL = 1: 16.8 MHz via the CLK_IN pin

11:

CLK_SEL = 0: 12 MHz via the on-chip USB oscillator

CLK_SEL = 1: 19.2 MHz via the CLK_IN pin

8:5 BootMode[3:0]

Read-only bits that reflect the latched state of the EM_A[18:15] or GP[24:21] pins on the first clock edge after RESET pin goes high. The Bootloader determines boot mode based on this value.

0000: Boot mode: 16-bit NOR flash data boot, system clock generator is in bypass mode.

0001: Boot mode: 16-bit or 8-bit NAND flash data boot, system clock generator is in bypass mode.

0010: Boot mode: UART 9600 baud boot, system clock generator output = input clock x 3

0011: Boot mode: UART 57600 baud boot, system clock generator output = input clock x 3

0100: Boot mode: UART 115200 baud boot, system clock generator output = input clock x 3

0101: Boot mode: SPI 16-bit or 24-bit address Boot (SPI_CLK < 1 MHz), system clock generator output = input clock x 3

0110: Boot mode: SPI 16-bit or 24-bit address Boot (SPI_CLK < 10 MHz), system clock generator output = input clock x 3

0111: Polling Mode 2: Check for valid boot image from peripherals in the following order: NOR, NAND, SPI, I2C, SD/SDHC/MMC/eMMC Controller 0, McSPI, and UART/USB (infinite retry).(2)

1000: Boot mode: I2C 16-bit address Boot, 400 kHz, system clock generator is in bypass mode.

1001: Boot mode: SD or SDHC, MMC, or eMMC Controller 0 card boot, system clock generator is in bypass mode

1010: Boot mode: SD or SDHC, MMC, or eMMC Controller 1 card boot, system clock generator is in bypass mode

1011: Polling Mode 1: Check for valid boot image from peripherals in the following order: NOR, NAND, SPI, I2C, SD/SDHC/MMC/eMMC Controller 0, SD/SDHC/MMC/eMMC Controller 1, and UART/USB (infinite retry).(2)

1100: Boot mode: UHPI 16-bit multiplexed mode boot, system clock generator output = input clock x 3

1101: Boot mode: McSPI 24-bit address serial flash at 10-MHz mode

1110: Boot mode: McSPI 24-bit address serial flash at 40-MHz mode

1111: Boot mode: USB boot, system clock generator output = input clock x 3

4:0 Reserved Reserved
(1) The RESET pin is asynchronous to the selected system clock (CLKIN or USB_OSC). The pin could be 10, 11, or even 12 clock cycles after the rising edge of RESETN due to possible metastability.
(2) If MMCx_CMD is low, the bootloader continues to check for a valid boot image in the card controller. MMCx_CMD must be high or toggle in order to move from the card controller to the next peripheral for a valid boot image.
Figure 6-4 Clock Configuration Register 2 (CCR2) [1C1Fh]
15 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Reserved Reserved Reserved CLKSELSTAT Reserved SYSCLKSEL
R-0 R-x R/W-0 R-0 R-0 R/W-0
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset; -x = value undetermined

Table 6-34 Clock Configuration Register 2 (CCR2) Field Descriptions

BIT NAME VALUE DESCRIPTION
15:6 RESERVED 0 Reserved
5:4 RESERVED 0 Reserved
3 RESERVED 0 Reserved. This bit must be written to 0.
2 CLKSELSTAT CLK_SEL pin status bit. This reflects the state of the CLK_SEL pin.
0 CLK_SEL pin is low (USB Oscillator clock selected).
1h CLK_SEL pin is high (CLKIN input clock selected).
1 RESERVED 0 Reserved. This bit must be written to 0.
0 SYSCLKSEL

System clock source select bit. This bit is used to select between the two main clocking modes for the DSP: bypass and PLL mode.

In bypass mode, the system clock generator is bypassed and the system clock is set to either CLKIN or the USB oscillator output (as determined by the CLKSEL pin).

In PLL mode, the system clock is set to the output of the system clock generator.

0 Bypass mode is selected.
1 PLL mode is selected.

6.4.1 Invocation Sequence

The boot sequence is a process by which the device's on-chip memory is loaded with program and data sections from an external image file (in flash memory, for example). The boot sequence also allows, optionally, for some of the device's internal registers to be programmed with predetermined values. The boot sequence is started automatically after each device reset. For more details on device reset, see Section 5.7.3, Reset.

This device can boot from EMIF, UART, SPI, I2C, eMMC, MMC, SD, SDHC, UHPI, McSPI, or USB interface. For a complete description of the boot options, see Using the TMS320C5517 Bootloader [literature number SPRABP1].

The peripheral interface that the device boots from is determined by the configuration of the EM_A[20:15] or GP[26:21] pins at reset. The values of EM_A[20:15] or GP[26:21] are latched at reset into the BootMode[5:0] bits in the BootMode register (1C34h) and the Bootloader reads the bits to determine a peripheral interface for booting.

The on-chip Bootloader allows the DSP registers to be configured during the boot process, if the optional register configuration section is present in the boot image. For more information on the boot modes supported, see Section 6.4, Boot Modes.

See Figure 6-5, Boot Timing, and the notes at the bottom of the figure, for an illustration of the boot sequence.

boot_timing_sprs727.gif
1. Enter the boot sequence described in boot sequence Step 1.
2. The maximum wait time from reset between (1) and (2) until the reset is released is 20 ms.
3. The bootloaded code starts. The best-case time is 200 ms from the start of the boot sequence (see note 2) due to the BG_CAP settling time in Step 18. The worst-case time is the loading time for the bootloaded code when it exceeds 200 ms.
Figure 6-5 Boot Timing

The device bootloader follows the following steps:

  1. Immediately after reset, the CPU fetches the reset vector from 0xFFFF00. MP or MC is 0 by default, so 0xFFFF00 is mapped to internal ROM. The PLL is in bypass mode. The input clock is assumed to be in the range of 11.2896–19.2 MHz.
  2. Set CLKOUT slew rate control to slow slew rate.
  3. Idle all peripherals and HWA.
  4. Apply manufacturing trim to the bandgap references.
  5. Disable CLKOUT.
  6. The Bootloader configures the system clock generator based on boot mode (see Section 6.4, Boot Modes, for details on boot mode) and enables TIMER0 to count the settling time of BG_CAP. Bootloader will try this main loop infinitely if it cannot get the correct boot signature.
  7. [Main Loop]

  8. If McSPI boot, test for 24-bit McSPI flash boot on SPI_CS[0] using a clock-rate close to, but not over, 10 MHz, or a clock-rate close to, but not over, 40 MHz based on the boot mode. Set Serial Port 1 Mode on the External Bus Selection Register to 1:
    1. Check the first two bytes read from the boot table for a boot signature match using 24-bit address mode.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt McSPI Serial Memory boot and go to .
  9. If UHPI boot, the external host has to communicate in 16-bit multiplexed mode:
    Note: The bootloader sets up the UHPI slave to handshake with an external UHPI master.
    1. The external host power up the device and must wait for the settling time of BG_CAP to elapse before executing the next step.
    2. The bootloader waits for the external host to finish transferring the data.
    3. External Host writes to device on-chip memory. The code or data sections are directly loaded to the desired locations on device by the external host.
    4. External Host interrupts the device through the DSP_INT in the UHPIC register after code transfer complete.
    5. Bootloader branches to the entry point. The entry point is located in the last block of SARAM, word addresses 0x27FFA and 0x27FFB. To ensure data integrity, the external host writes two 16-bit signatures in 0x27FFC and 0x27FFD with respective values of 0x1234 and 0xABCD. If the address of the entry point is in DARAM space or incorrect signatures are detected in 0x27FFC and 0x27FFD, go to .
    6. Go to .
  10. If NOR boot, test for NOR boot on all asynchronous CS spaces (EM_CS[2:5]) with 16-bit access:
    Note: The booatloader requires NOR flash that supports a reset command (0xF0 on data).
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot signature.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt NOR boot and go to .
  11. If NAND boot, test for NAND boot on all asynchronous CS spaces (EM_CS[2:5]) with 16-bit access:
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match. If the boot signature is not valid, read the first 2 bytes again using 8-bit access on all asynchronous CS spaces (EM_CS[2:5])
    2. If the boot signature is still not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt NAND boot and go to .
  12. If SPI boot, test for 16- and 24-bit SPI EEPROM or Flash boot on SPI_CS[0] using a clock-rate close to, but not over, 1 MHz, or a clock-rate close to, but not over, 10 MHz based on the boot mode. Set Parallel Port Mode on the External Bus Selection Register to 5, then set to 6:
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match using 16-bit address mode.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, read the first 2 bytes again using 24-bit address mode.
    3. If the boot signature is not valid from either case (16-bit and 24-bit address modes), go to .
    4. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    5. Attempt SPI Serial Memory boot and go to .
  13. If I2C boot, test for 16-bit I2C EEPROM boot with a 7-bit slave address 0x50 and 400-kHz clock rate.
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match using 16-bit address mode.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt I2C EEPROM boot and go to .
  14. If eMMC, MMC, SD, or SDHC Controller 0 boot, program SD0 and search for the filename “bootimg.bin" under the first partition’s root directory. For SD or SDHC, the device must comply with SD/SDHC specification v1.1 or v2.0 for FAT16 or FAT32 using SD or SDHC unsecure mode.
    If eMMC, the bootloader will check the boot partition for a bootable image before checking the root directory for "bootimg.bin". For eMMC or MMC, the device must comply with eMMC/MMC specification v4.3 for FAT32 using eMMC or MMC nonencrypted mode.
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt eMMC, MMC, SD, or SDHC boot and go to .
  15. If eMMC, MMC, SD, or SDHC Controller 1 boot, program SD1 and search for the filename “bootimg.bin" under the first partition’s root directory. For SD or SDHC, the device must comply with SD/SDHC specification v1.1 or v2.0 for FAT16 or FAT32 using SD or SDHC unsecure mode.
    If eMMC, the bootloader will check the boot partition for a bootable image before checking the root directory for "bootimg.bin". For eMMC or MMC the device must comply with eMMC/MMC specification v4.3 for FAT32 using eMMC or MMC nonencrypted mode.
    Note: Do not boot from eMMC if no valid image is present. Booting from eMMC without a valid image will put the card into an inactive state.
    1. Check the first two bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, go to .
    3. Set Register Configuration, if present in boot image.
    4. Attempt eMMC, MMC, SD, or SDHC boot and go to .
  16. If UART boot, set PLL to multiply the input clock by 3 and adjust TIMER0 for the settling time of BG_CAP. Program UART with 9600-, 57600-, or 115200-baud based on boot mode, 8-bit data, odd parity, one stop-bit, and auto flow control using CTS or RTS:
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, return to the beginning of step 15.
    3. Attempt UART boot and go to .
  17. If USB boot, set PLL to multiply the input clock by 3 and adjust TIMER0 for the settling time of BG_CAP. Use USB on endpoint 1. The device has vendor-ID 0x0451 and product-ID 0x9010 and uses Bulk Endpoint 1 OUT to receive the boot image from the USB host:
    1. Check the first 2 bytes read from boot table for a boot signature match.
    2. If the boot signature is not valid, return to the beginning of step 16.
    3. Attempt USB boot and go to .
  18. If polling mode, there is a fixed order of supported boot devices on which a valid image is checked.
    • Polling Mode 1:
      1. NOR
      2. NAND
      3. SPI
      4. I2C
      5. SD/SDHC, MMC/eMMC Controller 0 (see note below)
      6. SD/SDHC, MMC/eMMC Controller 1 (see note below)
      7. UART/USB
    • Polling Mode 2:
      1. NOR
      2. NAND
      3. SPI
      4. I2C
      5. SD/SDHC, MMC/eMMC Controller 0 (see note below)
      6. McSPI
      7. UART/USB
  19. The first device with a valid boot image is used to load and execute user code. If none of these devices has a valid boot image, the bootloader modifies the CPU clock setup as follows:

    • If CLK_SEL=0, the bootloader powers up the PLL and sets its frequency to 36 MHz (12 MHz multiplied by 3).
    • If CLK_SEL=1, the bootloader powers up the PLL and sets it to multiply CLKIN by 3.

    This change in the CPU clock setup is required to meet the minimum frequency needed by the USB module. After the CPU clock setup changes, the bootloader enters an endless loop and checks for data received on the UART/USB. If a valid boot image is received, the image is used to load and execute user code. If no valid boot image is received, the bootloader continues to monitor the boot devices. If the time since the trim setup exceeds 200 ms during this endless loop, the bootloader re-enables the low-voltage detection circuit to ensure the circuit is not disabled for an extended period.

    Note: If MMCx_CMD is low, the bootloader continues to check for a valid boot image in the card controller. MMCx_CMD must be high or toggle in order to move from the card controller to the next peripheral for a valid boot image.

  20. If the boot signature is not valid, toggle XF when the retry count reaches 100.
  21. Copy the boot image sections to system memory. Then set the XF port low to indicate that boot-up is complete. Ensure the settling time of BG_CAP has elapsed since step 6 before proceeding to execute the bootloaded code.
  22. Jump to the specified entry point.

6.4.2 DSP Resources Used By the Bootloader

The Bootloader uses SARAM block 31 for the storing of temporary data. This block of memory is reserved during the boot process. However, after the boot process is complete, it can be used by the user application.