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Serial Communications Interface (SCI) Michael LennardZachary PetersBao Nguyen
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Overview Types of Data TransmissionMichael Lennard Parallel Serial Serial Communication Synchronous Asynchronous Baud and Bit Rates Asynchronous Serial TransmissionZachary Peters Serial Communication With the HCS12Bao Nguyen Examples of data words are transmitted
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Parallel Data Transmission Simultaneous transmission Requires separate data lines Uses a clock to keep bits synchronized Fast but Expensive Requires short cables to prevent Cross-Talk/Skewing Example: Printer Cable Presenter: Michael Lennard Transmitter Receiver One ‘Word’
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Serial Data Transmission One bit sent at a time Slow compared to Parallel Requires only a single transmission line & port Cheap! Can often be clocked faster than parallel data Example: USB, Firewire, Ethernet Presenter: Michael Lennard Transmitter Receiver One Word
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Serial Data Transmission Two Basic Types of Serial Data Transmission Synchronous Asynchronous Two solutions to same problem - Receiver needs to know When data starts When data stops If data was processed correctly Presenter: Michael Lennard
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Synchronous Serial Communication Transmitter and Receiver have synchronized clocks Continuous data must be sent to maintain synchronization Any data not on a clock cycle is considered noise Establish transmission parameters before sending data 30% faster than asynchronous transmission for large continuous blocks of data Presenter: Michael Lennard Transmitter Receiver Data Clock Ticks 123
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Asynchronous Serial Communication Transmitter & Receiver are independent Transmitter sends ‘Start’, ‘Stop’ and ‘Parity’ bits with each word of data Simpler to implement and less expensive than synchronous Data received between a Stop bits and the next Start bit is ignored Presenter: Michael Lennard Transmitter Receiver Data Word ParityStop Start
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Baud Rate vs. Bit Rate Baud Rate (Bd) is the rate at which Symbols (Signaling Events) are transferred Number of bits per Symbol is Hardware Specific Our hardware uses just 1 ’s and 0’s and thus just 1 bit/Symbol Bit rate is the absolute rate at which bits are transmitted Can be changed for each port Presenter: Michael Lennard
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Baud Rate vs. Characters Per Second Presenter: Michael Lennard
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Example Problem You have an asynchronous serial connection with 2 bits/Symbol and a 9600 bd line speed. You want to send data in an 8 bit data format with 1 parity, 1 start bit and 1 stop bit. Calculate the throughput in cps. Presenter: Michael Lennard
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Overview Types of Data TransmissionMichael Lennard Parallel Serial Serial Communication Synchronous Asynchronous Baud and Bit Rates Asynchronous Serial TransmissionZachary Peters Serial Communication With the HCS12Bao Nguyen Examples of data words are transmitted
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Asynchronous Serial Communication Transmitter and Receiver Operate independently Transmitter sends data at any time Receiver is always ready to accept data No need for clock signals However… format and transfer rate must match during transmission Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Asynchronous Transmission Data word contains information before and after that specifies the beginning and end of word This synchronizes transmitter and receiver during transmission Bit transfer rate is determined by programmer, but limited by interfaces Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Data Format Start bit – indicates the beginning of word Data bit – data user is transmitting Parity bit – checks integrity of data Stop bit – indicates the end of the word Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Start Bit Opposite polarity from idle bit state Idle state for HCS12 = all 1’s so start bit = 0 Alerts receiver that the data transmission is about to begin Accuracy verification methods to reduce noise (discussed later) Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Data Bits Actual Data being sent or received plus parity bit Most common mode: 8-bit transmission Used for ASCII character transmission (ASCII code is 7-bit + 1 parity bit = 8-bit) Less common mode: 9-bit transmission Can be used to send a full byte of data + parity bit Example: sending an address LSB transmitted first Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Data Bits Example: 8-bit mode: 1100010101111 ASCII Code in Data “T” 9-bit mode: 11011010100011 Hex equivalent in Data $2B Presenter: Zachary Peters Data Start Bit Stop Bits Parity Bit Data Start Bit Stop Bits Parity Bit
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1 Bit Located at end of data bits Used as a method of ensuring proper data transmission Even Parity Parity bit = 1, if # of ones in the set is odd (makes the total # of ones even) Odd Parity Parity bit = 1, if # of ones in the set is even (makes the total # of ones odd) Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Stop Bit 1 or 2 bits Only used due to asynchronous nature (Synchronous transmitters/receivers don’t need start/stop bits) Occurs directly after the parity bit Bit is the same as the polarity of the data-line’s idle state Idle state for HCS12 = all 1’s so stop bits = 1 Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Noise Detection Problem: A premature bit (1 or 0) can cause the receiver to think it is receiving data before it should be, or receive incorrect data Solution: Sample at higher freq than baud rate and take “average” of samples RT Clock = Baud rate * 16 16 samples of each bit RT3, RT5, RT7 are recorded Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Noise Detection for Start Bit Samples taken after the signal falls to 0 to verify if it is indeed a start bit If two ‘1’s in sample then not a start bit If one ‘1’ in sample then noise bit flagged Presenter: Zachary Peters
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Overview Types of Data TransmissionMichael Lennard Parallel Serial Serial Communication Synchronous Asynchronous Baud and Bit Rates Asynchronous Serial TransmissionZachary Peters Serial Communication With the HCS12Bao Nguyen Examples of data words are transmitted
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SCI Baud Rate Registers SCIBDH & SCHBDL - $00C8-$00C9 13-Bit register determines SCI Baud rate Baud rate generator is Disabled until TE or RE bit is set for the first time after reset. Baud rate generator is turned off when this register contains $0000 Note: Writing to SCIBDH has no effect w/out writing to SCIBDL Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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SCI Control Register 1 SCICR1 - $00CA Presenter: Bao Nguyen LOOPS (loop operation enable) – 0: Normal, 1: Loop Operation SCISWAI (SCI wait mode enable) – 0: Off 1: On M (data format mode) – 0: 8 data bits, 1: 9 data bits. Both use 1 start bit and 1 stop bit PE (parity enable) – 0: Off, 1: On PT (parity type) – 0: Even, 1: Odd
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SCI Control Register 2 SCICR2 - $00CB TIE (transmit interrupt enable) – 0: disables interrupts for transmit data register empty, 1: enables TCIE (transmit complete interrupt enable) – 0: disables interrupts for transmit complete, 1: enables RIE (receiver interrupt enable) – 0: disables interrupts for receiver full and overrun, 1: enables ILIE (idle line interrupt enable) – 0: disables interrupts for idle line, 1: enables TE (transmit enable) – 0: disable transmitter, 1: enable RE (receiver enable) – 0: disable receiver, 1: enable Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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SCI Status Register 1 SCISR1 - $00CC Read only register Can be used to provide input to the microcontroller for generation of SCI interrupts TDRE (transmit data register empty) – 0: No byte transferred,1: byte successfully transferred to transmit shift register TC (transmit complete flag) – 0: transmission in progress, 1: no transmission in progress RDRF (receive data register full) – 0: no data in data register, 1: data in data register IDLE (idle flag) – 0: receiver input is active, 1: receiver input has become idle Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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SCI Status Register 2 SCISR2 - $00CD BK13 (break transmit character length) – 0: 10 or 11 bit, 1: 13 or 14 bit TXDIR (transmitter pin direction) – 0: TXD pin used as input, 1: TXD pin used as output. (used only in single wire mode) RAF (receiver active flag) – 0: no reception in progress, 1: reception in progress Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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SCI Data Registers SCIDRH &SCIDRL - $00CE - $00CF SCIRDL contains incoming bytes of data from serial port R8 – bit 8 of received 9-bit data T8 – bit 8 of transmitted 9-bit data Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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Asynchronous Data Transmission Example 1: Hex# 4A 16 is to be sent with one start bit, even parity, 8-bit data length and two stop bits 4A 16 = 0100 1010 2 Note: Little endian communication used (LSB sent first) Start BitData Bit 0Data Bit 1 Data Bit 2Data Bit 3Data Bit 4Data Bit 5Data Bit 6Data Bit 7 Parity BitStop Bit 00101001 0111 Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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Asynchronous Data Transmission Example 2: Hex# B4 16 is to be sent with one start bit, even parity, 8-bit data length and two stop bits B4 16 = 1011 0100 2 Start BitData Bit 0Data Bit 1 Data Bit 2Data Bit 3Data Bit 4Data Bit 5Data Bit 6Data Bit 7 Parity BitStop Bit 00010110 1011 Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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Asynchronous Data Transmission Example 3: Hex# B4 16 is to be sent with one start bit, odd parity, 8-bit data length and two stop bits B4 16 = 1011 0100 2 Start BitData Bit 0Data Bit 1 Data Bit 2Data Bit 3Data Bit 4Data Bit 5Data Bit 6Data Bit 7 Parity BitStop Bit 00010110 1111 Presenter: Bao Nguyen
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Thank You! Any Questions?
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