IDT
TM
Interprise
TM
Integrated
Communications Processor
79RC32334—Rev. Y
Features
◆
RC32300 32-bit Microprocessor
– Up to 150 MHz operation
– Enhanced MIPS-II Instruction Set Architecture (ISA)
– Cache prefetch instruction
– Conditional move instruction
– DSP instructions
– Supports big or little endian operation
– MMU with 32 page TLB
– 8kB Instruction Cache, 2-way set associative
– 2kB Data Cache, 2-way set associative
– Cache locking per line
– Programmable on a page basis to implement a write-through
no write allocate, write-through write allocate, or write-back
algorithms for cache management
– Compatible with a wide variety of operating systems
◆
Local Bus Interface
– Up to 75 MHz operation
– 26-bit address bus
– 32-bit data bus
– Direct control of local memory and peripherals
– Programmable system watch-dog timers
– Big or little endian support
◆
Interrupt Controller simplifies exception management
◆
Four general purpose 32-bit timer/counters
Programmable I/O (PIO)
– Input/Output/Interrupt source
– Individually programmable
◆
SDRAM Controller (32-bit memory only)
– 4 banks, non-interleaved
– Up to 512MB total SDRAM memory supported
– Implements full, direct control of discrete, SODIMM, or DIMM
memories
– Supports 16Mb through 512Mb SDRAM device depths
– Automatic refresh generation
◆
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) master mode interface
◆
UART Interface
– Two 16550 compatible UARTs
– Baud rate support up to 1.5 Mb/s
– Modem control signals available on one channel
◆
Memory & Peripheral Controller
– 6 banks, up to 64MB per bank
– Supports 8-,16-, and 32-bit interfaces
– Supports Flash ROM, SRAM, dual-port memory, and
peripheral devices
– Supports external wait-state generation
– 8-bit boot PROM support
– Flexible I/O timing protocols
◆
Block Diagram
EJTAG
In-Circuit Emulator Interface
RISCore32300
RC5000
Enhanced MIPS-II ISA Compatible
Integer CPU
CP0
32-page
TLB
Interrupt Control
Programmable I/O
32-bit Timers
SPI Control
DMA Control
Local
Memory/IO
Control
Dual UART
IPBus
Bridge
2kB
2-set, Lockable
Data Cache
8kB
2-set
Lockable
Instr. Cache
Figure 1 RC32334 Block Diagram
IDT
Peripheral
Bus
PCI Bridge
SDRAM
Control
Note:
This data sheet does not apply to revision Z silicon. Contact your IDT sales representative for information on revision Z.
IDT and the IDT logo are trademarks of Integrated Device Technology, Inc.
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©
2004 Integrated Device Technology, Inc.
August 31, 2004
DSC 5701
IDT 79RC32334—Rev. Y
4 DMA Channels
– 4 general purpose DMA, each with endianess swappers and
byte lane data alignment
– Supports scatter/gather, chaining via linked lists of records
– Supports memory-to-memory, memory-to-I/O, memory-to-
PCI, PCI-to-PCI, and I/O-to-I/O transfers
– Supports unaligned transfers
– Supports burst transfers
– Programmable DMA bus transactions burst size
(up to 16 bytes)
◆
PCI Bus Interface
– 32-bit PCI, up to 66 MHz
– Revision 2.2 compatible
– Target or master
– Host or satellite
– Three slot PCI arbiter
– Serial EEPROM support, for loading configuration registers
◆
Off-the-shelf development tools
◆
JTAG Interface (IEEE Std. 1149.1 compatible)
◆
256-ball BGA (1.0mm spacing)
◆
3.3V operation with 5V tolerant I/O
◆
EJTAG in-circuit emulator interface
◆
CPU Execution Core
The RC32334 integrates the RISCore32300, the same CPU core
found in the award-winning RC32364 microprocessor.
The RISCore32300 implements the Enhanced MIPS-II ISA. Thus, it
is upwardly compatible with applications written for a wide variety of
MIPS architecture processors, and it is kernel compatible with the
modern operating systems that support IDT’s 64-bit RISController
product family.
The RISCore32300 was explicitly defined and designed for inte-
grated processor products such as the RC32334. Key attributes of the
execution core found within this product include:
◆
High-speed, 5-stage scalar pipeline executes to 150MHz. This
high performance enables the RC32334 to perform a variety of
performance intensive tasks, such as routing, DSP algorithms,
etc.
◆
32-bit architecture with enhancements of key capabilities. Thus,
the RC32334 can execute existing 32-bit programs, while
enabling designers to take advantage of recent advances in
CPU architecture.
◆
Count leading-zeroes/ones. These instructions are common to a
wide variety of tasks, including modem emulation, voice over IP
compression and decompression, etc.
◆
Cache PREFetch instruction support, including a specialized
form intended to help memory coherency. System programmers
can allocate and stage the use of memory bandwidth to achieve
maximum performance.
◆
8kB of 2-way set associative instruction cache
Device Overview
The IDT RC32334 device is an integrated processor based on the
RC32300 CPU core. This product incorporates a high-performance, low-
cost 32-bit CPU core with functionality common to a large number of
embedded applications. The RC32334 integrates these functions to
enable the use of low-cost PC commodity market memory and I/O
devices, allowing the aggressive price/performance characteristics of
the CPU to be realized quickly into low-cost systems.
Serial
Channels
Programmable I/O
Serial
EEPROM
RC32334
Integrated
Core
Controller
SDRAM
Local
Memory
I/O Bus
FLASH
Local I/O
32-bit, 66MHz PCI
Figure 2 RC32334 Based System Diagram
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IDT 79RC32334—Rev. Y
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2KB of 2-way set associative data cache, capable of write-back
and write-through operation.
Cache locking per line to speed real-time systems and critical
system functions
On-chip TLB to enable multi-tasking in modern operating
systems
EJTAG interface to enable sophisticated low-cost in-circuit
emulation.
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Synchronous-DRAM Interface
The RC32334 integrates a SDRAM controller which provides direct
control of system SyncDRAM running at speeds to 75MHz.
Key capabilities of the SDRAM controller include:
◆
Direct control of 4 banks of SDRAM (up to 2 64-bit wide DIMMs)
◆
On-chip page comparators optimize access latency.
◆
Speeds to 75MHz
◆
Programmable address map.
◆
Supports 16, 64, 128, 256, or 512Mb SDRAM devices
◆
Automatic refresh generation driven by on-chip timer
◆
Support for discrete devices, SODIMM, or DIMM modules.
Thus, systems can take advantage of the full range of commodity
memory that is available, enabling system optimization for cost, real-
estate, or other attributes.
66 MHz operation
PCI revision 2.2 compliant
Programmable address mappings between CPU/Local memory
and PCI memory and I/O
On-chip PCI arbiter
Extensive buffering allows PCI to operate concurrently with local
memory transfers
Selectable byte-ordering swapper
5V tolerant I/O.
On-Chip DMA Controller
To minimize CPU exception handling and maximize the efficiency of
system bandwidth, the RC32334 integrates a very sophisticated 4-
channel DMA controller on chip.
The RC32334 DMA controller is capable of:
◆
Chaining and scatter/gather support through the use of a
flexible, linked list of DMA transaction descriptors
◆
Capable of memory<->memory, memory<->I/O, and
PCI<->memory DMA
◆
Unaligned transfer support
◆
Byte, halfword, word, quadword DMA support.
On-Chip Peripherals
The RC32334 also integrates peripherals that are common to a wide
variety of embedded systems.
◆
Dual channel 16550 compatible UARTs, with modem control
interface on one channel.
◆
SPI master mode interface for direct interface to EEPROM,
A/D, etc.
◆
Interrupt Controller to speed interrupt decode and management
◆
Four 32-bit on-chip Timer/Counters
◆
Programmable I/O module
Local Memory and I/O Controller
The local memory and I/O controller implements direct control of
external memory devices, including the boot ROM as well as other
memory areas, and also implements direct control of external periph-
erals.
The local memory controller is highly flexible, allowing a wide range
of devices to be directly controlled by the RC32334 processor. For
example, a system can be built using an 8-bit boot ROM, 16-bit FLASH
cards (possibly on PCMCIA), a 32-bit SRAM or dual-port memory, and a
variety of low-cost peripherals.
Key capabilities include:
◆
Direct control of EPROM, FLASH, RAM, and dual-port memories
◆
6 chip-select outputs, supporting up to 64MB per memory space
◆
Supports mixture of 8-, 16-, and 32-bit wide memory regions
◆
Flexible timing protocols allow direct control of a wide variety of
devices
◆
Programmable address map for 2 chip selects
◆
Automatic wait state generation.
Debug Support
To facilitate rapid time to market, the RC32334 provides extensive
support for system debug.
First and foremost, this product integrates an EJTAG in-circuit emula-
tion module, allowing a low-cost emulator to interoperate with programs
executing on the controller. By using an augmented JTAG interface, the
RC32334 is able to reuse the same low-cost emulators developed
around the RC32364 CPU.
Secondly, the RC32334 implements additional reporting signals
intended to simplify the task of system debugging when using a logic
analyzer. This product allows the logic analyzer to differentiate transac-
tions initiated by DMA from those initiated by the CPU and further allows
CPU transactions to be sorted into instruction fetches vs. data fetches.
Finally, the RC32334 implements a full boundary scan capability,
allowing board manufacturing diagnostics and debug.
PCI Bus Bridge
In order to leverage the wide availability of low-cost peripherals for
the PC market as well as to simplify the design of add-in functions, the
RC32334 integrates a full 32-bit PCI bus bridge. Key attributes of this
bridge include:
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IDT 79RC32334—Rev. Y
Packaging
The RC32334 is packaged using a 256-lead PBGA package, with
1.0mm ball spacing.
Thermal Considerations
The RC32334 consumes less than 2.1 W peak power. The device is
guaranteed in an ambient temperature range of 0° to +70° C for
commercial temperature devices; -40° to +85° for industrial temperature
devices.
September 14, 2001:
In the Reset category of Table 6: switched
mem_addr[19:17] from Tsu22 and Thld22 to Tsu10 and Thld10;
switched mem_addr[22:20] from Tsu10 and Thld10 to Tsu22 and
Thld22; moved ejtag_pcst[2:0] from Reset to Debug Interface category
under Tsu20 and Thld20.
November 1, 2001:
Added Input Voltage Undershoot parameter and
2 footnotes to Table 10.
March 20, 2002:
In Local System Interface section of AC Timing
Characteristics table, changed values in Min column for last category of
signals (Tdoh3) from 2.5 to 1.5 for all speeds. In Table 8, PCI Drive
Output Pads, the Conditions for parameters V
OL
, V
OH
, V
IL
, and V
IH
were
changed to read Per PCI 2.2.
May 2, 2002:
Changed upper ambient temperature for commercial
uses back from +85° C to +70° C (changed erroneously from 70 to 85
on March 13, 2001). Added Reset State Status column to Table 1.
Revised description of jtag_trst_n in Table 1 and changed this pin to a
pull-down instead of a pull-up.
July 3, 2002:
This data sheet now describes revision Y silicon and is
no longer applicable to revision Z.
July 12, 2002:
In Table 6: PCI section, changed Thld Min values
from 1 to zero; DMA section, changed Thld9 Min values from 2 to 1; in
PIO section, changed Thld9 Min values from 2 to 1; in Timer section,
changed Thld10 Min values from 2 to 1. Revision Y data sheet changed
from Preliminary to Final.
September 18, 2002:
Added cpu_coldreset_n rise time to Table 5,
Clock Parameters. Added mem_addr[16] and sdram_addr[16] to Tables
1 and 12. Changed Logic Diagram to include sdram_addr[16].
December 18, 2002:
In the Reset section of Table 6, AC Timing
Characteristics, setup and hold time categories for cpu_coldreset_n
have been deleted.
July 30, 2003:
In Table 8, added 3 new categories (Input Pads, PCI
Input Pads, and All Pads) and added footnotes 2 and 3.
March 24, 2004:
In Table 1, changed description in Satellite Mode
for pci_rst_n. Specified “cold” reset on pages 11 and 12. Changed the
maximum value for Vcc to 4.0 in Table 10, Absolute Maximum Ratings,
and changed footnote 1 to that table. Added Power Ramp-up section on
page 21.
August 31, 2004:
Added ”Green” orderable parts on page 30.
Revision History
May 16, 2000:
Initial version.
June 8, 2000:
In CPU Core Specific Signals section of Table 1,
changed cpu_dr_r_n pin from Input to Output. Updated document from
Advance to Preliminary Information.
June 15, 2000:
In Table 1, switched assertion and de-assertion for
debug_cpu_dma_n signal. In the AC Timing Characteristics table,
added SPI section and adjusted parameters in the Reset section.
July 12, 2000:
Removed “Preliminary Information” statement. Added
information regarding external pull-ups and pull-downs to the Pin
Description Table. Made minor revisions in other parts of the data sheet.
August 3, 2000:
Added Pin Layout diagram showing power and
ground pins. Revised Power Curves section to reflect support of only 2x,
3x, and 4x.
August 30, 2000:
Added Standby mode and values to Power
Consumption table. Extended Power Curve figure to 75 MHz.
September 25, 2000:
Changed MIPS32 ISA to Enhanced MIPS-II. In
Local System Interface section of Table 6, changed Thld2 values for
mem_data[31:0] from 1.8 to 1.5 ns and changed Tdoh3 values for
mem_addr[25:2], etc. from 1.8 to 1.5 ns.
December 12, 2000:
Changed Max values for cpu_masterclock
period in Table 5 and added footnote. In Table 1, added 2nd alternate
function for spi_mosi, spi_miso, spi_sck. In Table 10, removed the “1”
from Alt column for cpu_masterclk and added “2” in Alt column for pins
G3, G4, H2. In RC32334 Alternate Signal Functions table: added pin T2;
added pin names in Alt #2 column for pins G3, G4, H2; added PIO[11] to
Alt #2 column for pin R3.
January 4, 2001:
In Table 6 under Interrupt Handling, moved the
values for Tsu9 from the Max to the Min columns.
March 13, 2001:
Changed upper ambient temperature for industrial
and commercial uses from +70° C to +85° C.
June 7, 2001:
In the Clock Parameters table, added footnote 3 to
output_clk category and added NA to Min and Max columns. In Figure 3
(Reset Specification), enhanced signal line for cpu_masterclk. In Local
System Interface section of AC Timing Characteristics table, changed
values in Min column for last category of signals (Tdoh3) from 1.5 to 2.5
for all speeds. In SDRAM Controller section of same table, changed
values in Min column for last category of signals (9 signals) from 1 to 2.5
for all speeds.
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IDT 79RC32334—Rev. Y
Pin Description Table
The following table lists the pins provided on the RC32334. Note that those pin names followed by ”_n” are active-low signals. All external pull-ups
and pull-downs require
10 kΩ resistor.
Name
Type
Reset
Drive
State
Strength
Status Capability
Description
Local System Interface
mem_data[31:0]
mem_addr[25:2]
I/O
I/O
Z
[25:10] Z
[9:2] L
High
Local System Data Bus
Primary data bus for memory. I/O and SDRAM.
[25:17] Low
Memory Address Bus
These signals provide the Memory or DRAM address, during a Memory or DRAM bus transaction. During
[16:2] High each word data, the address increments either in linear or sub-block ordering, depending on the transac-
tion type. The table below indicates how the memory write enable signals are used to address discreet
memory port width types.
Port Width
Pin Signals
mem_we_n[3]
mem_we_n[3]
mem_we_n[2]
mem_we_n[1]
mem_we_n[0]
mem_we_n[0]
mem_we_n[0]
Byte Low Write
Enable
Byte Write Enable
DMA (32-bit) mem_we_n[3]
32-bit
16-bit
8-bit
mem_we_n[2] mem_we_n[1]
mem_we_n[2] mem_we_n[1]
Not Used (Driven
Low)
mem_addr[0]
Byte High Write Enable mem_addr[1]
Not Used (Driven High) mem_addr[1]
mem_addr[22] Alternate function: reset_boot_mode[1].
mem_addr[21] Alternate function: reset_boot_mode[0].
mem_addr[20] Alternate function: reset_pci_host_mode.
mem_addr[19] Alternate function: modebit [9].
mem_addr[18] Alternate function: modebit [8].
mem_addr[17] Alternate function: modebit [7].
mem_addr[16] Alternate function: sdram_addr[16].
mem_addr[15] Alternate function: sdram_addr[15].
mem_addr[14] Alternate function: sdram_addr[14].
mem_addr[13] Alternate function: sdram_addr[13].
mem_addr[11] Alternate function: sdram_addr[11].
mem_addr[10] Alternate function: sdram_addr[10].
mem_addr[9] Alternate function: sdram_addr[9].
mem_addr[8] Alternate function: sdram_addr[8].
mem_addr[7] Alternate function: sdram_addr[7].
mem_addr[6] Alternate function: sdram_addr[6].
mem_addr[5] Alternate function: sdram_addr[5].
mem_addr[4] Alternate function: sdram_addr[4].
mem_addr[3] Alternate function: sdram_addr[3].
mem_addr[2] Alternate function: sdram_addr[2].
mem_cs_n[5:0]
Output
H
Low with
internal
pull-up
High
Memory Chip Select Negated
Recommend external pull-up.
Signals that a Memory Bank is actively selected.
Memory Output Enable Negated
Recommend external pull-up.
Signals that a Memory Bank can output its data lines onto the cpu_ad bus.
Table 1 Pin Description (Part 1 of 7)
mem_oe_n
Output
H
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