ATtiny25 Automotive Atmel Corporation, ATtiny25 Automotive Datasheet - Page 12

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ATtiny25 Automotive

Manufacturer Part Number
ATtiny25 Automotive
Description
Manufacturer
Atmel Corporation

Specifications of ATtiny25 Automotive

Flash (kbytes)
2 Kbytes
Pin Count
8
Max. Operating Frequency
16 MHz
Cpu
8-bit AVR
# Of Touch Channels
4
Hardware Qtouch Acquisition
No
Max I/o Pins
6
Ext Interrupts
6
Usb Speed
No
Usb Interface
No
Spi
1
Twi (i2c)
1
Graphic Lcd
No
Video Decoder
No
Camera Interface
No
Adc Channels
4
Adc Resolution (bits)
10
Adc Speed (ksps)
15
Analog Comparators
1
Resistive Touch Screen
No
Temp. Sensor
Yes
Crypto Engine
No
Sram (kbytes)
0.12
Eeprom (bytes)
128
Self Program Memory
YES
Dram Memory
No
Nand Interface
No
Picopower
No
Temp. Range (deg C)
-40 to 125
I/o Supply Class
2.7 to 5.5
Operating Voltage (vcc)
2.7 to 5.5
Fpu
No
Mpu / Mmu
no / no
Timers
2
Output Compare Channels
5
Pwm Channels
6
32khz Rtc
No
Calibrated Rc Oscillator
Yes
12
ATtiny25/45/85
When an interrupt occurs, the Global Interrupt Enable I-bit is cleared and all interrupts are dis-
abled. The user software can write logic one to the I-bit to enable nested interrupts. All enabled
interrupts can then interrupt the current interrupt routine. The I-bit is automatically set when a
Return from Interrupt instruction – RETI – is executed.
There are basically two types of interrupts. The first type is triggered by an event that sets the
Interrupt Flag. For these interrupts, the Program Counter is vectored to the actual Interrupt Vec-
tor in order to execute the interrupt handling routine, and hardware clears the corresponding
Interrupt Flag. Interrupt Flags can also be cleared by writing a logic one to the flag bit position(s)
to be cleared. If an interrupt condition occurs while the corresponding interrupt enable bit is
cleared, the Interrupt Flag will be set and remembered until the interrupt is enabled, or the flag is
cleared by software. Similarly, if one or more interrupt conditions occur while the Global Interrupt
Enable bit is cleared, the corresponding Interrupt Flag(s) will be set and remembered until the
Global Interrupt Enable bit is set, and will then be executed by order of priority.
The second type of interrupts will trigger as long as the interrupt condition is present. These
interrupts do not necessarily have Interrupt Flags. If the interrupt condition disappears before the
interrupt is enabled, the interrupt will not be triggered.
When the AVR exits from an interrupt, it will always return to the main program and execute one
more instruction before any pending interrupt is served.
Note that the Status Register is not automatically stored when entering an interrupt routine, nor
restored when returning from an interrupt routine. This must be handled by software.
When using the CLI instruction to disable interrupts, the interrupts will be immediately disabled.
No interrupt will be executed after the CLI instruction, even if it occurs simultaneously with the
CLI instruction. The following example shows how this can be used to avoid interrupts during the
timed EEPROM write sequence..
Assembly Code Example
C Code Example
in r16, SREG
cli
sbi EECR, EEMWE
sbi EECR, EEWE
out SREG, r16
char cSREG;
cSREG = SREG; /* store SREG value */
/* disable interrupts during timed sequence */
_CLI();
EECR |= (1<<EEMWE); /* start EEPROM write */
EECR |= (1<<EEWE);
SREG = cSREG; /* restore SREG value (I-bit) */
; disable interrupts during timed sequence
; store SREG value
; start EEPROM write
; restore SREG value (I-bit)
7598H–AVR–07/09

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