FDC37M60X SMSC Corporation, FDC37M60X Datasheet - Page 171

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FDC37M60X

Manufacturer Part Number
FDC37M60X
Description
ENHANCED SUPER I/O CONTROLLER WITH INFRARED SUPPORT
Manufacturer
SMSC Corporation
Datasheet
Parallel Port FIFO (Mode 101)
The standard parallel port is run at or near the
peak 500KBytes/sec allowed in the forward
direction using DMA. The state machine does
not examine nACK and begins the next transfer
based on Busy. Refer to Figure 17.
ECP Parallel Port Timing
The timing is designed to allow operation at
approximately 2.0 Mbytes/sec over a 15ft cable.
If a shorter cable is used then the bandwidth will
increase.
Forward-Idle
When the host has no data to send it keeps
HostClk (nStrobe) high and the peripheral will
leave PeriphClk (Busy) low.
Forward Data Transfer Phase
The interface transfers data and commands
from the host to the peripheral using an inter-
locked PeriphAck and HostClk. The peripheral
may indicate its desire to send data to the host
by asserting nPeriphRequest.
The Forward Data Transfer Phase may be
entered from the Forward-Idle Phase. While in
the
asynchronously
(nFault) to request that the channel be reversed.
When the peripheral is not busy it sets
PeriphAck (Busy) low. The host then sets
HostClk (nStrobe) low when it is prepared to
send data. The data must be stable for the
specified setup time prior to the falling edge of
HostClk. The peripheral then sets PeriphAck
(Busy) high to acknowledge the handshake. The
host then sets HostClk (nStrobe) high. The
peripheral then
Forward
Phase
assert
accepts the data and
the
the
peripheral
nPeriphRequest
ECP PARALLEL PORT TIMING
may
sets
171
PeriphAck (Busy) low, completing the transfer.
This sequence is shown in Figure 17.
The timing is designed to provide 3 cable
round-trip times for data setup if Data is driven
simultaneously with HostClk (nStrobe).
Reverse-Idle Phase
The peripheral has no data to send and keeps
PeriphClk high. The host is idle and keeps
HostAck low.
Reverse Data Transfer Phase
The interface transfers data and commands
from the peripheral to the host using an inter-
locked HostAck and PeriphClk.
The Reverse Data Transfer Phase may be en-
tered from the Reverse-Idle Phase.
previous byte has beed accepted the host sets
HostAck (nALF) low. The peripheral then sets
PeriphClk (nACK) low when it has data to send.
The data must be stable for the specified setup
time prior to the falling edge of PeriphClk. When
the host is ready to accept a byte it sets
HostAck (nALF) high to acknowledge the
handshake. The peripheral then sets PeriphClk
(nACK) high. After the host has accepted the
data it sets HostAck (nALF) low, completing the
transfer. This sequence is shown in Figure 18.
Output Drivers
To facilitate higher performance data transfer,
the use of balanced CMOS active drivers for
critical
PeriphAck, PeriphClk) are used ECP Mode.
Because the use of active drivers can present
compatibility
(the control signals, by tradition, are specified
as open-collector), the drivers are dynamically
changed from open-collector to totem-pole. The
signals
problems in Compatible
(Data,
HostAck,
After the
HostClk,
Mode

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