DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO Microchip Technology, DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO Datasheet - Page 26

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DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO

Manufacturer Part Number
DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO
Description
IC,DSP,16-BIT,CMOS,SOP,28PIN,PLASTIC
Manufacturer
Microchip Technology
Series
dsPIC™ 30Fr

Specifications of DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO

Core Processor
dsPIC
Core Size
16-Bit
Speed
20 MIPS
Connectivity
I²C, SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, Motor Control PWM, QEI, POR, PWM, WDT
Number Of I /o
20
Program Memory Size
12KB (4K x 24)
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Eeprom Size
1K x 8
Ram Size
512 x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
2.5 V ~ 5.5 V
Data Converters
A/D 6x10b
Oscillator Type
Internal
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 125°C
Package / Case
28-SOIC (7.5mm Width)
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
For Use With
XLT28SO-1 - SOCKET TRANSITION 28SOIC 300MIL
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
DSPIC30F2010-20E/SO
Manufacturer:
MICROCHIP/微芯
Quantity:
20 000
dsPIC30F2010
3.2.2
The X data space is used by all instructions and sup-
ports all addressing modes. There are separate read
and write data buses. The X read data bus is the return
data path for all instructions that view data space as
combined X and Y address space. It is also the X
address space data path for the dual operand read
instructions (MAC class). The X write data bus is the
only write path to data space for all instructions.
The X data space also supports Modulo Addressing for
all instructions, subject to addressing mode restric-
tions. Bit-Reversed addressing is only supported for
writes to X data space.
The Y data space is used in concert with the X data
space by the MAC class of instructions (CLR, ED, EDAC,
MAC, MOVSAC, MPY, MPY.N and MSC) to provide two
concurrent data read paths. No writes occur across the
Y bus. This class of instructions dedicates two W reg-
ister pointers, W10 and W11, to always address Y data
space, independent of X data space, whereas W8 and
W9 always address X data space. Note that during
accumulator write-back, the data address space is con-
sidered a combination of X and Y data spaces, so the
write occurs across the X bus. Consequently, the write
can be to any address in the entire data space.
The Y data space can only be used for the data
prefetch operation associated with the MAC class of
instructions. It also supports Modulo Addressing for
automated circular buffers. Of course, all other instruc-
tions can access the Y data address space through the
X data path, as part of the composite linear space.
The boundary between the X and Y data spaces is
defined as shown in
grammable. Should an EA point to data outside its own
assigned address space, or to a location outside phys-
ical memory, an all-zero word/byte will be returned. For
example, although Y address space is visible by all
non-MAC instructions using any Addressing mode, an
attempt by a MAC instruction to fetch data from that
space, using W8 or W9 (X space pointers), will return
0x0000.
TABLE 3-2:
All effective addresses are 16 bits wide and point to
bytes within the data space. Therefore, the data space
address range is 64 Kbytes or 32K words.
DS70118J-page 26
Attempted Operation
EA = an unimplemented address
W8 or W9 used to access Y data
space in a MAC instruction
W10 or W11 used to access X
data space in a MAC instruction
DATA SPACES
EFFECT OF INVALID
MEMORY ACCESSES
Figure 3-6
and is not user pro-
Data Returned
0x0000
0x0000
0x0000
3.2.3
The core data width is 16 bits. All internal registers are
organized as 16-bit wide words. Data space memory is
organized in byte addressable, 16-bit wide blocks.
3.2.4
To help maintain backward compatibility with PIC
MCU devices and improve data space memory usage
efficiency, the dsPIC30F instruction set supports both
word and byte operations. Data is aligned in data mem-
ory and registers as words, but all data space EAs
resolve to bytes. Data byte reads will read the complete
word, which contains the byte, using the LSb of any EA
to determine which byte to select. The selected byte is
placed onto the LSB of the X data path (no byte
accesses are possible from the Y data path as the MAC
class of instruction can only fetch words). That is, data
memory and registers are organized as two parallel
byte wide entities with shared (word) address decode,
but separate write lines. Data byte writes only write to
the corresponding side of the array or register which
matches the byte address.
As a consequence of this byte accessibility, all effec-
tive address calculations (including those generated
by the DSP operations, which are restricted to word-
sized data) are internally scaled to step through
word-aligned memory. For example, the core would
recognize
Addressing mode, [Ws ++], will result in a value of
Ws + 1 for byte operations and Ws + 2 for word
operations.
All word accesses must be aligned to an even address.
Misaligned word data fetches are not supported, so
care must be taken when mixing byte and word opera-
tions, or translating from 8-bit MCU code. Should a mis-
aligned read or write be attempted, an address error
trap will be generated. If the error occurred on a read,
the instruction underway is completed, whereas if it
occurred on a write, the instruction will be executed but
the write will not occur. In either case, a trap will then
be executed, allowing the system and/or user to exam-
ine the machine state prior to execution of the address
fault.
FIGURE 3-8:
0001
0003
0005
15
DATA SPACE WIDTH
DATA ALIGNMENT
that
MSB
Byte 1
Byte 3
Byte 5
Post-Modified
DATA ALIGNMENT
© 2011 Microchip Technology Inc.
8 7
LSB
Byte 0
Byte 2
Byte 4
Register
0
0000
0002
0004
Indirect
®

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