AMD-K6-IIIE+550ACR AMD (ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES), AMD-K6-IIIE+550ACR Datasheet - Page 277

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AMD-K6-IIIE+550ACR

Manufacturer Part Number
AMD-K6-IIIE+550ACR
Description
Manufacturer
AMD (ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES)
Datasheet

Specifications of AMD-K6-IIIE+550ACR

Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Not Compliant
23543A/0—September 2000
TAP Registers
Chapter 13
The AMD-K6-IIIE+ processor provides an Instruction Register
(IR) and three Test Data Registers (TDR) to support the
boundary-scan architecture. The IR and one of the TDRs—the
Boundary-Scan Register (BSR)—consist of a shift register and
an output register. The shift register is loaded in parallel in the
Capture states. (See “TAP Controller State Machine” on
page 260 for a description of the TAP controller states.) In
addition, the shift register is loaded and shifted serially in the
Shift states. The output register is loaded in parallel from its
corresponding shift register in the Update states.
Instruction Register (IR). The IR is a 5-bit register, without parity,
that determines which instruction to run and which test data
register to select. When the TAP controller enters the
Capture-IR state, the processor loads the following bits into the
IR shift register:
Loading 00001b into the IR shift register during the Capture-IR
state results in loading the SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction.
For each entry into the Shift-IR state, the IR shift register is
serially shifted by one bit toward the TDO pin. During the shift,
the most significant bit of the IR shift register is loaded from
the TDI pin.
The IR output register is loaded from the IR shift register in the
Update-IR state, and the current instruction is defined by the
IR output register. See “TAP Instructions” on page 259 for a list
a n d d e f i n i t i o n o f t h e i n s t r u c t i o n s s u p p o r t e d by t h e
AMD-K6-IIIE+ processor.
Boundary Scan Register (BSR). The Boundary Scan Register is a Test
Data Register consisting of the interconnection of 152
boundary-scan cells. Each output and bidirectional pin of the
processor requires a two-bit cell, where one bit corresponds to
the pin and the other bit is the output enable for the pin. When
a 0 is shifted into the enable bit of a cell, the corresponding pin
is floated, and when a 1 is shifted into the enable bit, the pin is
driven valid. Each input pin requires a one-bit cell that
corresponds to the pin. The last cell of the BSR is reserved and
does not correspond to any processor pin.
01b—Loaded into the two least significant bits, as specified
by the IEEE 1149.1 standard
000b—Loaded into the three most significant bits
Test and Debug
AMD-K6™-IIIE+ Embedded Processor Data Sheet
255

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