SAM9G45 Atmel Corporation, SAM9G45 Datasheet - Page 242

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SAM9G45

Manufacturer Part Number
SAM9G45
Description
Manufacturer
Atmel Corporation
Datasheets

Specifications of SAM9G45

Flash (kbytes)
0 Kbytes
Pin Count
324
Max. Operating Frequency
400 MHz
Cpu
ARM926
Hardware Qtouch Acquisition
No
Max I/o Pins
160
Ext Interrupts
160
Usb Transceiver
3
Usb Speed
Hi-Speed
Usb Interface
Host, Device
Spi
2
Twi (i2c)
2
Uart
5
Lin
4
Ssc
2
Ethernet
1
Sd / Emmc
2
Graphic Lcd
Yes
Video Decoder
No
Camera Interface
Yes
Adc Channels
8
Adc Resolution (bits)
10
Adc Speed (ksps)
440
Resistive Touch Screen
Yes
Temp. Sensor
No
Crypto Engine
No
Sram (kbytes)
64
Self Program Memory
NO
External Bus Interface
2
Dram Memory
DDR2/LPDDR, SDRAM/LPSDR
Nand Interface
Yes
Picopower
No
Temp. Range (deg C)
-40 to 85
I/o Supply Class
1.8/3.3
Operating Voltage (vcc)
0.9 to 1.1
Fpu
No
Mpu / Mmu
No/Yes
Timers
6
Output Compare Channels
6
Input Capture Channels
6
Pwm Channels
4
32khz Rtc
Yes
Calibrated Rc Oscillator
No
Glossary
Unpredictable
VA
Victim
Virtual Address (VA)
Warm reset
Watchpoint
Way
WB
Word
Write
Write-back (WB)
Write buffer
Glossary-18
For reads, the data returned when reading from this location is unpredictable. It can have
any value. For writes, writing to this location causes unpredictable behavior, or an
unpredictable change in device configuration. Unpredictable instructions must not halt
or hang the processor, or any part of the system.
See Virtual Address.
A cache line, selected to be discarded to make room for a replacement cache line that is
required as a result of a cache miss. The way in which the victim is selected for eviction
is processor-specific. A victim is also known as a cast out.
The MMU uses its page tables to translate a Virtual Address into a Physical Address.
The processor executes code at the Virtual Address, which might be located elsewhere
in physical memory.
See also Fast Context Switch Extension, Modified Virtual Address, and Physical
Address.
Also known as a core reset. Initializes the majority of the processor excluding the debug
controller and debug logic. This type of reset is useful if you are using the debugging
features of a processor.
A watchpoint is a mechanism provided by debuggers to halt program execution when
the data contained by a particular memory address is changed. Watchpoints are inserted
by the programmer to allow inspection of register contents, memory locations, and
variable values when memory is written to test that the program is operating correctly.
Watchpoints are removed after the program is successfully tested. See also Breakpoint.
See Cache way.
See Write-back.
A 32-bit data item.
Writes are defined as operations that have the semantics of a store. That is, the ARM
instructions SRS, STM, STRD, STC, STRT, STRH, STRB, STRBT, STREX, SWP, and
SWPB, and the Thumb instructions STM, STR, STRH, STRB, and PUSH. Java
instructions that are accelerated by hardware can cause a number of writes to occur,
according to the state of the Java stack and the implementation of the Java hardware
acceleration.
In a write-back cache, data is only written to main memory when it is forced out of the
cache on line replacement following a cache miss. Otherwise, writes by the processor
only update the cache. (Also known as copyback).
A block of high-speed memory, arranged as a FIFO buffer, between the data cache and
main memory, whose purpose is to optimize stores to main memory.
Copyright © 2001-2003 ARM Limited. All rights reserved.
ARM DDI0198D

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