7 internal registers, 8 selecting peripherals vs. general purpose i/o, Internal registers -7 – Intel PXA255 User Manual

Page 37: Selecting peripherals vs. general purpose i/o -7

Advertising
background image

Intel® PXA255 Processor Developer’s Manual

2-7

System Architecture

2.7

Internal Registers

All internal registers are mapped in physical memory space on 32-bit address boundaries. Use

word access loads and stores to access internal registers. Internal register space must be mapped as

non-cacheable.

Byte and halfword accesses to internal registers are not permitted and yield unpredictable results.

Register space where a register is not specifically mapped is defined as reserved space. Reading or

writing reserved space causes unpredictable results.

The processor does not use all register bit locations. The unused bit locations are marked reserved

and are allocated for future use. Write reserved bit locations as zeros. Ignore the values of these bits

during reads because they are unpredictable.

2.8

Selecting Peripherals vs. General Purpose I/O

Most peripherals connect to the external pins through GPIOs. To use a peripheral connected

through a GPIO, the software must first configure the GPIO so that the desired peripheral is

connected to its pins. The default state of the pins is GPIO inputs.

To allocate a peripheral to a pin, disable the GPIO function for that pin, then map the peripheral

function onto the pin by selecting the proper alternate function for the pin. Some GPIOs have

multiple alternate functions. After a function is selected for a pin, all other functions are excluded.
For this reason some peripherals are mapped to multiple GPIOs, as shown in

Section 4.1.2, “GPIO

Alternate Functions” on page 4-2

. Multiple mapping does not mean multiple instances of a

peripheral - only that the peripheral is connected to the pins in several ways.

PWM

reset

reset

reset

reset

Interrupt Controller

reset

reset

reset

reset

GPIO

reset

reset

reset

reset

Power Manager

preserved

reset

reset

reset

SSP

reset

reset

reset

reset

NSSP

reset

reset

reset

reset

MMC

reset

reset

reset

reset

Clocks

preserved (except CP14)

preserved (except CP14)

reset (except OSCC)

reset

Table 2-4. Effect of Each Type of Reset on Internal Register State (Sheet 2 of 2)

Unit

Sleep Mode

GPIO Reset

Watchdog Reset

Hard Reset

Advertising