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从高速微控制器系列向超高速闪存微控制器的升级

作者: 来源: 发布时间:2009/9/5 14:05:56  点击数:1661

 

Porting Applications from the High-Speed Micro Family to Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontrollers

Abstract: There are many reasons to upgrade older 8051 designs that use high-speed microcontrollers (DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520) to the newer ultra-high-speed flash microcontrollers (DS89C430/DS89C450). Incentives to upgrade include higher performance, additional features and peripherals, and the flexibility of internal flash memory. This application note discusses some important differences between the two microcontroller families and explains how to upgrade from the high-speed to the ultra-high-speed devices.

Overview

Maxim's high-speed microcontroller family includes a wide variety of 8051 microcontrollers which execute instructions at a faster 4 clocks-per-machine-cycle rate compared to the 8051's original 12 clocks-per-machine cycle speed. Some of the high-speed microcontrollers operate entirely from external program memory, such as the DS80C310, while others contain internal EPROM or ROM program memory, such as the DS87C520/DS83C520. All of these high-speed devices are pin-compatible with existing 8051 microcontrollers, so designs can be upgraded in most cases simply by dropping in a faster device and making minor software adjustments.

In a similar manner, the ultra-high-speed flash microcontrollers can be used as drop-in upgrades for high-speed microcontroller designs. These newer, more powerful microcontrollers, which include the DS89C430/DS89C450, offer important improvements: expanded internal program flash memory (up to 64kB); and a redesigned, ultra-high-speed microcontroller core capable of executing instructions in a single clock cycle for up to a 12x speed improvement over the original 8051 design.

This application note discusses how to upgrade from the high-speed microcontrollers to ultra-high-speed flash devices. The article also outlines differences in feature sets, pinout details, and SFR changes that must be considered when upgrading a design.

General References

For general programming guidelines for the following devices, consult the High-Speed Microcontroller User's Guide (PDF).
  • DS80C310 High-Speed Microcontroller
  • DS80C320 High-Speed Low-Power Microcontroller
  • DS80C323 High-Speed Low-Power Microcontroller
  • DS83C520 High-Speed ROM Microcontroller
  • DS87C520 High-Speed EPROM Microcontroller
For general programming guidelines for the following devices, consult the Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontroller User's Guide (PDF).
  • DS89C430 Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontroller
  • DS89C450 Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontroller

Basic Device Features

Table 1. Comparison of Device Features
Feature DS80C310 DS80C320
DS80C323
DS87C520
DS83C520
DS89C430
DS89C450
Clocks per Machine Cycle 4 4 4 1
Operating Voltage Range (V) 4.5 to 5.5 4.25 to 5.5 (DS80C320)
2.7 to 5.5 (DS80C323)
4.5 to 5.5 4.5 to 5.5
Clock Rate (MHz, max) 33 33 (DS80C320)
18 (DS80C323)
33 33
Instruction Execution Time (ns, min) 121 121 (DS80C320)
222 (DS80C323)
121 30
Crystal Multiplier       √ (x2 or x4)
Ring Oscillator  
Internal Program Memory None None 16kB 16kB (DS89C430)
64kB (DS89C450)
Internal Register Memory (Bytes) 256 256 256 256
Internal MOVX Memory None None 1kB 1kB
Serial Ports (UARTs) 1 2 2 2
External Interrupts 6 6 6 6
Port Pins (with Bus Active) 16 16 16 16
Port Pins (max) 16 16 32 32
Timer/Counters Three/16-bit Three/16-bit Three/16-bit Three/16-bit
Watchdog  
Dual Data Pointers
Autoincrement/Decrement      
Stop Mode
Power-On Reset
Power-Fail Interrupt  

Device Pinout Scheme

Table 2. Device Pinout Differences
DIP PLCC TQFP DS80C310 DS80C320
DS80C323
DS87C520
DS83C520
DS89C430
DS89C450
1 2 40 P1.0 (T2) P1.0 (T2) P1.0 (T2) P1.0 (T2)
2 3 41 P1.1 (T2EX) P1.1 (T2EX) P1.1 (T2EX) P1.1 (T2EX)
3 4 42 P1.2 P1.2 (RXD1) P1.2 (RXD1) P1.2 (RXD1)
4 5 43 P1.3 P1.3 (TXD1) P1.3 (TXD1) P1.3 (TXD1)
5 6 44 P1.4 (INT2) P1.4 (INT2) P1.4 (INT2) P1.4 (INT2)
6 7 1 P1.5 (nINT3) P1.5 (nINT3) P1.5 (nINT3) P1.5 (nINT3)
7 8 2 P1.6 (INT4) P1.6 (INT4) P1.6 (INT4) P1.6 (INT4)
8 9 3 P1.7 (nINT5) P1.7 (nINT5) P1.7 (nINT5) P1.7 (nINT5)
9 10 4 RST RST RST RST
10 11 5 P3.0 (RXD0) P3.0 (RXD0) P3.0 (RXD0) P3.0 (RXD0)
11 13 7 P3.1 (TXD0) P3.1 (TXD0) P3.1 (TXD0) P3.1 (TXD0)
12 14 8 P3.2 (nINT0) P3.2 (nINT0) P3.2 (nINT0) P3.2 (nINT0)
13 15 9 P3.3 (nINT1) P3.3 (nINT1) P3.3 (nINT1) P3.3 (nINT1)
14 16 10 P3.4 (T0) P3.4 (T0) P3.4 (T0) P3.4 (T0)
15 17 11 P3.5 (T1) P3.5 (T1) P3.5 (T1) P3.5 (T1)
16 18 12 P3.6 (nWR) P3.6 (nWR) P3.6 (nWR) P3.6 (nWR)
17 19 13 P3.7 (nRD) P3.7 (nRD) P3.7 (nRD) P3.7 (nRD)
18 20 14 XTAL2 XTAL2 XTAL2 XTAL2
19 21 15 XTAL1 XTAL1 XTAL1 XTAL1
20 22, 23 16, 17 GND GND GND GND
1 39 GND N/C (can be connected to GND if desired) GND GND
21 24 18 A8 (P2.0) A8 (P2.0) A8 (P2.0) A8 (P2.0)
22 25 19 A9 (P2.1) A9 (P2.1) A9 (P2.1) A9 (P2.1)
23 26 20 A10 (P2.2) A10 (P2.2) A10 (P2.2) A10 (P2.2)
24 27 21 A11 (P2.3) A11 (P2.3) A11 (P2.3) A11 (P2.3)
25 28 22 A12 (P2.4) A12 (P2.4) A12 (P2.4) A12 (P2.4)
26 29 23 A13 (P2.5) A13 (P2.5) A13 (P2.5) A13 (P2.5)
27 30 24 A14 (P2.6) A14 (P2.6) A14 (P2.6) A14 (P2.6)
28 31 25 A15 (P2.7) A15 (P2.7) A15 (P2.7) A15 (P2.7)
29 32 26 nPSEN nPSEN nPSEN nPSEN
30 33 27 ALE ALE ALE ALE/nPROG
31 35 29 nEA nEA nEA nEA
32 36 30 AD7 AD7 AD7 (P0.7) AD7 (P0.7)
33 37 31 AD6 AD6 AD6 (P0.6) AD6 (P0.6)
34 38 32 AD5 AD5 AD5 (P0.5) AD5 (P0.5)
35 39 33 AD4 AD4 AD4 (P0.4) AD4 (P0.4)
36 40 34 AD3 AD3 AD3 (P0.3) AD3 (P0.3)
37 41 35 AD2 AD2 AD2 (P0.2) AD2 (P0.2)
38 42 36 AD1 AD1 AD1 (P0.1) AD1 (P0.1)
39 43 37 AD0 AD0 AD0 (P0.0) AD0 (P0.0)
40 44 38 VCC (+5V) VCC +5V (DS80C320)
VCC +3V (DS80C323)
VCC (+5V) VCC (+5V)
12 6 N/C N/C N/C VCC (+5V)
34 28 N/C N/C N/C GND

Device Registers

Table 3. SFR Map Comparisons
Address DS80C310 DS80C320
DS80C323
DS87C520
DS83C520
DS89C430
DS89C450
80h P0 P0
81h SP SP SP SP
82h DPL DPL DPL DPL
83h DPH DPH DPH DPH
84h DPL1 DPL1 DPL1 DPL1
85h DPH1 DPH1 DPH1 DPH1
86h DPS DPS DPS DPS
87h PCON PCON PCON PCON
88h TCON TCON TCON TCON
89h TMOD TMOD TMOD TMOD
8Ah TL0 TL0 TL0 TL0
8Bh TL1 TL1 TL1 TL1
8Ch TH0 TH0 TH0 TH0
8Dh TH1 TH1 TH1 TH1
8Eh CKCON CKCON CKCON CKCON
90h P1 P1 P1 P1
91h EXIF EXIF EXIF EXIF
96h CKMOD
98h SCON SCON0 SCON0 SCON0
99h SBUF SBUF0 SBUF0 SBUF0
9Dh ACON
A0h P2 P2 P2 P2
A8h IE IE IE IE
A9h SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0
AAh SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1
B0h P3 P3 P3 P3
B1h IP1
B8h IP IP IP IP0
B9h SADEN0 SADEN0 SADEN0 SADEN0
BAh SADEN1 SADEN1 SADEN1
C0h SCON1 SCON1 SCON1
C1h SBUF1 SBUF1 SBUF1
C2h ROMSIZE ROMSIZE
C4h PMR PMR
C5h STATUS STATUS STATUS STATUS
C7h TA TA TA
C8h T2CON T2CON T2CON T2CON
C9h T2MOD T2MOD T2MOD T2MOD
CAh RCAP2L RCAP2L RCAP2L RCAP2L
CBh RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H
CCh TL2 TL2 TL2 TL2
CDh TH2 TH2 TH2 TH2
D0h PSW PSW PSW PSW
D5h FCNTL
D6h FDATA
D8h WDCON WDCON WDCON WDCON
E0h ACC ACC ACC ACC
E8h EIE EIE EIE EIE
F0h B B B B
F1h EIP1
F8h EIP EIP EIP EIP0

Table 4. SFR Function Differences
SFR Bit(s) Differences
P0 DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls Port 0 pins.
DPS 4 (AID) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls the autoincrement/decrement function for the active data pointer.
5 (TSL) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; enables automatic toggling between data pointers after certain opcodes.
6 (ID0) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls the effect of INC DPTR (increment or decrement) on DPTR.
7 (ID1) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls the effect of INC DPTR (increment or decrement) on DPTR1.
PCON 4 (OFDE) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; crystal oscillator fail detection enable.
5 (OFDF) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; crystal oscillator fail detection flag.
CKCON 7 (WD1)
6 (WD0)
On all devices except the DS80C310; these bits control the watchdog timer period.
EXIF 0 (BGS) On all devices except the DS80C310; this bit enables/disables the bandgap reference during stop mode.
1 (RGSL) On all devices except the DS80C310; this bit controls execution from the ring oscillator during the crystal warmup period.
2 (RGMD) On all devices except the DS80C310; this flag indicates the current clock source (ring or crystal).
3 DS8xC520 (XT/nRG); selects the ring oscillator or crystal as the desired clock source.
DS89C430/DS89C450 (CKRY); indicates that the crystal oscillator or crystal multiplier has completed its warmup period.
CKMOD 3 (T0MH) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; allows Timer 0 to run directly from the system clock (clock/1).
4 (T1MH) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; allows Timer 1 to run directly from the system clock (clock/1).
5 (T2MH) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; allows Timer 2 to run directly from the system clock (clock/1).
ACON 5 (PAGES0)
6 (PAGES1)
DS89C430/DS89C450 only; selects the page-mode configuration for external bus operations.
7 (PAGEE) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; enables page mode (as opposed to the standard 8051 expanded bus mode) for external bus operations.
IE 6 (ES1) On all devices except the DS80C310; this bit enables/disables the serial port 1 interrupt.
SADDR1 On all devices except the DS80C310; this register controls the slave address for serial port 1.
IP1 DS89C430/DS89C450 only; this register combines with the settings in IP0/IP to provide four priority-level settings for each interrupt (as opposed to two settings with IP only).
SADEN1 On all devices except the DS80C310; this register sets the slave address mask for serial port 1.
SCON1 On all devices except the DS80C310; this register controls mode settings for serial port 1.
SBUF1 On all devices except the DS80C310; this register provides the input/output buffer for serial port 1.
ROMSIZE 2:0 (RMS2:0) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; selects the range of on-chip EPROM/flash that maps into program space.
3 (PRAME) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; enables/disables mapping of the 1kB internal RAM into program space.
PMR 1:0 (DME1:0) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls mapping of internal data memory into data space.
2 DS8xC520 (ALEOFF); when set to 1, disables ALE during on-board memory access.
DS89C430/DS89C450 (ALEON); when set to 0, disables ALE during on-board memory access.
3 DS8xC520 (XTOFF); when set to 1, disables the crystal oscillator (must run from ring).
DS89C430/DS89C450 (4X/n2X); sets the mode for the crystal multiplier.
4 (CTM) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; when set to 1, enables the crystal multiplier.
5 (SWB) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; when set to 1, enables automatic switchback mode.
7:6 (CD1:0) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; controls the clock division or multiplier mode. Note that the available settings are different on the DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450.
STATUS 0 (SPRA0) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; indicates that a character is currently being received on serial port 0.
1 (SPTA0) DS8xC520/DS9C430/DS89C450 only; indicates that a character is currently being transmitted on serial port 0.
2 (SPRA1) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; indicates that a character is currently being received on serial port 1.
3 (SPTA0) DS8xC520/DS89C430/DS89C450 only; indicates that a character is currently being transmitted on serial port 1.
4 (XTUP) DS8xC520 only; indicates whether the crystal oscillator has completed its warmup cycle.
5 (LIP) DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520 only; indicates that a low-priority interrupt is currently being serviced.
6 (HIP) DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520 only; indicates that a high-priority interrupt is currently being serviced.
7 (PIP) DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520 only; indicates that a power-fail priority interrupt is currently being serviced.
7:5 (PIS2:0) DS89C430/DS89C450 only; indicates that the priority level of the interrupt is being serviced.
TA On all except the DS80C310; controls the Timed Access register protection mechanism.
WDCON 0 (RWT) On all devices except the DS80C310; resets the watchdog timer.
1 (EWT) On all devices except the DS80C310; enables/disables the watchdog timer.
2 (WTRF) On all devices except the DS80C310; indicates that a watchdog timer reset has occurred.
3 (WDIF) On all devices except the DS80C310; indicates that a watchdog timer interrupt has occurred.
4 (PFI) On all devices except the DS80C310; indicates that a power-fail interrupt has occurred.
5 (EPFI) On all devices except the DS80C310; enables/disables the power-fail interrupt.
6 (POR) On all devices; indicates that a power-on reset has occurred.
7 (SMOD_1) On all devices except the DS80C310; enables/disables baud-rate doubling mode for serial port 1.
EIE 4 (EWDI) On all devices except the DS80C310; enables/disables interrupts from the watchdog timer.
EIP 3:0 (PX5:2) On all devices except the DS89C430/DS89C450; sets high/low priority for external interrupts 2, 3, 4, and 5.
4 (PWDI) DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520 only; sets high/low priority for the watchdog timer interrupt.
EIP1, EIP0 DS89C430/DS89C450 only; these registers set priority levels 0–3 for the watchdog timer interrupt and external interrupts 2, 3, 4, and 5.

Single-Cycle Execution

The ultra-high-speed DS89C430/DS89C450 processors require only a single clock to execute a single-cycle instruction, which is a 4x speed improvement over the DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520. These latter high-speed microcontrollers require 4 clocks to complete a machine cycle. This difference in clock speed means that simply replacing one of the high-speed devices with the DS89C430/DS89C450 will result in up to a 4x increase in execution speed at the same crystal frequency.

Nonvolatile Memory

The DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323 have no programmable internal code memory and require external memory for code storage. The DS8xC520 improves on this memory scheme by including 16kB of program EPROM.

When porting from the DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323 to the DS89C430/DS89C450, application code that was stored in external ROM, flash, or EPROM memory can be relocated to the internal flash memory of the ultra-high-speed processors. The DS89C430 provides the same amount of internal program memory (16kB) as the DS8xC520, so any applications stored in the DS8xC520 should fit into the DS89C430 without modification. Applications stored in external program memory will fit in the 64kB internal flash memory of the DS89C450, as long as port-pin banking was not used to expand program memory beyond 64kB.

Finally, since the DS89C430/DS89C450 still support the standard 8051 multiplexed address bus scheme, external code and program memory can still be used in the application, if desired.

Serial Bootloader

While the DS8xC520 includes internal EPROM program memory, there is no provision for in-system or in-application programming (IAP) of the internal EPROM. A stand-alone programmer must be used to load the EPROM, and the DS8xC520 must be removed from (or electrically isolated from) the rest of the system for reprogramming to occur. (It is possible, however, to implement a user loader on the DS8xC520 which allows an external program or data EPROM or nonvolatile RAM to be reloaded under application control. See application note 102, "Using the High-Speed Microcontroller as a Bootstrap Loader," for more details.)

The DS89C430/DS89C450 improve on this programming process by including a serial bootloader function. This function allows program memory to be reloaded by using a simple ASCII-based protocol. The serial bootloader is implemented in the microcontroller's on-board ROM, so no code space is consumed by this feature. In addition, the FCNTL and FDATA registers can be used for IAP, so parts of the flash can be erased and rewritten under user control.

GPIO Port 0

Since the DS89C430/DS89C450 (like the DS8xC520) can operate without external code or data memory if desired, their eight Port 0 pins (which act as AD[7:0] when the multiplexed bus is active) can be used as general-purpose I/O (GPIOs). There are other I/O pins that can be reclaimed for general-purpose use when the external bus is not used: the eight Port 2 pins (P2[7:0]); the P3.6 (nWR) pins; and P3.7 (nRD) pins.

Unlike the Port 2 and Port 3 pins, however, the Port 0 pins use open-drain output drivers. This means that pullup resistors must be used, if these pins are to act as outputs. If the Port 0 pins will be used as inputs (driven externally), no pullup resistors are required.

Divide-by-1 Timer Clocks

The CKMOD register on the DS89C430/DS89C450 adds the ability to drive the three timers (Timer 0, Timer 1, and Timer 2) directly from the system clock (as opposed to the standard divide-by-4 and divide-by-12 options). This high-speed select mode (controlled by the bits T0MH, T1MH, and T2MH) defaults to disable following reset to make the timers compatible with code written for the DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520.

Crystal Multiplier

The DS89C430/SD89C450 include an on-board crystal multiplier which allows the crystal frequency to be boosted by 2x or 4x. This means that a 5MHz crystal can be used to generate a 5MHz, 10MHz, or 20MHz clock as needed.

Five-Level Interrupt Priority

The DS89C430/DS89C450 expand the programmable interrupt priority scheme to allow any of the external interrupts, timer interrupts, serial port interrupts, or the watchdog interrupt to be assigned a user-defined priority level from 0 (lowest) to 3 (highest nonpower-fail priority). The highest priority level, level 4, is reserved for the power-fail interrupt. This system is backwards compatible with the low-/high-programmable priority scheme used by the DS80C310/DS80C320/DS80C323/DS8xC520.

Power-Supply Considerations

With their increased processing power, the DS89C430/DS89C450 have higher power-supply requirements than the microcontrollers in the high-speed family. At the maximum crystal frequency in active mode, the DS89C430/DS89C450 can draw up to 110mA (75mA, typ) in supply current. Consequently, when upgrading to the DS89C430/DS89C450, their power consumption may require changes to the power-supply circuit of a high-speed design. Refer to the device's data sheet for more details.

Digital Noise Considerations

The improved performance of the ultra-high-speed flash microcontrollers is the result of a core redesign that reduces machine cycle time and significantly increases internal switching speeds. Because of this, system designers can see a slight increase in digital noise when an ultra-high-speed flash microcontroller directly replaces a high-speed microcontroller. System designers should investigate what, if any, effect the increase in performance will have on their design. In some cases, it may be necessary to add additional bypass capacitors at the microcontroller or apply some other filtering method to reduce digital noise.

Software Timing Loops

Application code that generates precise timing using software loops may need to be adjusted when moving from the high-speed microcontrollers to the ultra-high-speed devices. Timing loops of this type must be examined on a case-by-case basis, however, since not all instructions show the maximum 4x speed improvement when moving to the DS89C430/DS89C450. For example, while "ADD A, R0" executes in 4 clock cycles on any of the high-speed microcontrollers and in 1 clock cycle on the DS89C430/DS89C450 (a 4x speed increase), the instruction "ADD A, @R0" goes from 4 cycles on the high-speed devices to 2 cycles on the DS89C430/DS89C450 (a 2x speed increase). Refer to the "Instruction Timing" sections in both the High-Speed Microcontroller User's Guide and the Ultra-High-Speed Flash Microcontroller User's Guide for more details.

 

 


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