Lucent Technologies Inc.
5
Data Sheet
April 1997
T7121 HDLC Interface for ISDN (HIFI-64)
Pin Information
(continued)
Table 2. Pin Descriptions
Pin
1
Symbol
ALE
Type
I
Name/Function
A high-to-low transition on this pin latches the register
address on pins AD3—AD0. ALE should be held high in the demultiplexed (sep-
arate address/data) mode. ALE latches the address regardless of the state of
CS
.
Address/Data Bus.
The data bus direction is controlled by the logic states of
the
CS
,
RD
, and
WR
pins. Microprocessors using a multiplexed bus supply
address information during read or write cycles on AD6, AD3—AD0 synchro-
nized to the ALE signal. During read cycles, data is available to the micropro-
cessor on AD7—AD0. During write cycles, data is supplied by the
microprocessor on these lines. When
CS
placed in a high-impedance state (3-state). AD0 is the least significant
address/data bit.
Address Latch Enable.
2—5,
7—10
AD0—AD7
I/O
is not active, the AD7—AD0 pins are
Block move is available in MUXed address and data mode by setting the BM bit
in register 0 (R0—B3) to 1 and holding AD6 high during the address cycle of the
ALE. All writes then go directly to the transmit FIFO, and all reads address the
receive FIFO. Normal ALE mode addressing is accomplished by holding AD6
low during the ALE address cycle. Block move can be disabled by clearing the
BM bit to 0.
Ground.
Write (Active-Low).
This signal controls when data is written to the registers.
When
CS
and
WR
are low, valid data is supplied on lines AD7—AD0 by the
microprocessor. The chip latches the data on the rising edge of
Read (Active-Low).
This signal is used to read data from the registers. When
CS
and
WR
are low, the chip makes the requested data available on lines AD7—
AD0 to be read by the microprocessor.
Chip Select (Active-Low).
This signal must be low for the internal registers to
be read or written.
Interrupt.
An interrupt signal is generated when any of the interrupting condi-
tions are true. The interrupt signal remains active until the microprocessor reads
the interrupt status register (R15) if DINT (R0—B0) = 0, or until the condition
causing the interrupt is alleviated if DINT = 1. Interrupts can be masked by
appropriately setting the corresponding interrupt enable bits in the interrupt
mask register (R14). The polarity of the interrupt signal output is controlled by
the IPOL bit in register 0 (R0—B1). This pin is
Reset.
A high on this pin resets the device and forces a high-impedance
(3-state) condition on all outputs. All register bits are forced to their reset values.
(See Register section for more details.) A reset must be performed upon pow-
erup. A full chip reset occurs with or without a clock input.
Frame Synchronization.
This signal marks the beginning of a TDM highway
frame. The polarity of the input pulse can be adjusted via the FSPOL bit in regis-
ter 0 (R0—B6). Individual time slots are assigned relative to the detection of FS
by the use of registers 7—11. When HWYEN (R0—B7) is 0, the input to this pin
is ignored.
6, 22
11
V
WR
SS
—
I
WR
.
12
RD
I
13
CS
I
14
INT
O
not
an open-drain output.
15
RESET
I
16
FS
I