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  ? intel corporation, 2004 a u gust, 2004 or der number: 270565 - 00 8 80960kb 80960kb embedded 32-bit microprocessor with integrated floating-point unit figure 1. the 80960kb processors highly parallel architecture n high-performance embedded architecture 25 mips burst execution at 25 mhz 9.4 mips* sustained execution at 25 mhz n 512-byte on-chip instruction cache direct mapped parallel load/decode for uncached instructions n multiple register sets sixteen global 32-bit registers sixteen local 32-bit registers four local register sets stored on-chip register scoreboarding n 4 gigabyte, linear address space n pin compatible with 80960ka n built-in interrupt controller 31 priority levels, 256 vectors 3.4 s latency @ 25 mhz n easy to use, high bandwidth 32-bit bus 66.7 mbytes/s burst up to 16 bytes transferred per burst n 132-lead packages: pin grid array (pga) plastic quad flat-pack (pqfp) n on-chip floating point unit supports ieee 754 floating point standard four 80-bit registers 13.6 million whetstones/s (single precision) at 25 mhz sixteen 32-bit global registers 64- by 32-bit local register cache 32-bit instruction execution unit instruction fetch unit 512-byte instruction cache instruction decoder micro- instruction sequencer micro- instruction rom 32-bit bus control logic 32-bit burst bus four 80-bit fp registers 80-bit fpu
information in this document is provided in connection with intel products. no license, express or implied, by estoppel or otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document. except as provided in intel's terms and conditions of sale for such products, intel assumes no liability whatsoever, and intel disclaims any express or implied warranty, relating to sale and/or use of intel products including liability or warranties relating to fitness for a particular purpose, merchantability, or infringement of any patent, copyright or other intellectual property right. intel products are not intended for use in medical, life saving, or life sustaining applications. intel may make changes to specifications and product descriptions at any time, without notice. contact your local intel sales office or your distributor to obtain the latest specifications and before placing your product order. intel retains the right to make changes to specifications and product descriptions at any time, without notice. *third party brands and names are the property of their respective owners. copies of documents which have an ordering number and are referenced in this document, or other intel literature, may be obtained from: intel corporation p.o. box 7641 mt. prospect il 60056-7641 or call 1-800-879-4683. many documents are available for download from intels website at http:\\www.intel.com. copyright ? intel corporation 1997 , 2004
contents i i i
iv contents figures figure 1. 80960ka programming environment ...................................................................................... .. 1 figure 2. instruction formats .................................................................................................. .................. 4 figure 3. multiple register sets are stored on-chip ............................................................................ ... 6 figure 4. connection recommendations for low current drive network .............................................. 11 figure 5. connection recommendations for high current drive network .............................................. 11 figure 6. typical supply current vs. case temperature ......................................................................... 1 2 figure 7. typical current vs. frequency (room temp) .......................................................................... 12 figure 8. typical current vs. frequency (hot temp) ............................................................................. .13 figure 9. worst-case voltage vs. output current on open-drain pins .................................................. 13 figure 10. capacitive derating curve ........................................................................................... ............ 13 figure 11. test load circuit for three-state output pins ....................................................................... .. 14 figure 12. test load circuit for open-drain output pins ........................................................................ .. 14 figure 13. drive levels and timing relationships for 80960ka signals .................................................. 16 figure 14. processor clock pulse (clk2) ........................................................................................ ........ 20 figure 15. reset signal timing ................................................................................................. ............. 20 figure 16. 132-lead pin-grid array (pga) package ............................................................................... .21 figure 17. 80960ka pga pinoutview from bottom (pins facing up) ................................................... 22 figure 18. 80960ka pga pinoutview from top (pins facing down) .................................................... 23 figure 19. 80960ka 132-lead plastic quad flat-pack (pqfp) package ................................................ 23 figure 20. pqfp pinout - view from top ......................................................................................... ........ 24 figure 21. hold timing ......................................................................................................... .................. 30 figure 22. 16 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature ................................................................ 31 figure 23. 20 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature ................................................................ 31 figure 24. 25 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature ................................................................ 32 figure 25. maximum allowable ambient temperature for the extended temperature 80960ka at 20 mhz in pga package ..... ............ ..................... 32 figure 27. burst read and write transaction without wait states ........................................................... 34 figure 28. burst write transaction with 2, 1, 1, 1 wait states ................................................................. .35 figure 29. accesses generated by quad word read bus request, misaligned two bytes from quad word boundary (1, 0, 0, 0 wait states) .............................. 36 figure 30. interrupt acknowledge transaction ................................................................................... ...... 37
v contents tables table 1. 80960ka instruction set ............................................................................................... ............. 3 table 2. memory addressing modes ............................................................................................... ........ 4 table 3. 80960ka pin description: l-bus signals ................................................................................ ... 8 table 4. 80960ka pin description: support signals .............................................................................. .9 table 5. dc characteristics .................................................................................................... ............... 15 table 6. 80960ka ac characteristics (16 mhz) ................................................................................... 17 table 7. 80960ka ac characteristics (20 mhz) ................................................................................... 18 table 9. 80960ka pga pinout ? in pin order ..................................................................................... 25 table 10. 80960ka pga pinout ? in signal order ................................................................................ 2 6 table 11. 80960ka pqfp pinout ? in pin order ................................................................................... 27 table 12. 80960ka pqfp pinout ? in signal order .............................................................................. 28 table 13. 80960ka pga package thermal characteristics ................................................................... 29 table 14. 80960ka pqfp package thermal characteristics ................................................................. 30

1 80960kb 1.0 the i960 ? processor the 80960kb is a member of intel?s i960? 32-bit processor family, which is designed especially for embedded applications. it includes a 512-byte instruction cache, an integrated floating-point unit and a built-in interrupt controller. the 80960kb has a large register set, multiple parallel execution units and a high-bandwidth burst bus. using advanced risc technology, this high performance processor is capable of execution rates in excess of 9.4 million instructions per second * . the 80960kb is well-suited for a wide range of applications including non-impact printers, i/o control and specialty instrumentation. the embedded market includes applications as diverse as industrial automation, avionics, image processing, graphics and networking. these types of * relative to digital equipment corporation?s vax-11/780 at 1 mips (vax-11? is a trademark of digital equipment corporation) applications require high integration, low power consumption, quick interrupt response times and high performance. since time to market is critical, embedded microprocessors need to be easy to use in both hardware and software designs. all members of the i960 processor family share a common core architecture which utilizes risc technology so that, except for special functions, the family members are object-code compatible. each new processor in the family adds its own special set of functions to the core to satisfy the needs of a specific application or range of applications in the embedded market. software written for the 80960kb will run without modification on any other member of the 80960 family. it is also pin-compatible with the 80960ka and the 80960mc which is a military-grade version that supports multitasking, memory management, multiprocessing and fault tolerance. figure 2. 80960kb programming environment instruction cache instruction stream fetch load store sixteen 32-bit global registers g0 g15 sixteen 32-bit local registers register cache four 80-bit floating point registers r0 r15 control registers instruction execution instruction pointer arithmetic controls process controls trace controls architecturally defined data structures ffff ffffh 0000 0000h address space processor state registers
80960kb 2 1.1 key performance features the 80960 architecture is based on the most recent advances in microprocessor technology and is grounded in intel?s long experience in the design and manufacture of embedded microprocessors. many features contribute to the 80960kb?s exceptional performance: 1. large register set. having a large number of registers reduces the number of times that a processor needs to access memory. modern compilers can take advantage of this feature to optimize execution speed. for maximum flexi- bility, the 80960kb provides thirty-two 32-bit registers and four 80-bit floating point registers. (see figure 2.) 2. fast instruction execution. simple functions make up the bulk of instructions in most programs so that execution speed can be improved by ensuring that these core instruc- tions are executed as quickly as possible. the most frequently executed instructions such as register-register moves, add/subtract, logical operations and shifts execute in one to two cycles. (table 1 contains a list of instructions.) 3. load/store architecture. one way to improve execution speed is to reduce the number of times that the processor must access memory to perform an operation. as with other processors based on risc technology, the 80960kb has a load/store architecture. as such, only the load and store instructions reference memory; all other instructions operate on registers. this type of architecture simplifies instruction decoding and is used in combination with other techniques to increase parallelism. 4. simple instruction formats. all instructions in the 80960kb are 32 bits long and must be aligned on word boundaries. this alignment makes it possible to eliminate the instruction alignment stage in the pipeline. to simplify the instruction decoder, there are only five instruction formats; each instruction uses only one format. (see figure 3.) 5. overlapped instruction execution. load operations allow execution of subsequent instructions to continue before the data has been returned from memory, so that these instructions can overlap the load. the 80960kb manages this process transparently to software through the use of a register score- board. conditional instructions also make use of a scoreboard so that subsequent unrelated instructions may be executed while the condi- tional instruction is pending. 6. integer execution optimization. when the result of an arithmetic execution is used as an operand in a subsequent calculation, the value is sent immediately to its destination register. yet at the same time, the value is put on a bypass path to the alu, thereby saving the time that otherwise would be required to retrieve the value for the next operation. 7. bandwidth optimizations. the 80960kb gets optimal use of its memory bus bandwidth because the bus is tuned for use with the on-chip instruction cache: instruction cache line size matches the maximum burst size for instruction fetches. the 80960kb automatically fetches four words in a burst and stores them directly in the cache. due to the size of the cache and the fact that it is continually filled in anticipation of needed instructions in the program flow, the 80960kb is relatively insen- sitive to memory wait states. the benefit is that the 80960kb delivers outstanding performance even with a low cost memory system. 8. cache bypass. if a cache miss occurs, the processor fetches the needed instruction then sends it on to the instruction decoder at the same time it updates the cache. thus, no extra time is spent to load and read the cache.
80960kb 3 table 1. 80960kb instruction set data movement arithmetic logical bit and bit field load store move load address add subtract multiply divide remainder modulo shift and not and and not or exclusive or not or or not exclusive nor not nand rotate set bit clear bit not bit check bit alter bit scan for bit scan over bit extract modify comparison branch call/return fault compare conditional compare compare and increment compare and decrement unconditional branch conditional branch compare and branch call call extended call system return branch and link conditional fault synchronize faults debug miscellaneous decimal floating point modify trace controls mark force mark atomic add atomic modify flush local registers modify arithmetic controls scan byte for equal test condition code modify process controls decimal move decimal add with carry decimal subtract with carry move real add subtract multiply divide remainder scale round square root sine cosine tangent arctangent log log binary log natural exponent classify copy real extended compare synchronous conversion synchronous load synchronous move convert real to integer convert integer to real
80960kb 4 figure 3. instruction formats opcodedisplacement opcodereg/litregmdisplacement opcoderegreg/litmodes ext?d opreg/lit opcoderegbasemxoffset opcoderegbasemodescalexxoffset displacement control compare and branch register to register memory access?short memory access?long 1.1.1 memory space and addressing modes the 80960kb offers a linear programming environment so that all programs running on the processor are contained in a single address space. maximum address space size is 4 gigabytes (2 32 bytes). for ease of use the 80960kb has a small number of addressing modes, but includes all those necessary to ensure efficient execution of high-level languages such as c. table 2 lists the modes. 1.1.2 data types the 80960kb recognizes the following data types: numeric: ? 8-, 16-, 32- and 64-bit ordinals ? 8-, 16-, 32- and 64-bit integers ? 32-, 64- and 80-bit real numbers non-numeric: ?bit ? bit field ? triple word (96 bits) ? quad-word (128 bits) 1.1.3 large register set the 80960kb programming environment includes a large number of registers. in fact, 32 registers are available at any time. the availability of this many registers greatly reduces the number of memory accesses required to perform algorithms, which leads to greater instruction processing speed. there are two types of general-purpose registers: local and global. the 20 global registers consist of sixteen 32-bit registers (g0 though g15) and four 80-bit registers (fp0 through fp3). these registers table 2. memory addressing modes ? 12-bit offset ? 32-bit offset ? register-indirect ? register + 12-bit offset ? register + 32-bit offset ? register + (index-register x scale-factor) ? register x scale factor + 32-bit displacement ? register + (index-register x scale-factor) + 32-bit displacement ? scale-factor is 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16
80960kb 5 perform the same function as the general-purpose registers provided in other popular microprocessors. the term global refers to the fact that these registers retain their contents across procedure calls. the local registers, on the other hand, are procedure specific. for each procedure call, the 80960kb allocates 16 local registers (r0 through r15). each local register is 32 bits wide. any register can also be used for single or double-precision floating-point operations; the 80-bit floating-point registers are provided for extended precision. 1.1.4 multiple register sets to further increase the efficiency of the register set, multiple sets of local registers are stored on-chip (see figure 4). this cache holds up to four local register frames, which means that up to three procedure calls can be made without having to access the procedure stack resident in memory. although programs may have procedure calls nested many calls deep, a program typically oscillates back and forth between only two to three levels. as a result, with four stack frames in the cache, the probability of having a free frame available on the cache when a call is made is very high. in fact, runs of representative c-language programs show that 80% of the calls are handled without needing to access memory. if four or more procedures are active and a new procedure is called, the 80960kb moves the oldest local register set in the stack-frame cache to a procedure stack in memory to make room for a new set of registers. global register g15 is the frame pointer (fp) to the procedure stack. global and floating point registers are not exchanged on a procedure call, but retain their contents, making them available to all procedures for fast parameter passing. 1.1.5 instruction cache to further reduce memory accesses, the 80960kb includes a 512-byte on-chip instruction cache. the instruction cache is based on the concept of locality of reference; most programs are not usually executed in a steady stream but consist of many branches, loops and procedure calls that lead to jumping back and forth in the same small section of code. thus, by maintaining a block of instructions in cache, the number of memory references required to read instructions into the processor is greatly reduced. to load the instruction cache, instructions are fetched in 16-byte blocks; up to four instructions can be fetched at one time. an efficient prefetch algorithm increases the probability that an instruction will already be in the cache when it is needed. code for small loops often fits entirely within the cache, leading to a great increase in processing speed since further memory references might not be necessary until the program exits the loop. similarly, when calling short procedures, the code for the calling procedure is likely to remain in the cache so it will be there on the procedure?s return. 1.1.6 register scoreboarding the instruction decoder is optimized in several ways. one optimization method is the ability to overlap instructions by using register scoreboarding. register scoreboarding occurs when a load moves a variable from memory into a register. when the instruction initiates, a scoreboard bit on the target register is set. once the register is loaded, the bit is reset. in between, any reference to the register contents is accompanied by a test of the scoreboard bit to ensure that the load has completed before processing continues. since the processor does not need to wait for the load to complete, it can execute additional instructions placed between the load and the instruction that uses the register contents, as shown in the following example: ld data_2, r4 ld data_2, r5 unrelated instruction unrelated instruction add r4, r5, r6 in essence, the two unrelated instructions between load and add are executed ?for free? (i.e., take no apparent time to execute) because they are executed while the register is being loaded. up to three load instructions can be pending at one time with three corresponding scoreboard bits set. by exploiting this feature, system programmers and compiler writers have a useful tool for optimizing execution speed.
80960kb 6 figure 4. multiple register sets are stored on-chip register cache one of four local register sets local register set r 15 r 0 31 0 1.1.7 floating-point arithmetic in the 80960kb, floating-point arithmetic has been made an integral part of the architecture. having the floating-point unit integrated on-chip provides two advantages. first, it improves the performance of the chip for floating-point applications, since no additional bus overhead is associated with floating-point calculations, thereby leaving more time for other bus operations such as i/o. second, the cost of using floating-point operations is reduced because a separate coprocessor chip is not required. the 80960kb floating-point (real-number) data types include single-precision (32-bit), double-precision (64-bit) and extended precision (80-bit) floating-point numbers. any registers may be used to execute floating-point operations. the processor provides hardware support for both mandatory and recommended portions of ieee standard 754 for floating-point arithmetic, including all arithmetic, exponential, logarithmic and other transcendental functions. table 3 shows execution times for some representative instructions. 1.1.8 high bandwidth local bus the 80960kb cpu resides on a high-bandwidth address/data bus known as the local bus (l-bus). the l-bus provides a direct communication path between the processor and the memory and i/o subsystem interfaces. the processor uses the l-bus to fetch instructions, manipulate memory and respond to interrupts. l-bus features include: ? 32-bit multiplexed address/data path ? four-word burst capability which allows transfers from 1 to 16 bytes at a time ? high bandwidth reads and writes with 66.7 mbytes/s burst (at 25 mhz) table 4 defines l-bus signal names and functions; table 5 defines other component-support signals such as interrupt lines. table 3. sample floating-point execution times (s) at 25 mhz function 32-bit 64-bit add 0.4 0.5 subtract 0.4 0.5 multiply 0.7 1.3 divide 1.3 2.9 square root 3.7 3.9 arctangent 10.1 13.1 exponent 11.3 12.5 sine 15.2 16.6 cosine 15.2 16.6
80960kb 7 1.1.9 interrupt handling the 80960kb can be interrupted in two ways: by the activation of one of four interrupt pins or by sending a message on the processor?s data bus. the 80960kb is unusual in that it automatically handles interrupts on a priority basis and can keep track of pending interrupts through its on-chip interrupt controller. two of the interrupt pins can be configured to provide 8259a-style handshaking for expansion beyond four interrupt lines. 1.1.10 debug features the 80960kb has built-in debug capabilities. there are two types of breakpoints and six trace modes. debug features are controlled by two internal 32-bit registers: the process-controls word and the trace-controls word. by setting bits in these control words, a software debug monitor can closely control how the processor responds during program execution. the 80960kb provides two hardware breakpoint registers on-chip which, by using a special command, can be set to any value. when the instruction pointer matches either breakpoint register value, the breakpoint handling routine is automati- cally called. the 80960kb also provides software breakpoints through the use of two instructions: mark and fmark. these can be placed at any point in a program and cause the processor to halt execution at that point and call the breakpoint handling routine. the breakpoint mechanism is easy to use and provides a powerful debugging tool. tracing is available for instructions (single step execution), calls and returns and branching. each trace type may be enabled separately by a special debug instruction. in each case, the 80960kb executes the instruction first and then calls a trace handling routine (usually part of a software debug monitor). further program execution is halted until the routine completes, at which time execution resumes at the next instruction. the 80960kb?s tracing mechanisms, implemented completely in hardware, greatly simplify the task of software test and debug. 1.1.11 fault detection the 80960kb has an automatic mechanism to handle faults. fault types include floating point, trace and arithmetic faults. when the processor detects a fault, it automatically calls the appropriate fault handling routine and saves the current instruction pointer and necessary state information to make efficient recovery possible. like interrupt handling routines, fault handling routines are usually written to meet the needs of specific applications and are often included as part of the operating system or kernel. for each of the fault types, there are numerous subtypes that provide specific information about a fault. for example, a floating point fault may have the subtype set to an overflow or zero-divide fault. the fault handler can use this specific information to respond correctly to the fault. 1.1.12 built-in testability upon reset, the 80960kb automatically conducts an exhaustive internal test of its major blocks of logic. then, before executing its first instruction, it does a zero check sum on the first eight words in memory to ensure that the memory image was programmed correctly. if a problem is discovered at any point during the self-test, the 80960kb asserts its failure pin and will not begin program execution. self test takes approximately 47,000 cycles to complete. system manufacturers can use the 80960kb?s self-test feature during incoming parts inspection. no special diagnostic programs need to be written. the test is both thorough and fast. the self-test capability helps ensure that defective parts are discovered before systems are shipped and, once in the field, the self-test makes it easier to distinguish between problems caused by processor failure and problems resulting from other causes. 1.1.13 chmos the 80960kb is fabricated using intel?s chmos iv (complementary high speed metal oxide semicon- ductor) process. the 80960kb is currently available in 16, 20 and 25 mhz versions.
80960kb 8 table 4. 80960kb pin description: l-bus signals (sheet 1 of 2) name type description clk2 i system clock provides the fundamental timing for 80960kb systems. it is divided by two inside the 80960kb and four 80-bit registers (fp0 through fp3) to generate the internal processor clock. lad31:0 i/o t.s. local address / data bus carries 32-bit physical addresses and data to and from memory. during an address (t a ) cycle, bits 2-31 contain a physical word address (bits 0-1 indicate size; see below). during a data (t d ) cycle, bits 0-31 contain read or write data. these pins float to a high impedance state when not active. bits 0-1 comprise size during a t a cycle. size specifies burst transfer size in words. lad1 lad0 00 1 word 0 1 2 words 1 0 3 words 1 1 4 words ale o t.s. address latch enable indicates the transfer of a physical address. ale is asserted during a t a cycle and deasserted before the beginning of the t d state. it is active low and floats to a high impedance state during a hold cycle (t h ). ads o o.d. address/data status indicates an address state. ads is asserted every t a state and deasserted during the following t d state. for a burst transaction, ads is asserted again every t d state where ready was asserted in the previous cycle. w/r o o.d. write/read specifies, during a t a cycle, whether the operation is a write or read. it is latched on-chip and remains valid during t d cycles. dt/r o o.d. data transmit / receive indicates the direction of data transfer to and from the l-bus. it is low during t a and t d cycles for a read or interrupt acknowl- edgment; it is high during t a and t d cycles for a write. dt/r never changes state when den is asserted. den o o.d. data enable (active low) enables data transceivers. the processor asserts den# during all td and tw states. the den# line is an open drain-output of the 80960kb-processor. ready i ready indicates that data on lad lines can be sampled or removed. if ready is not asserted during a t d cycle, the t d cycle is extended to the next cycle by inserting a wait state (t w ) and ads is not asserted in the next cycle. lock i/o o.d. bus lock prevents bus masters from gaining control of the l-bus during read/modify/write (rmw) cycles. the processor or any bus agent may assert lock . at the start of a rmw operation, the processor examines the lock pin. if the pin is already asserted, the processor waits until it is not asserted. if the pin is not asserted, the processor asserts lock during the t a cycle of the read transaction. the processor deasserts lock in the t a cycle of the write transaction. during the time lock is asserted, a bus agent can perform a normal read or write but not a rmw operation. the processor also asserts lock during interrupt-acknowledge transactions. do not leave lock unconnected. it must be pulled high for the processor to function properly. i/o = input/output, o = output, i = input, o.d. = open drain, t.s. = three-state errata - 6/13/97 den pin description omitted.
80960kb 9 be3:0 o o.d. byte enable lines specify the data bytes (up to four) on the bus which are used in the current bus cycle. be3 corresponds to lad31:24; be0 corresponds to lad7:0. the byte enables are provided in advance of data: byte enables asserted during t a specify the bytes of the first data word. byte enables asserted during t d specify the bytes of the next data word, if any (the word to be transmitted following the next assertion of ready ). byte enables that occur during t d cycles that precede the last assertion of ready are undefined. byte enables are latched on-chip and remain constant from one t d cycle to the next when ready is not asserted. for reads, byte enables specify the byte(s) that the processor will actually use. l-bus agents are required to assert only adjacent byte enables (e.g., asserting just be0 and be2 is not permitted) and are required to assert at least one byte enable. address bits a 0 and a 1 can be decoded externally from the byte enables. hold i hold : a request from an external bus master to acquire the bus. when the processor receives hold and grants bus control to another master, it floats its three-state bus lines and open-drain control lines, asserts hlda and enters the t h state. when hold deasserts, the processor deasserts hlda and enters the t i or t a state. hlda o t. s . hold acknowledge : notifies an external bus master that the processor has relinquished control of the bus. cache o t. s . cache indicates when an access is cacheable during a t a cycle. it is not asserted during any synchronous access, such as a synchronous load or move instruction used for sending an iac message. the cache signal floats to a high impedance state when the processor is idle. table 5. 80960kb pin description: support signals (sheet 1 of 2) name type description badac i bad access , if asserted in the cycle following the one in which the last ready of a transaction is asserted, indicates that an unrecoverable error has occurred on the current bus transaction or that a synchronous load/store instruction has not been acknowledged. during system reset the badac signal is interpreted differently. if the signal is high, it indicates that this processor will perform system initialization. if it is low, another processor in the system will perform system initialization instead. reset i reset clears the processor?s internal logic and causes it to reinitialize. during reset assertion, the input pins are ignored (except for badac and iac /int 0 ), the three-state output pins are placed in a high impedance state and other output pins are placed in their non-asserted states. reset must be asserted for at least 41 clk2 cycles for a predictable reset. the high to low transition of reset should occur after the rising edge of both clk2 and the external bus clock and before the next rising edge of clk2. i/o = input/output, o = output, i = input, o.d. = open drain, t.s. = three-state table 4. 80960kb pin description: l-bus signals (sheet 2 of 2) name type description i/o = input/output, o = output, i = input, o.d. = open drain, t.s. = three-state
80960kb 10 failure o o.d. initialization failure indicates that the processor did not initialize correctly. after reset deasserts and before the first bus transaction begins, failure asserts while the processor performs a self-test. if the self-test completes successfully, then failure deasserts. the processor then performs a zero checksum on the first eight words of memory. if it fails, failure asserts for a second time and remains asserted. if it passes, system initialization continues and failure remains deasserted. iac /int 0 i interagent communication request/interrupt 0 indicates an iac message or an interrupt is pending. the bus interrupt control register determines how the signal is interpreted. to signal an interrupt or iac request in a synchronous system, this pin ? as well as the other interrupt pins ? must be enabled by being deasserted for at least one bus cycle and then asserted for at least one additional bus cycle. in an asynchronous system the pin must remain deasserted for at least two bus cycles and then asserted for at least two more bus cycles. during system reset, this signal must be in the logic high condition to enable normal processor operation. the logic low condition is reserved. int 1 i interrupt 1 , like int 0 , provides direct interrupt signaling. int 2 /intr i interrupt2/interrupt request : the interrupt control register determines how this pin is interpreted. if int 2 , it has the same interpretation as the int 0 and int 1 pins. if intr, it is used to receive an interrupt request from an external interrupt controller. int 3 /inta i/o o.d. interrupt3/interrupt acknowledge : the bus interrupt control register determines how this pin is interpreted. if int 3 , it has the same interpretation as the int 0 , int1 and int2 pins. if inta , it is used as an output to control interrupt-acknowledge transactions. the inta output is latched on-chip and remains valid during t d cycles; as an output, it is open-drain. n.c. n/a not connected indicates pins should not be connected. never connect any pin marked n.c. as these pins may be reserved for factory use. table 5. 80960kb pin description: support signals (sheet 2 of 2) name type description i/o = input/output, o = output, i = input, o.d. = open drain, t.s. = three-state 2.0 electrical specifications 2.1 power and grounding the 80960kb is implemented in chmos iv technology and therefore has modest power require- ments. its high clock frequency and numerous output buffers (address/data, control, error and arbitration signals) can cause power surges as multiple output buffers simultaneously drive new signal levels. for clean on-chip power distribution, v cc and v ss pins separately feed the device?s functional units. power and ground connections must be made to all 80960kb power and ground pins. on the circuit board, all v cc pins must be strapped closely together, preferably on a power plane; all v ss pins should be strapped together, preferably on a ground plane. 2.2 power decoupling recommendations place a liberal amount of decoupling capacitance near the 80960kb. when driving the l-bus the processor can cause transient power surges, partic- ularly when connected to a large capacitive load.
80960kb 11 low inductance capacitors and interconnects are recommended for best high frequency electrical performance. inductance is reduced by shortening board traces between the processor and decoupling capacitors as much as possible. 2.3 connection recommendations for reliable operation, always connect unused inputs to an appropriate signal level. in particular, if one or more interrupt lines are not used, they should be pulled up. no inputs should ever be left floating. all open-drain outputs require a pullup device. while in most cases a simple pullup resistor is adequate, a network of pullup and pulldown resistors biased to a valid v ih ( > 3.0 v) and terminated in the characteristic impedance of the circuit board is recommended to limit noise and ac power consumption. figure 5 and figure 6 show recommended values for the resistor network for low and high current drive, assuming a characteristic impedance of 100 w. terminating output signals in this fashion limits signal swing and reduces ac power consumption. note: do not connect external logic to pins marked n.c. figure 5. connection recommendations for low current drive network figure 6. connection recommendations for high current drive network 2.4 characteristic curves figure 7 shows typical supply current requirements over the operating temperature range of the processor at supply voltage (v cc ) of 5 v. figure 8 and figure 9 show the typical power supply current (i cc ) that the 80960kb requires at various operating frequencies when measured at three input voltage (v cc ) levels and two temperatures. for a given output current (i ol ) the curve in figure 10 shows the worst case output low voltage (v ol ). figure 11 shows the typical capacitive derating curve for the 80960kb measured from 1.5v on the system clock (clk) to 1.5v on the falling edge and 1.5v on the rising edge of the l-bus address/data (lad) signals. 220 w 330 w low drive network: v oh = 3.0 v i ol = 20.7 ma v cc open-drain output open-drain output 180 w 390 w high drive network: v oh = 3.4 v i ol = 25.3 ma v cc
80960kb 12 figure 7. typical supply current vs. case temperature figure 8. typical current vs. frequency (room temp) -60-40-20020406080100120140 v cc = 5.0 v power supply current (ma) case temperature (c) 25 mhz 20 mhz 16 mhz 380 360 340 320 300 280 260 240 220 200 operating frequency (mhz) @4.5v @5.0v @5.5v typical supply current (ma) temp = +22c 400 380 360 340 320 300 280 260 240 220 200 180 16 20 25
80960kb 13 figure 9. typical current vs. frequency (hot temp) operating frequency (mhz) @4.5v @5.0v @5.5v typical supply current (ma) temp = +22c 380 360 340 320 300 280 260 240 220 200 180 16 20 25 160 figure 10. worst-case voltage vs. output current on open-drain pins figure 11. capacitive derating curve 2.5 test load circuit figure 12 illustrates the load circuit used to test the 80960kb ?s three-state pins; figure 13 shows the load circuit used to test the open drain outputs. the open drain test uses an active load circuit in the form 01020304050 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 output low current(ma) (temp = +85c, v cc = 4.5v) output low voltage (v) 020406080100 30 25 20 15 10 capacitive load(pf) (temp = +85c, v cc = 4.5v) 5 0 rising falling valid delay(ns) three-state output
80960kb 14 of a matched diode bridge. since the open-drain outputs sink current, only the i ol legs of the bridge are necessary and the i oh legs are not used. when the 80960kb driver under test is turned off, the output pin is pulled up to v ref (i.e., v oh ). diode d 1 is turned off and the i ol current source flows through diode d 2 . when the 80960kb open-drain driver under test is on, diode d 1 is also on and the voltage on the pin being tested drops to v ol . diode d 2 turns off and i ol flows through diode d 1 . figure 12. test load circuit for three-state output pins figure 13. test load circuit for open-drain output pins three-state output c l = 50 pf for all signals c l c l open-drain output i ol d 2 i ol tested at 25 ma v ref = v cc d1 and d 2 are matched d 1 c l = 50 pf for all signals
80960kb 15 2.7 dc characteristics 2.6 absolute maximum ratings notice: this is a production data sheet. the specifi- cations are subject to change without notice. operating temperature(pga)................... 0c to +85c case (pqfp) ............. 0c to +100c case storage temperature .................................... ?65c to +150c voltage on any pin .................................. ?0.5v to vcc +0.5v power dissipation ............................................ 2.5w (25 mhz) *warning: stressing the device beyond the ?absolute maximum ratings? may cause permanent damage. these are stress ratings only. operation beyond the ?operating condi- tions? is not recommended and extended exposure beyond the ?operating conditions? may affect device reliability. pga: 80960kb (16 mhz) t case = 0c to +85 c, v cc = 5v 10% 80960kb (20 and 25 mhz) t case = 0c to +85 c, v cc = 5v 5% pqfp: 80960kb (16 mhz) t case = 0c to +100 c, v cc = 5v 10% 80960kb (20 and 25 mhz) t case = 0c to +100 c, v cc = 5v 5% table 6. dc characteristics symbol parameter min max units notes v il input low voltage ?0.3 +0.8 v v ih input high voltage 2.0 v cc + 0.3 v v cl clk2 input low voltage ?0.3 +0.8 v v ch clk2 input high voltage 0.55 v cc v cc + 0.3 v v ol output low voltage 0.45 v (1,2) v oh output high voltage 2.4 v (3,4) i cc power supply current: 16 mhz 20 mhz 25 mhz 315 360 420 ma ma ma (5) (5) (5) i li input leakage current 15 a 0 v in v cc i lo output leakage current 15 a 0.45 v o v cc c in input capacitance 10 pf f c = 1 mhz (6) c o output capacitance 12 pf f c = 1 mhz (6) c clk clock capacitance 10 pf f c = 1 mhz (6) notes: 1. for three-state outputs, this parameter is measured at: address/data ........................................ 4.0 ma controls.................................................. 5.0 ma 2. for open-drain outputs ........................... 25 ma 3. this parameter is measured at: address/data ...................................... -1.0 ma controls................................................ -0.9 ma ale ..................................................... -5.0 ma 4. not measured on open-drain outputs. 5. measured at worst case frequency, v cc and temperature, with device operating and outputs loaded to the test conditions in figures 12 and 13. figure 7, figure 8 and figure 9 indicate typical values. 6. input, output and clock capacitance are not tested.
16 80960kb 2.8 ac specifications this section describes the ac specifications for the 80960kb pins. all input and output timings are specified relative to the 1.5 v level of the rising edge of clk2. for output timings the specifications refer to the time it takes the signal to reach 1.5 v. for input timings the specifications refer to the time at which the signal reaches (for input setup) or leaves (for hold time) the ttl levels of low (0.8 v) or high (2.0 v). all ac testing should be done with input voltages of 0.4 v and 2.4 v, except for the clock (clk2), which should be tested with input voltages of 0.45 v and 0.55 v cc . figure 14. drive levels and timing relationships for 80960kb signals ab c d a bc 1.5v 1.5v 1.5v 1.5v 0.8v t 6 1.5v 1.5v t 7 1.5v 1.5v valid output t 6 t 8 t 8 t 13 t 14 1.5v 1.5v valid output t 9 2.0v 2.0v 2.0v 2.0v 0.8v 0.8v 0.8v 0.8v edge clk2 outputs: lad 31:0 ads w/r , den be3:0 hlda cache lock , inta ale dt/r inputs: lad31:0 badac iac /int0 , int1 int2/intr, int3 hold lock ready t 9 va lid inp ut t 10 t 11 t 12 t 11
80960kb 17 2.8.1 ac specification tables 1. clock rise and fall times are not tested. 2. a float condition occurs when the maximum output current becomes less than i lo . float delay is not tested; however, it should not be longer than the valid delay. 3. lad31:0, badac , hold, lock and ready are synchronous inputs. iac /int 0 , int 1 , int 2 /int r and int 3 may be syn- chronous or asynchronous. table 7. 80960kb ac characteristics (16 mhz) symbol parameter min max units notes input clock t 1 processor clock period (clk2) 31.25 125 ns v in = 1.5v t 2 processor clock low time (clk2) 8 ns v il = 10% point = 1.2v t 3 processor clock high time (clk2) 8 ns v ih = 90% point = 0.1v + 0.5 v cc t 4 processor clock fall time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 90% point to 10% point (1) t 5 processor clock rise time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 10% point to 90% point (1) synchronous outputs t 6 output valid delay 2 25 ns t 6h hlda output valid delay 4 28 ns t 7 ale width 15 ns t 8 ale output valid delay 2 18 ns t 9 output float delay 2 20 ns (2) t 9h hlda output float delay 4 20 ns (2) synchronous inputs t 10 input setup 1 3 ns (3) t 11 input hold 5 ns (3) t 11h hold input hold 4 ns (3) t 12 input setup 2 8 ns (3) t 13 setup to ale inactive 10 ns t 14 hold after ale inactive 8 ns t 15 reset hold 3 ns (3) t 16 reset setup 5 ns (3) t 17 reset width 1281 ns 41 clk2 periods minimum notes:
80960kb 18 1. clock rise and fall times are not tested. 2. a float condition occurs when the maximum output current becomes less than i lo . float delay is not tested; however, it should not be longer than the valid delay. 3. lad31:0, badac , hold, lock and ready are synchronous inputs. iac /int 0 , int 1 , int 2 /int r and int 3 may be syn- chronous or asynchronous. table 8. 80960kb ac characteristics (20 mhz) symbol parameter min max units notes input clock t 1 processor clock period (clk2) 25 125 ns v in = 1.5v t 2 processor clock low time (clk2) 6 ns v il = 10% point = 1.2v t 3 processor clock high time (clk2) 6 ns v ih = 90% point = 0.1v + 0.5 v cc t 4 processor clock fall time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 90% point to 10% point (1) t 5 processor clock rise time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 10% point to 90% point (1) synchronous outputs t 6 output valid delay 2 20 ns t 6h hlda output valid delay 4 23 ns t 7 ale width 12 ns t 8 ale output valid delay 2 18 ns t 9 output float delay 2 20 ns (2) t 9h hlda output float delay 4 20 ns (2) synchronous inputs t 10 input setup 1 3 ns (3) t 11 input hold 5 ns (3) t 11h hold input hold 4 ns (3) t 12 input setup 2 7 ns (3) t 13 setup to ale inactive 10 ns t 14 hold after ale inactive 8 ns t 15 reset hold 3 ns t 16 reset setup 5 ns t 17 reset width 1025 ns 41 clk2 periods minimum notes:
80960kb 19 1. clock rise and fall times are not tested. 2. a float condition occurs when the maximum output current becomes less than i lo . float delay is not tested; however, it should not be longer than the valid delay. 3. lad31:0, badac , hold, lock and ready are synchronous inputs. iac /int 0 , int 1 , int 2 /int r and int 3 may be syn- chronous or asynchronous. table 9. 80960kb ac characteristics (25 mhz) symbol parameter min max units notes input clock t 1 processor clock period (clk2) 20 125 ns v in = 1.5v t 2 processor clock low time (clk2) 5 ns v il = 10% point = 1.2v t 3 processor clock high time (clk2) 5 ns v ih = 90% point = 0.1v + 0.5 v cc t 4 processor clock fall time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 90% point to 10% point (1) t 5 processor clock rise time (clk2) 10 ns v in = 10% point to 90% point (1) synchronous outputs t 6 output valid delay 2 18 ns t 6h hlda output valid delay 4 23 ns t 7 ale width 12 ns t 8 ale output valid delay 2 18 ns t 9 output float delay 2 18 ns (2) t 9h hlda output float delay 4 20 ns (2) synchronous inputs t 10 input setup 1 3 ns (3) t 11 input hold 5 ns (3) t 11h hold input hold 4 ns t 12 input setup 2 7 ns t 13 setup to ale inactive 8 ns t 14 hold after ale inactive 8 ns t 15 reset hold 3 ns t 16 reset setup 5 ns t 17 reset width 820 ns 41 clk2 periods minimum notes:
80960kb 20 figure 15. processor clock pulse (clk2) figure 16. reset signal timing high level (min) 0.55v cc low level (max) 0.8v t 1 t 3 t 5 t 4 t 2 90% 10% 1.5 v ... ... ... ... clk2 clk reset outputs first abcda init parameters (badac , int 0 /iac) must be set up 8 clocks prior to this clk2 edge init parameters must be held beyond this clk2 edge t 15 = reset hold t 16 = reset setup t 17 = reset width t 15 t 16 t 17
21 80960kb 3.0 mechanical data 3.1 packaging the 80960kb is available in two package types: ? 132-lead ceramic pin-grid array (pga). pins are arranged 0.100 inch (2.54 mm) center-to-center, in a 14 by 14 matrix, three rows around (see figure 17). ? 132-lead plastic quad flat pack (pqfp). this package uses fine-pitch gull wing leads arranged in a single row along the package perimeter with 0.025 inch (0.64 mm) spacing (see figure 20). dimensions for both package types are given in the intel packaging handbook (order #240800). 3.1.1 pin assignment the pga and pqfp have different pin assignments. figure 18 shows the view from the pga bottom (pins facing up) and figure 19 shows a view from the pga top (pins facing down). figure 20 shows the pqfp package; figure 21 shows the pqfp pinout with signal names. notice that the pins are numbered in order from 1 to 132 around the package perimeter. table 10 and table 11 list the function of each pga pin; table 12 and table 13 list the function of each pqfp pin. figure 17. 132-lead pin-grid array (pga) package 1 2 3 abcdefgh jk lmnp 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
80960kb 22 figure 18. 80960kb pga pinout?view from bottom (pins facing up) v cc v ss n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. v cc n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. v ss n.c. n.c. n.c. v cc v ss n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. v cc v ss v cc n.c. v ss v cc n.c. den v ss fail be 3 v ss be 2 dt/r lock be 0 w/r be 1 ready lad 30 cache lad 31 lad 29 lad 27 lad 26 lad 28 hlda ads ale n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. n.c. v ss v cc v ss v cc v ss v ss v ss v ss v cc v cc v cc v cc int 2 int 0 int 1 int 3 lad 3 lad 8 lad 20 lad 13 badac hold lad 25 reset lad 0 lad 1 lad 4 lad 5 lad 7 lad 9 lad 11 lad 14 lad 16 lad 17 lad 19 lad 2 lad 6 lad 10 lad 12 lad 15 lad 18 lad 21 lad 22 lad 24 lad 23 clk2 p n m l k j h g f e d c b a p n m l k j h g f e d c b a 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 errata 6-17-97: pin m2 was n.c.; should be v cc . pin m13 was v cc ; should be n.c. this page now shows it correctly.
8 0 9 6 0 k b 2 3 f i gu r e 1 9 . 8 0 9 6 0 k b p g a p i no u tvi e w fro m t o p (p i n s f a c i n g d o w n ) fi g ur e 2 0 . 8 0 9 6 0 kb 1 3 2 - l e a d p l a s ti c q u a d f l a t-p a c k (p q f p ) p a c k a g e v c c v s s n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n . c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . v c c n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c . n . c . n.c . n.c. n.c. n.c . n.c. v s s n.c . n.c . n.c. v c c v s s n.c . n.c . n.c . n.c. v c c v s s v c c n.c. v s s v c c n.c . d e n v s s f a i l b e 3 v s s b e 2 d t /r l o c k b e 0 w / r b e 1 r e a d y l a d 3 0 c a ch e l a d 3 1 l a d 2 9 l a d 2 7 l a d 2 6 l a d 2 8 h l d a a d s a l e n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c. n.c . n.c. v s s v c c v s s v c c v s s v s s v s s v s s v c c v c c v c c v c c int 2 int 0 int 1 int 3 l a d 3 l a d 8 l a d 2 0 l a d 1 3 b a d a c h o l d l a d 2 5 r es e t l a d 0 l a d 1 l a d 4 l a d 5 l a d 7 l a d 9 l a d 1 1 l a d 1 4 l a d 1 6 l a d 1 7 l a d 1 9 l a d 2 l a d 6 l a d 1 0 l a d 1 2 l a d 1 5 l a d 1 8 l a d 2 1 l a d 2 2 l a d 2 4 l a d 2 3 c l k 2 p n m l k j h g f e d c b a p n m l k j h g f e d c b a 1 4 1 3 1 2 1 1 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 4 1 3 1 2 1 1 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 x 5 2 - b k 0 6 9 0 8 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x note: to address the fact that many of the package prefix variables have changed, all package prefix variables in this document are now indicated with an "x".
80 9 6 0 k b 2 4 fi g u r e 2 1 . p q fp p in o ut - v i e w f r o m t o p l a d 0 l a d 1 l a d 2 v s s l a d 3 l a d 4 l a d 5 l a d 6 l a d 7 l a d 8 l a d 9 l a d 1 0 l a d 1 1 l a d 1 2 v s s l a d 1 3 l a d 1 4 l a d 1 5 l a d 1 6 l a d 1 7 l a d 1 8 l a d 1 9 l a d 2 0 l a d 2 1 l a d 2 2 v s s l a d 2 3 l a d 2 4 l a d 2 5 b a d a c h o l d n c a d s v s s c n c n c n c n c n t e s e r v c c 2 k l c v s s c n 3 t n i a t n i / r t n i / 2 t n i 1 t n i c a i 0 t n i / v s s v c c v c c c n v s s v s s c n c n c n c n v c c v s s c n v c c v c c c n v s s v s s n c n c n c n c n c n c n c n c n c v s s v c c v c c n c v s s v s s n c n c n c n c n c n c n c n c n c v s s v c c n c n c n c n c v c c v c c n c a d l h e l a 6 2 d a l 7 2 d a l 8 2 d a l 9 2 d a l 0 3 d a l 1 3 d a l v s s e h c a c r / w y d a e r r / t d 0 e b 1 e b 2 e b 3 e b e r u l i a f v s s k c o l n e d v s s v s s c n c n v s s v s s c n v c c v c c c n v s s v s s 6 6 6 5 6 4 6 3 6 2 6 1 6 0 5 9 5 8 5 7 5 6 5 5 5 4 5 3 5 2 5 1 5 0 4 9 4 8 4 7 4 6 4 5 4 4 4 3 4 2 4 1 4 0 3 9 3 8 3 7 3 6 3 5 3 4 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 3 1 0 4 1 0 5 1 0 6 1 0 7 1 0 8 1 0 9 1 1 0 11 1 1 1 2 1 1 3 1 1 4 1 1 5 1 1 6 1 1 7 1 1 8 1 1 9 1 2 0 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2 3 1 2 4 1 2 5 1 2 6 1 2 7 1 2 8 1 2 9 1 3 0 1 3 1 1 3 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9 2 0 2 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 5 2 6 2 7 2 8 2 9 3 0 3 1 3 2 3 3 9 9 9 8 9 7 9 6 9 5 9 4 9 3 9 2 9 1 9 0 8 9 8 8 8 7 8 6 8 5 8 4 8 3 8 2 8 1 8 0 7 9 7 8 7 7 7 6 7 5 7 4 7 3 7 2 7 1 7 0 6 9 6 8 6 7 x 5 2 - b k 0 6 9 0 8 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x note: to address the fact that many of the package prefix variables have changed, all package prefix variables in this document are now indicated with an "x".
80960kb 25 3.2 pinout note: do not connect any external logic to any pins marked n.c. table 10. 80960kb pga pinout ? in pin order pin signal pin signal pin signal pin signal a1 v cc c6 lad 20 h1 w/r m10 v ss a2 v ss c7 lad 13 h2 be 0 m11 v cc a3 lad 19 c8 lad 8 h3 lock m12 n.c. a4 lad 17 c9 lad 3 h12 n.c. m13 n.c. a5 lad 16 c10 v cc h13 n.c. m14 n.c. a6 lad 14 c11 v ss h14 n.c. n1 v ss a7 lad 11 c12 int 3 /inta j1 dt/r n2 n.c. a8 lad 9 c13 int 1 j2 be 2 n3 n.c. a9 lad 7 c14 iac /int 0 j3 v ss n4 n.c. a10 lad 5 d1 ale j12 n.c. n5 n.c. a11 lad 4 d2 ads j13 n.c. n6 n.c. a12 lad 1 d3 hlda j14 n.c. n7 n.c. a13 int 2 /intr d12 v cc k1 be 3 n8 n.c. a14 v cc d13 n.c. k2 failure n9 n.c. b1 lad 23 d14 n.c. k3 v ss n10 n.c. b2 lad 24 e1 lad 28 k12 v cc n11 n.c. b3 lad 22 e2 lad 26 k13 n.c. n12 n.c. b4 lad 21 e3 lad 27 k14 n.c. n13 n.c. b5 lad 18 e12 n.c. l1 den n14 n.c. b6 lad 15 e13 v ss l2 n.c. p1 v cc b7 lad 12 e14 n.c. l3 v cc p2 n.c. b8 lad 10 f1 lad 29 l12 v ss p3 n.c. b9 lad 6 f2 lad 31 l13 n.c. p4 n.c. b10 lad 2 f3 cache l14 n.c. p5 n.c. b11 clk2 f12 n.c. m1 n.c. p6 n.c. b12 lad 0 f13 n.c. m2 v cc p7 n.c. b13 reset f14 n.c. m3 v ss p8 n.c. b14 v ss g1 lad 30 m4 v ss p9 n.c. c1 hold g2 ready m5 v cc p10 n.c. c2 lad 25 g3 be 1 m6 n.c. p11 n.c. c3 badac g12 n.c. m7 n.c. p12 n.c. c4 v cc g13 n.c. m8 n.c. p13 v ss c5 v ss g14 n.c. m9 n.c. p14 v cc
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2 9 8 0 9 6 0 k b 3 . 3 p acka g e t h er m a l s p e c i f i cat i on t h e 8 0 9 6 0 kb i s s p e c i f i e d f o r o p e r a t i on w h e n c a s e t e m p e r a t u r e is w i t h i n t h e r a n g e 0 c t o 8 5 c ( p g a) o r 0 c t o 1 0 0 c (p q f p) . m e a s u r e c a s e t e m p e r a t u re a t t h e t o p ce n t e r o f t h e p a c k ag e . a m b i e n t t e m p e r- a t u r e c a n b e c a l c u l at e d f r o m : ? t j = t c + p* j c ? t a = t j + p* j a ? t c = t a + p* [ j a ? j c ] v a l u e s f o r j a a n d j c f o r v a r i o u s a i r f l o w s a r e g i v e n i n t a b l e 12 f o r t h e p g a p a c k a ge a n d i n t a b l e 1 2 f o r t h e p q f p p a c k a g e . t he p g a s j a c a n b e r e d u c e d b y a d d i n g a h e a t s i n k . f o r t h e p q f p , h o w ev e r , a h ea t s i n k i s n o t g e n e r al l y u s e d s i n c e t h e d e v i c e i s i n t e n d e d t o b e su r f a c e m o u n t ed . m a x i m u m a l l o w a b l e a m b i e n t t e m p e r a t u r e (t a ) p e r m i t te d w i t h o u t e x c e e d i n g t c i s s h o w n b y t h e g r a p h s i n fi g u r e s 2 3 , 2 4 , 2 5 a n d 2 6 . t h e c u r v e s a ss u m e t h e m a x i m u m p e r m i tt e d s u p p l y c u rr e nt (i c c ) a t e a c h s p e e d , v c c o f + 5 . 0 v an d a t c as e o f + 8 5 c (p g a ) o r + 1 0 0 c ( p q f p). i f th e 8 0 9 6 0 k b i s t o b e u s e d i n a h a r s h e n v i r o n m e n t w h e r e t h e a m b ie n t te m p e r a t u r e m a y e xc e e d t h e l i m it s fo r t h e no r m a l c o mm e r c i a l p a r t , c o n s i de r u s i n g a n e x t e n d e d t e m p e r a t u r e d e v i c e . t h e s e c o m p on e n t s a r e a v a il a b l e a t 1 6 , 2 0 a n d 2 5 m h z i n the ceramic pga package. extended operating temperature r a n g e i s C 4 0 c t o + 1 2 5 c ( c a s e ) . f i g u r e 2 6 s ho w s t h e m a x i m u m a ll o w a b l e a m b i e n t t e m p e r a t u r e f o r t h e 2 0 m h z e x t e n d e d t e m p e r a t u r e t a 8 0 9 6 0 kb a t va r i o u s a i r f l o w s . t h e c u r v e a ss u m e s a n i c c o f 42 0 m a , v c c of 5 . 0 v a n d a t c as e o f + 12 5 c . t a b l e 1 4 . 8 0 9 6 0 kb p g a p a c k a g e t h e r m a l c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s th e r m a l r e s i s t a n c e c / w a tt p a r a m e t e r a i r f lo w ft. / m i n ( m / s e c ) 0 ( 0 ) 5 0 ( 0 . 2 5 ) 1 0 0 ( 0 . 5 0 ) 2 0 0 ( 1 . 0 1 ) 4 0 0 ( 2 . 0 3 ) 6 0 0 ( 3 . 0 4 ) 8 0 0 ( 4 . 0 6 ) j un c t i o n - t o - c a s e 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 c a s e - t o - a m b i e n t ( n o h eat s i n k ) 1 9 1 8 1 7 1 5 1 2 1 0 9 c a s e - t o - a m b i e n t ( o m n i d i r e c t i ona l h e at s i n k ) 1 6 1 5 1 4 1 2 9 7 6 c a s e - t o - a m b i e n t ( u n i d i r e c t i o n a l h e at - s i n k ) 1 5 1 4 1 3 1 1 8 6 5 n o t e s : 1 . t h i s ta b l e a pp l i e s to 80 9 60 k b p g a p l u g ged i nto s o c k et o r s o l de r ed d i r e c t l y to bo a r d . 2 . j a = j c + c a 3 . j - c a p = 4 c / w ( app r o x . ) j - p i n = 4 c / w ( i n n e r p i n s ) ( app r o x . ) j - p i n = 8 c / w ( oute r p i n s ) ( a p p r o x . ) jc ja j - p i n j - c a p
80960kb 30 figure 22. hold timing table 15. 80960kb pqfp package thermal characteristics thermal resistance ? c/watt parameter airflow ? ft./min (m/sec) 0 (0) 50 (0.25) 100 (0.50) 200 (1.01) 400 (2.03) 600 (3.04) 800 (4.06) q junction-to-case 9999999 q case-to-ambient (no heatsink) 22 19 18 16 11 9 8 notes: 1. this table applies to 80960kb pqfp soldered directly to board. 2. q ja = q jc + q ca 3. q jl = 18c/w (approx.) q jb = 18c/w (approx.) q jc q jl q jb t h t h t h clk2 clk hold hlda t 12 t 11 t 6h t 9h
80960kb 31 figure 23. 16 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature figure 24. 20 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 0 200 400 600 800 pqfp pga with no heatsink pga with omni- directional heatsink pga with uni- directional heatsink airflow (ft/min) temperature ( o c) 90 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 0 200 400 600 800 pqfp pga with no heatsink pga with omni- directional heatsink pga with uni- directional heatsink airflow (ft/min) temperature ( o c) 55 50
80960kb 32 figure 25. 25 mhz maximum allowable ambient temperature figure 26. maximum allowable ambient temperature for the extended temperature ta-80960kb at 20 mhz in pga package airflow (ft/min) temperature ( o c) 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 pqfp pga with no heatsink pga with omni- directional heatsink pga with uni- directional heatsink 85 pga with no heatsink pga with omni- directional heatsink airflow (ft/min) temperature ( o c) 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 120 115 110 105 100 95 90 pga with uni- directional heatsink
80960kb 33 4.0 waveforms figures 27, 28, 29 and 30 show the waveforms for various transactions on the 80960kb ?s local bus. figure 27. non-burst read and write transactions without wait states t a t d t r t a t d t r clk2 clk lad31:0 ale ads be3:0 w/r dt/r den ready
80960kb 34 figure 28. burst read and write transaction without wait states t a t d t d t r t a t d t d t d t d t r clk2 clk lad31:0 ale ads be3:0 w/r dt/r den ready
80960kb 35 figure 29. burst write transaction with 2, 1, 1, 1 wait states t a t w t w t d t w t d t w t d t w t d t r clk2 clk lad31:0 ale ads be3:0 w/r dt/r den ready
80960kb 36 figure 30. accesses generated by quad word read bus request, misaligned two bytes from quad word boundary (1, 0, 0, 0 wait states) t a t w t d t d t d t d t r t a t w t d t r clk2 clk lad31:0 ale ads be3:2 w/r dt/r den ready be1:0
80960kb 37 figure 31. interrupt acknowledge transaction clk2 t x t x t a t d t r t r t i t i t i t i t i t a t w t d intr lad31:0 ale ads inta dt/r den lock ready note: intr can go low no sooner than the input hold time following the beginning of interrupt acknowledgment cycle 1. for a second interrupt to be acknowledged, intr must be low for at least three cycles before it can be reasserted. interrupt acknowledgement cycle 1 idle (5 bus states) interrupt acknowledgement cycle 2 previous cycle addr vector addr clk
80 9 6 0 k b 3 8 5 . 0 r e v i s i o n hi s t o r y n o r e v i s ion hi s to r y w a s m a i nt a in e d i n e a r l ie r r e v is i on s o f th i s d a t a s h e e t. a ll e rr a t a t h at h a s b e e n id e ntif i e d to da t e i s i n c o r p o r at e d i nto thi s r e vi s i o n. t h e s e c t io n s s ig n ifi c a n tl y c ha n g e d s in c e th e p r e v io u s r e v i s i on a r e : s e c t i o n l a s t r e v . d e s c r i p t io n t a b l e 4 . 8 0 9 60 kb p i n d e s c r i p t i o n : l -b u s s i g n a l s ( p g . 8 ) - 0 0 5 l o c k p in d e s c r i pt i o n r e w r it t e n f o r c l a r it y . 2 . 3 . c o n n ec t i o n r e c o mm e n d a - t i o n s (p g . 1 1 ) - 0 0 5 c h a n g e d s u g g e s t e d o p e n - d r a i n te r m i n a t i o n n e t w o r k s to r e fl e c t m o r e r e a l i s ti c o p e r a t i n g c o n d it i o n s w i t h r e d u c t i o n in dc p o w e r c o n s um p t i o n . f i g u r e 9. t y p i c a l c u rr e n t v s . f r e q ue n c y ( h o t t e m p ) ( p g . 1 3 ) - 0 0 5 a d d e d f i g u r e f o r t y p i c a l p o w e r s u p p l y c u rr e n t a t h o t t e m p e r a t u r e t o a i d t h e r m a l a na l y s i s . f i g u re 1 2 . t e s t l o a d c i r c u i t for t h r e e -s t a t e o u t p u t p i n s ( p g . 1 4 ) f i g u re 1 3 . t e s t l o a d c i r c u i t for o p e n - d r a i n o u t p u t p i n s ( p g . 1 4 ) - 0 0 5 a l l o u t p u t s n o w s p ec i f i e d w i t h s t a n d a r d 5 0 p f t e s t l o a d s t o a g r e e w i t h a c t u a l t e s t m e t h o d o l o g y . 2 . 7 . dc c h a r ac t e r i s t i c s ( p g . 1 5 ) - 0 0 5 i cc m a x s pe c i f i c a t i o n r ed u c e d : w a s : i s : a t : 3 7 5 m a 3 1 5 m a 1 6 m h z 4 2 0 m a 3 6 0 m a 2 0 m h z 4 8 0 m a 4 2 0 m a 2 5 m h z f i g u r e s 7 , 8 , 9 , 23 , 2 4 , 2 5 a nd 2 6 h a v e al s o b ee n c h an g e d a c c o r d i n g l y . 2 . 8 . a c s p e c i f i c a t i o n s ( p g . 1 6 ) - 0 0 5 2 5 m h z o p e r a t i o n e x t e n d e d t o p r o d u c t i n p q f p p a c k ag e . t 8 m i n . i m p r o v e d a t a l l f r e q ue n c i e s f r o m 0 ns t o 2 n s a n d t 8 m a x . i m p r o v e d f r o m 2 0 n s t o 1 8 n s . t 8 h m a x i m p r o v e m e nt : w a s : i s : a t : 3 1 n s 2 8 n s 1 6 m h z 2 6 n s 2 3 n s 2 0 m h z 2 4 n s 2 3 n s 2 5 m h z f u n c t i o n a l w a v e f o r m s - 0 0 5 r e d r a w n fo r c l a r i t y . c l k s i g n a l d r a w n w i th m o r e l i k e l y p h a s e r e l a t i o n s h i p t o c l k 2 . o p e n - d r a i n o u t p u t s i g n a l s d r a w n t o s h o w c o rr e c t i na c t i v e s t a t e s . v a r i o u s - 0 0 5 d e le t e d a ll r e f e r e n c e s t o 1 0 m h z . i n t e l n o l o n g e r o f f e r s a 1 0 m h z 8 0 9 6 0 kb d e v i ce . t a b l e 4 . 8 0 9 60 kb p i n d e s c r i p t i o n : l -b u s s i g n a l s ( p g . 8 ) - 0 0 6 de n p i n d e sc r i p ti o n o m i t te d f r o m r e v i s i o n - 0 0 5 . f i g u r e 1 8 , 8 0 9 6 0 kb p g a p i n o ut v i e w f r o m b o t t o m ( p i n s f a c in g u p ) ( p g . 2 2 ) - 0 0 6 p i n m 2 w a s n . c ., n o w s h o w s a s v c c p i n m 1 3 w a s v c c , n o w s h o w s a s n . c . revision -008 to address the fact that many of the package prefix variables have changed, all package prefix variables in this document are now indicated with an "x".


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