MCC501RX166TD0B Motorola / Freescale Semiconductor, MCC501RX166TD0B Datasheet - Page 17

no-image

MCC501RX166TD0B

Manufacturer Part Number
MCC501RX166TD0B
Description
Network Processor, 16 Processing Elements, 166MHz Core Operating Frequency, 5Gbps Max Throughput, 838-CBGA
Manufacturer
Motorola / Freescale Semiconductor
Datasheet
C-Port Confidential
Executive Processor
System Interfaces
The Executive Processor (XP) serves as a centralized computing resource for the C-5 NP
and manages the system interfaces.
The XP performs conventional supervisory tasks in the C-5 NP, including:
The system interfaces to the XP are:
Reset and initialization of the C-5 NP
Program loading and control of CPs
Centralized exception handling
Management of a host interface through the PCI
Management of system interfaces (PCI, Serial Bus, PROM)
PCI — Provides an industry standard 32bit 33/66MHz PCI channel used for chip-level
shared resources. The PCI has both initiator and target capabilities. The PCI interface is
typically connected to a host processor.
Serial Bus Interface — Provides a general purpose bi-directional, two-wire serial bus
and I/O port that allows the C-5 NP to control external logic with either of two
standard protocols:
– The MDIO (high-speed) protocol: uses a 16bit data format with 10bits of
– The low-speed protocol: uses an 8bit data format followed by an acknowledge bit
Software is used to select which protocol to use, by setting the appropriate bits in the
Serial Bus Configuration Register. When a serial bus transfer is active, an external pin is
driven by the C-5 NP to indicate which protocol is being used (SPLD=0 indicates MDIO
protocol; SPLD=1 indicates low-speed protocol).
Both SIDA and SICL are bi-directional lines that are connected, via an external pull-up
resistor, to a positive supply voltage. When the bus is free, both lines are HIGH because
of the pull-up resistor. The output stages of the devices connected to the bus must
have either an open-drain or open-collector in order to perform the wired-AND
function required for its arbitration mechanism.
PROM Interface — Allows the XP to boot from nonvolatile, flash memory. The PROM
interface is a low-speed, serial I/O port that runs at
maximum PROM size is 8MBytes, and a 16bit wide configuration is required. External
addressing and supports transfers up to 25MHz.
and supports transfers up to 400kbps.
1
/
2
to
1
Preliminary Version — January 21, 2002
/
16
Executive Processor
the core clock rate. The
17

Related parts for MCC501RX166TD0B