HS2214EPI62H Renesas Electronics America, HS2214EPI62H Datasheet - Page 42

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HS2214EPI62H

Manufacturer Part Number
HS2214EPI62H
Description
EMULATOR BASE UNIT H8S/2214
Manufacturer
Renesas Electronics America
Type
Microcontrollerr
Datasheets

Specifications of HS2214EPI62H

Contents
E6000 Emulator and CD-ROM
For Use With/related Products
H8S/2214
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Contains lead / RoHS non-compliant
3.1.5
The emulator incorporates a bus monitoring function that monitors and displays the contents of the accessed area
in High-performance Embedded Workshop windows without stopping the program execution. Up to eight
blocks of 256 bytes can be monitored. In addition, the emulator can output trigger signals from external probe 2
(EXT2) when specified addresses (four points max.) are accessed. Note that, however, some products do not
support the bus monitoring function.
3.2
In most practical debugging applications, the program or hardware errors that you are trying to debug occur
under a certain restricted set of circumstances. For example, a hardware error may only occur after a specific
area of memory has been accessed. Tracking down such problems using simple software breakpoints can be very
time-consuming.
The emulator provides a very sophisticated system for giving a precise description of the conditions you want to
examine, called the complex event system. This allows you to define events which depend on the state of a
specified combination of the MCU signals.
The complex event system provides a unified way of controlling the trace, break, and timing functions of the
emulator.
3.2.1
The event channels allow you to detect when a specified event has occurred. The event can be defined as a
combination of one or more of the followings:
• Address or address range
• Address outside range
• Read or Write or either
• Data, with an optional mask
• MCU access type (e.g., DMAC and instruction prefetch)
• MCU access area (e.g., on-chip ROM and on-chip RAM)
• A signal state on one or more of the four external probes
• A certain number of times that the event must be triggered
• Delay cycles after an event
Up to eight events can be combined into a sequence, in which each event is either activated or deactivated by the
occurrence of the previous event in the sequence. For example, you can cause a break if an I/O register is written
to after a specified area of RAM has been accessed.
20
Bus Monitoring
Complex Event System (CES)
Event Channels

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