Processor Users Manual

MOTOROLA Chapter 21. SCC HDLC Mode 21-13
Part IV. Communications Processor Module
Figure 21-8 shows interrupts that can be generated using the HDLC protocol.
Figure 21-8. SCC HDLC Interrupt Event Example
12 RXF Rx frame. Set when the number of receive frames speciÞed in RFTHR are received on the HDLC
channel. It is set no sooner than two clocks after the last bit of the closing ßag is received. This event is
not maskable via the RxBD[I] bit.
13 BSY Busy condition. Indicates a frame arrived but was discarded due to a lack of buffers.
14 TXB Transmit buffer. Enabled by setting TxBD[I]. TXB is set when a buffer is sent on the HDLC channel. For
the last buffer in the frame, TXB is not set before the last bit of the closing ßag begins its transmission;
otherwise, it is set after the last byte of the buffer is written to the Tx FIFO.
15 RXB Receive buffer. Enabled by setting RxBD[I]. RXB is set when the HDLC channel receives a buffer that
is not the last in a frame.
Table 21-9. SCCE/SCCM Field Descriptions (Continued)
Bits Name Description
CD IDL FLG RXB RXF IDL CD
Line Idle
Stored in Rx Buffer
RXD
CD
Frame
Received by HDLC
Time
Line Idle
TXD
R
TS
Frame
Transmitted by HDLC
CTS
TXB CTSCTS
Line Idle Line Idle
Stored in Tx Buffer
NOTES:
HDLC SCCE
Events
1. RXB event assumes receive buffers are 6 bytes each.
2. The second IDL event occurs after 15 ones are received in a row.
3. The FLG interrupts show the beginning and end of flag reception.
4. The FLG interrupt at the end of the frame may precede the RXF interrupt due to receive FIFO latency.
5. The CD event must be programmed in the port C parallel I/O, not in the SCC itself.
NOTES:
HDLC SCCE
Events
1. TXB event shown assumes all three bytes were put into a single buffer.
2. Example shows one additional opening flag. This is programmable.
FF A A C I I I CR CR F
FLG FLG
FLG
6. F = flag, A = address byte, C = control byte, I = information byte, and CR = CRC byte
FFAACCRCRF
3. The CTS event must be programmed in the port C parallel I/O, not in the SCC itself.