User`s guide

NOTE
HALT has a higher priority than
LOOP. Thus, if
both are set, halt
on
error occurs first.
Example:
MIC>SE
LO
NER
- No error reports. SETting this flag causes the
MICMON
to skip the printout of error reporting.
Example:
MIC>SE
NE
BELL -
Bell
on
error. SETting this flag causes the
MICMON
to ring the terminal bell each time an error
is
reported.
Example:
MIC>SE
BE
SER
- Enable single bit errors to be reported as normal errors. SETting this flag causes the MICMON to
print single bit errors.
Example:
MIC>SE
SE
TRACE
- Trace execution. SETting this flag causes the
MICMON
to print the test number before start-
ing each test.
Example:
MIC>SE
TR
SOMM - Stop
on
micromatch. SETting this flag causes the
MICMON
to write bad parity to the WCS
location specified. When execution occurs and
PARITY
is
set, the MICMON traps the interrupt caused by
the parity error.
If
the address matches the last SOMM address,
MICMON
prints
"SOMM"
and the UPC
and returns to the command mode
(MICĀ».
If
the parity
is
not the SOM address, a parity error message
is
displayed. SETting SOMM a second time clears the previous address.
NOTE
CLear PArity must
be
issued prior to
SEt
SOmm.
Example:
MIC>SE
SO
xxxx
Where
xxxx
is
the
WCS
address.
DEFAULT - Set flags to default value. SETting this flag cuases the
MICMON
to
SET
HALT, disable
SOMM and CLEAR all other flags.
Example:
MIC>SE
DE
PARITY - Set bad parity. SETting this flag causes the
MICMON
to write bad parity to the address
specified and to disable stall
on
parity errors.
If
no
address
is
given, only disable stall on parity error occurs.
Clear parity
is
used to remove the bad parity error and reenable stall
on
parity error.
If
no
address
is
given,
only enable stall
on
parity error occurs. This command
is
also useful to write good parity
at
the location
that has data deposited into it. This assures the parity
at
that location
is
correct.
Example:
MIC>SE
PA
xxxx
Where
xxxx
is
the
WCS
address.
B-4