COM Express Carrier Type 2
Page 81 of 103
Design Guide
16.3
Watch Dog
The watchdog timer (WDT) event signal is provided by the COM Express module. The WDT output is
active-high. It is sourced from module pin B27. The WDT event can cause the system to reset by
making appropriate carrier board connections. It also may be possible to configure the module to reset
on a WDT event; check the user’s guide of the manufacturer's module.
If the WDT output is used to cause a system reset, the WDT output will be cleared by the system reset
event. The WDT can be latched to drive a LED for a visual indication of an event, as shown in Figure 30.
Note that the latch is powered by a power rail that is active in all power states, including the soft-off
state. The latch is only cleared by a complete power cycle. The cold power up cycle is signaled by the
RSMRST# net (Resume Reset, active low). A carrier board reset monitor, not shown in the figure, is
required to generate the RSMRST# signal. The reset monitor should monitor the 5 V or 3.3 V suspend
power rail (V5.0_S5 or V3.3_S5).
Figure 30 Watchdog Timer Event Latch Schematic
16.4
Speaker
The PC-AT architecture provides a speaker signal that creates beeps and chirps. The signal is a digital-
logic signal that is created from system timers within the core chipset. The speaker provides feedback
to the user that an error has occurred. The system BIOS usually drives the speaker line with a set of
beep codes to indicate hardware problems such as a memory test failure, a missing video device, or a
missing keyboard. Application software often uses the PC-AT speaker to flag an error such as an invalid
key press.
This speaker signal should not be confused with the analog-audio signals produced by the audio
CODEC. In many systems, the PC-AT speaker signal is fed into one of the audio CODEC inputs, allowing
it to be mixed with other audio signals and heard on the audio transducer (speakers and headphones)
that the CODEC drives.
The COM Express module provides a speaker output signal called SPKR, which is intended to drive an
external FET or a logic gate to connect a PC speaker.
The SPKR signal is often used as a configuration strap for the module’s chipset. It should not be
connected to a pull-up or pull-down resistor, which could overwrite the internal chipset configuration
and result in a malfunction of the module.
Summary of Contents for COM Express Carrier
Page 1: ...COM Express Carrier Type 2 Design Guide October 2009 Confidential and Proprietary ...
Page 17: ...COM Express Carrier Type 2 Page 17 of 103 Design Guide Figure 1 COM Express Type 2 Connector ...
Page 36: ...Page 36 of 103 COM Express Carrier Type 2 Design Guide Table 5 SDVO Layout Requirement ...