543
CHAPTER 29 EXAMPLE OF SERIAL PROGRAMMING CONNECTION
As the UI0, UO0, and UCK0 pins are also used by the user system, you need to provide a control circuit as
shown in Figure 29.1-2 if you want to disconnect from the user circuit during serial writing.
(The /TICS signal of the flash microcomputer programmer can be used to disconnect from the user circuit
during serial writing. See the connection example in Figure 29.1-2 for details.)
Figure 29.1-2 Control Circuit
Table 29.1-1 Pins Used for Fujitsu Standard Serial Onboard Programming
Pin
Function
Description
MOD, P13
Mode pin
Setting MOD=High and P13=Low sets serial write mode.
X0, X1
Oscillation pins
The CPU's internal operating clock during serial write mode is the oscillator
frequency divided by two.
Note that a 1MHz or higher oscillator frequency must be input when performing
serial writing.
RST
Reset pin
-
P10/UI0/
EC0
Serial data input pin
Setting P10/UI0=Low specifies that serial write mode uses clock synchronous
communications. As this low input is handled by the TTXD pin of the flash
microcomputer programmer, you do not need to provide a pull-down for the P10/UI0
pin.
P11/UO0/
TO01
Serial data output pin
-
P12/UCK0/
TO00
Serial clock input pin
Setting P12/UCK0=High sets serial write mode. As this high input is handled by the
TCK pin of the flash microcomputer programmer, you do not need to provide a pull-
up for the P12/UCK0 pin.
V
CC
Power supply volt-
age supply
pin
V
SS
GND pin
Common to the GND of the flash microcomputer programmer.
User
>
=
MB95F108A/H
programming
control pin
AF220/AF210/AF120/AF110
programming control pin
AF220/AF210/AF120/AF110
/TICS pin
Summary of Contents for F2 MC-8FX Family
Page 2: ......
Page 4: ......
Page 34: ...20 CHAPTER 1 DESCRIPTION ...
Page 38: ...24 CHAPTER 2 HANDLING DEVICES ...
Page 39: ...25 CHAPTER 3 MEMORY SPACE This chapter describes memory space 3 1 Memory Space 3 2 Memory Map ...
Page 56: ...42 CHAPTER 5 CPU ...
Page 73: ...59 CHAPTER 6 CLOCK CONTROLLER ...
Page 96: ...82 CHAPTER 6 CLOCK CONTROLLER ...
Page 104: ...90 CHAPTER 7 RESET ...
Page 105: ...91 CHAPTER 8 INTERRUPTS This chapter explains the interrupts 8 1 Interrupts ...
Page 174: ...160 CHAPTER 10 TIMEBASE TIMER ...
Page 184: ...170 CHAPTER 10 TIMEBASE TIMER ...
Page 218: ...204 CHAPTER 13 WATCH PRESCALER ...
Page 257: ...243 CHAPTER 16 8 16 BIT COMPOSITE TIMER ...
Page 261: ...247 CHAPTER 16 8 16 BIT COMPOSITE TIMER ...
Page 288: ...274 CHAPTER 16 8 16 BIT COMPOSITE TIMER ...
Page 301: ...287 CHAPTER 17 16 BIT PPG TIMER ...
Page 316: ...302 CHAPTER 17 16 BIT PPG TIMER ...
Page 382: ...368 CHAPTER 21 UART SIO DEDICATED BAUD RATE GENERATOR ...
Page 390: ...376 CHAPTER 22 I2C ...
Page 395: ...381 CHAPTER 22 I2C ...
Page 399: ...385 CHAPTER 22 I2C ...
Page 430: ...416 CHAPTER 23 10 BIT A D CONVERTER ...
Page 476: ...462 CHAPTER 24 LCD CONTROLLER ...
Page 482: ...468 CHAPTER 25 LOW VOLTAGE DETECTION RESET CIRCUIT ...
Page 494: ...480 CHAPTER 26 CLOCK SUPERVISOR ...
Page 507: ...493 CHAPTER 27 REAL TIME CLOCK ...
Page 523: ...509 CHAPTER 27 REAL TIME CLOCK ...
Page 532: ...518 CHAPTER 27 REAL TIME CLOCK ...
Page 536: ...522 CHAPTER 28 256 KBIT FLASH MEMORY ...
Page 554: ...540 CHAPTER 28 256 KBIT FLASH MEMORY ...
Page 564: ...550 CHAPTER 29 EXAMPLE OF SERIAL PROGRAMMING CONNECTION ...
Page 595: ...581 INDEX INDEX The index follows on the next page This is listed in alphabetic order ...
Page 596: ...582 INDEX Index ...
Page 597: ...583 INDEX ...
Page 600: ...586 Pin Function Index ...
Page 602: ......