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CHAPTER 7 INTERRUPT
7.4
Hardware Interrupt
The hardware interrupt function temporarily interrupts the program being executed by
the CPU and transfers control to a user-defined interrupt processing program in
response to an interrupt signal from a peripheral function.
The extended intelligent I/O service (EI
2
OS) and external interrupt are executed as a
type of hardware interrupt.
■
Hardware Interrupt
●
Hardware interrupt function
The hardware interrupt function compares the interrupt level of the interrupt request signal output by a
peripheral function with the interrupt level mask register (ILM) in the CPU processor status (PS). The
function then references the contents of the I flag in the processor status (PS) through the hardware and
decides if the interrupt can be accepted.
When the hardware interrupt is accepted, the CPU internal registers are automatically saved on the system
stack. The currently requested interrupt level is stored in the interrupt level mask register (ILM), and the
function branches to the corresponding interrupt vector.
●
Multiple interrupts
Multiple hardware interrupts can be activated.
●
Extended intelligent I/O service (EI
2
OS)
EI
2
OS is an automatic transfer function between memory and I/O. When the specified transfer count has
been completed, a hardware interrupt is activated. Multiple EI
2
OS activation does not occur. During
EI
2
OS processing, all other interrupt requests and EI
2
OS requests are held.
●
External interrupt
An external interrupt (including wake-up interrupt) is accepted from a peripheral function (interrupt request
detection circuit) as a hardware interrupt.
●
Interrupt vector
Interrupt vector tables referenced during interrupt processing are allocated to memory at FFFC00
H
to
FFFFFF
H
. These tables are shared by software interrupts.
See "7.2 Interrupt Causes and Interrupt Vectors", for more information about the allocation of interrupt
numbers and interrupt vectors.
Summary of Contents for MB90460 Series
Page 1: ...The following document contains information on Cypress products ...
Page 3: ......
Page 5: ......
Page 9: ...iv ...
Page 41: ...22 CHAPTER 1 OVERVIEW ...
Page 45: ...26 CHAPTER 2 NOTES ON HANDLING DEVICES ...
Page 83: ...64 CHAPTER 3 CPU ...
Page 95: ...76 CHAPTER 4 RESET ...
Page 107: ...88 CHAPTER 5 CLOCK ...
Page 131: ...112 CHAPTER 6 LOW POWER CONSUMPTION MODE ...
Page 175: ...156 CHAPTER 7 INTERRUPT ...
Page 181: ...162 CHAPTER 8 MODE SETTING ...
Page 223: ...204 CHAPTER 9 I O PORT ...
Page 237: ...218 CHAPTER 10 TIME BASE TIMER ...
Page 247: ...228 CHAPTER 11 WATCHDOG TIMER ...
Page 275: ...256 CHAPTER 12 16 BIT RELOAD TIMER ...
Page 373: ...354 CHAPTER 14 MULTI FUNCTIONAL TIMER ...
Page 485: ...466 CHAPTER 16 PWC Timer ...
Page 531: ...512 CHAPTER 17 UART ...
Page 559: ...540 CHAPTER 19 DELAYED INTERRUPT GENERATOR MODULE ...
Page 589: ...570 CHAPTER 20 8 10 BIT A D CONVERTER ...
Page 601: ...582 CHAPTER 21 ROM CORRECTION FUNCTION ...
Page 633: ...614 CHAPTER 23 512K 1024K BIT FLASH MEMORY ...
Page 645: ...626 CHAPTER 24 EXAMPLE OF F2 MC 16LX MB90F462 F462A F463A CONNECTION FOR SERIAL WRITING ...
Page 715: ...696 APPENDIX ...
Page 716: ...697 INDEX INDEX The index follows on the next page This is listed in alphabetic order ...
Page 739: ......