OVERVIEW OF THE 80C186 FAMILY ARCHITECTURE
2-48
Single step priority is a special case. If an interrupt (NMI or maskable) occurs at the same instruc-
tion boundary as a single step, the interrupt vector is taken first, then is followed immediately by
the single step vector. However, the single step service routine is executed before the interrupt
service routine (see Figure 2-29). If the single step service routine re-enables single step by exe-
cuting the IRET, the interrupt service routine will also be single stepped. This can severely limit
the real-time response of the CPU to an interrupt.
To prevent the single-step routine from executing before a maskable interrupt, disable interrupts
while single stepping an instruction, then enable interrupts in the single step service routine. The
maskable interrupt is serviced from within the single step service routine and that interrupt ser-
vice routine is not single-stepped. To prevent single stepping before an NMI, the single-step ser-
vice routine must compare the return address on the stack to the NMI vector. If they are the same,
return to the NMI service routine immediately without executing the single step service routine.
Figure 2-29. Simultaneous NMI and Single Step Interrupts
The most complicated case is when an NMI, a maskable interrupt, a single step and another ex-
ception are pending on the same instruction boundary. Figure 2-30 shows how this case is prior-
itized by the CPU. Note that if the single-step routine sets the Trap Flag (TF) bit before executing
the IRET instruction, the NMI routine will also be single stepped.
NMI
IRET
Instruction
Trap Flag = 1
Push PSW, CS, IP
Fetch Divide Error Vector
Trap Flag = 0
Execute Single Step
Service Routine
Push PSW, CS, IP
Fetch Single Step Vector
Trap Flag = ???
A1032-0A
Summary of Contents for 80C186XL
Page 1: ...80C186XL 80C188XL Microprocessor User s Manual...
Page 2: ...80C186XL 80C188XL Microprocessor User s Manual 1995...
Page 18: ...1 Introduction...
Page 19: ......
Page 27: ......
Page 28: ...2 Overview of the 80C186 Family Architecture...
Page 29: ......
Page 79: ......
Page 80: ...3 Bus Interface Unit...
Page 81: ......
Page 127: ......
Page 128: ...4 Peripheral Control Block...
Page 129: ......
Page 137: ......
Page 138: ...5 ClockGenerationand Power Management...
Page 139: ......
Page 154: ...6 Chip Select Unit...
Page 155: ......
Page 178: ...7 Refresh Control Unit...
Page 179: ......
Page 193: ......
Page 194: ...8 Interrupt Control Unit...
Page 195: ......
Page 227: ......
Page 228: ...9 Timer Counter Unit...
Page 229: ......
Page 253: ......
Page 254: ...10 Direct Memory Access Unit...
Page 255: ......
Page 283: ......
Page 284: ...11 Math Coprocessing...
Page 285: ......
Page 302: ...12 ONCE Mode...
Page 303: ......
Page 306: ...A 80C186 Instruction Set Additions and Extensions...
Page 307: ......
Page 318: ...B Input Synchronization...
Page 319: ......
Page 322: ...C Instruction Set Descriptions...
Page 323: ......
Page 371: ......
Page 372: ...D Instruction Set Opcodes and Clock Cycles...
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Page 396: ...Index...
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