29-18
MCF5282 User’s Manual
MOTOROLA
Background Debug Mode (BDM)
29.5.2 BDM Serial Interface
When the CPU is halted and PST reflects the halt status, the development system can send
unrestricted commands to the debug module. The debug module implements a synchronous
protocol using two inputs (DSCLK and DSI) and one output (DSO), where DSO is
specified as a delay relative to the rising edge of the processor clock. See Table 29-1. The
development system serves as the serial communication channel master and must generate
DSCLK.
The serial channel operates at a frequency from DC to 1/5 of the CLKOUT frequency. The
channel uses full-duplex mode, where data is sent and received simultaneously by both
master and slave devices. The transmission consists of 17-bit packets composed of a
status/control bit and a 16-bit data word. As shown in Figure 29-12, all state transitions are
enabled on a rising edge of CLKOUT when DSCLK is high; that is, DSI is sampled and
DSO is driven.
Figure 29-12. BDM Serial Interface Timing
DSCLK and DSI are synchronized inputs. DSCLK acts as a pseudo clock enable and is
sampled on the rising edge of the processor clock as well as the DSI. DSO is delayed from
the DSCLK-enabled CLK rising edge (registered after a BDM state machine state change).
All events in the debug module’s serial state machine are based on the processor clock
rising edge. DSCLK must also be sampled low (on a positive edge of CLK) between each
bit exchange. The MSB is transferred first. Because DSO changes state based on an
internally-recognized rising edge of DSCLK, DSDO cannot be used to indicate the start of
a serial transfer. The development system must count clock cycles in a given transfer.
C1–C4 are described as follows:
• C1—First synchronization cycle for DSI (DSCLK is high).
• C2—Second synchronization cycle for DSI (DSCLK is high).
• C3—BDM state machine changes state depending upon DSI and whether the entire
input data transfer has been transmitted.
• C4—DSO changes to next value.
CLKOUT
DSCLK
Next State
BDM State
Machine
DSO
DSI
Current State
Current
Next
Past
Current
C1
C2
C3
C4
Summary of Contents for ColdFire MCF5281
Page 124: ...3 20 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA EMAC Instruction Set Summary ...
Page 141: ...MOTOROLA Chapter 5 Static RAM SRAM 5 5 SRAM Programming Model ...
Page 142: ...5 6 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA SRAM Programming Model ...
Page 168: ...6 26 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Interrupts ...
Page 186: ...7 18 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Functional Description ...
Page 228: ...9 22 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Functional Description ...
Page 246: ...10 18 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Low Power Wakeup Operation ...
Page 254: ...11 8 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Memory Map and Registers ...
Page 264: ...12 10 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Chip Select Registers ...
Page 280: ...13 16 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Misaligned Operands ...
Page 314: ...14 34 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA MCF5282 External Signals ...
Page 339: ...MOTOROLA Chapter 15 Synchronous DRAM Controller Module 15 25 SDRAM Example ...
Page 340: ...15 26 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA SDRAM Example ...
Page 356: ...16 16 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA DMA Controller Module Functional Description ...
Page 408: ...17 52 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Buffer Descriptors ...
Page 446: ...20 24 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Interrupts ...
Page 474: ...22 18 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Programming Model ...
Page 510: ...23 36 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Operation ...
Page 526: ...24 16 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA I2C Programming Examples ...
Page 672: ...28 12 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Functional Description ...
Page 718: ...29 46 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Motorola Recommended BDM Pinout ...
Page 750: ...32 8 MCF5282 User s Manual MOTOROLA Ordering Information ...