© Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. 2005. All rights reserved.
User manual
Rev. 01 — 15 August 2005
11
Philips Semiconductors
UM10139
Volume 1
Chapter 2: Memory map
2.2 LPC2141/2142/2144/2146/2148 memory re-mapping and boot block
2.2.1 Memory map concepts and operating modes
The basic concept on the LPC2141/2/4/6/8 is that each memory area has a "natural"
location in the memory map. This is the address range for which code residing in that area
is written. The bulk of each memory space remains permanently fixed in the same
location, eliminating the need to have portions of the code designed to run in different
address ranges.
Because of the location of the interrupt vectors on the ARM7 processor (at addresses
0x0000 0000 through 0x0000 001C, as shown in
below), a small portion of the
Boot Block and SRAM spaces need to be re-mapped in order to allow alternative uses of
interrupts in the different operating modes described in
. Re-mapping of the
interrupts is accomplished via the Memory Mapping Control feature (
3
0xE000 C000
UART0
4
0xE001 0000
UART1
5
0xE001 4000
PWM
6
0xE001 8000
Not used
7
0xE001 C000
I
2
C0
8
0xE002 0000
SPI0
9
0xE002 4000
RTC
10
0xE002 8000
GPIO
11
0xE002 C000
Pin connect block
12
0xE003 0000
Not used
13
0xE003 4000
ADC0
14 - 22
0xE003 8000
0xE005 8000
Not used
23
0xE005 C000
I
2
C1
24
0xE006 0000
ADC1
25
0xE006 4000
Not used
26
0xE006 8000
SSP
27
0xE006 C000
DAC
28 - 35
0xE007 0000
0xE008 C000
Not used
36
0xE009 0000
USB
37 - 126
0xE009 4000
0xE01F 8000
Not used
127
0xE01F C000
System Control Block
Table 2:
VPB peripheries and base addresses
VPB peripheral
Base address
Peripheral name