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7.3
Power Domain and Module States Defined
7.3.1 Power Domain States
7.3.2 Module States
Power Domain and Module States Defined
Table 7-1. Module Configuration (continued)
Default States
31
ARM
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
32
BUS
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
33
BUS
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
34
BUS
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
35
Emulation
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
36
Test
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
37
Test
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
38
Test
AlwaysOn
ON
Enable
39
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
40
MPEG/JPEG
AlwaysOn
ON
SyncRst
Coprocessor (MJCP)
41
VPSS DAC
Always On
ON
SyncRst
A power domain can only be in one of two states: ON or OFF, defined as follows:
•
ON: power to the power domain is on.
•
OFF: power to the power domain is off.
In DM355, the AlwaysOn Power Domain is always in the ON state when the chip is powered-on.
A module can be in one of four states: Disable, Enable, SwRstDisable, or SyncReset. These four states
correspond to combinations of module reset asserted or de-asserted and module clock on or off, as
shown in
Note:
Reset of a module is defined to completely reset the module module hardware, such that all
module hardware returns to its default state. See
and
for more
information on module reset.
Table 7-2. Module States
Module State
Module Reset
Module Clock
Enable
De-asserted
On
Disable
De-asserted
Off
Sync Reset
Asserted
On
SwRstDisable
Asserted
Off
Power and Sleep Controller
66
SPRUFB3 – September 2007