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Rev. 1.10
120
March 02, 2020
Rev. 1.10
121
March 02, 2020
BS83A02L/BS83B04L
Ultra-Low Power Touch Key Flash MCU
BS83A02L/BS83B04L
Ultra-Low Power Touch Key Flash MCU
• MFI1 Register – BS83B04L
Bit
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Name
—
—
CTMAF
CTMPF
—
—
CTMAE
CTMPE
R/W
—
—
R/W
R/W
—
—
R/W
R/W
POR
—
—
0
0
—
—
0
0
Bit 7~6
Unimplemented, read as “0”
Bit 5
CTMAF
: CTM Comparator A match interrupt request flag
0: No request
1: Interrupt request
Bit 4
CTMPF
: CTM Comparator P match interrupt request flag
0: No request
1: Interrupt request
Bit 3~2
Unimplemented, read as “0”
Bit 1
CTMAE
: CTM Comparator A match interrupt control
0: Disable
1: Enable
Bit 0
CTMPE
: CTM Comparator P match interrupt control
0: Disable
1: Enable
Interrupt Operation
When the conditions for an interrupt event occur, such as a Touch Key Counter overflow etc., the
relevant interrupt request flag will be set. Whether the request flag actually generates a program
jump to the relevant interrupt vector is determined by the condition of the interrupt enable bit. If the
enable bit is set high, then the program will jump to its relevant vector; if the enable bit is zero then
although the interrupt request flag is set an actual interrupt will not be generated and the program
will not jump to the relevant interrupt vector. The global interrupt enable bit, if cleared to zero, will
disable all interrupts.
When an interrupt is generated, the Program Counter, which stores the address of the next instruction
to be executed, will be transferred onto the stack. The Program Counter will then be loaded with a
new address which will be the value of the corresponding interrupt vector. The microcontroller will
then fetch its next instruction from this interrupt vector. The instruction at this vector will usually
be a “JMP” which will jump to another section of program which is known as the interrupt service
routine. Here is located the code to control the appropriate interrupt. The interrupt service routine
must be terminated with a “RETI”, which retrieves the original Program Counter address from
the stack and allows the microcontroller to continue with normal execution at the point where the
interrupt occurred.
The various interrupt enable bit, together with their associated request flags, are shown in the
accompanying diagrams with their order of priority. Some interrupt sources have their own
individual vector while others share the same multi-function interrupt vector. Once an interrupt
subroutine is serviced, all the other interrupts will be blocked, as the global interrupt enable bit,
EMI bit will be cleared automatically. This will prevent any further interrupt nesting from occurring.
However, if other interrupt requests occur during this interval, although the interrupt will not be
immediately serviced, the request flag will still be recorded.
If an interrupt requires immediate servicing while the program is already in another interrupt service
routine, the EMI bit should be set after entering the routine, to allow interrupt nesting. If the stack
is full, the interrupt request will not be acknowledged, even if the related interrupt is enabled, until
the Stack Pointer is decremented. If immediate service is desired, the stack must be prevented from