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Appendix A: Watchdog Timer
The Watchdog Timer is provided to ensure that standalone systems can always
recover from catastrophic conditions that cause the CPU to crash. This condition
may have occurred by external EMI or a software bug. When the CPU stops
working correctly, hardware on the board will either perform a hardware reset
(cold boot) or a Non-Maskable Interrupt (NMI) to bring the system back to a
known state.
A BIOS function call (INT 15H) is used to control the Watchdog Timer:
INT 15H:
AH – 6FH
Sub-function:
AL – 2
: Set the Watchdog Timer’s period
BL:
Time-out value (Its unit--second or minute, is
dependent on the item “Watchdog Timer unit select”
in CMOS setup).
You have to call sub-function 2 to set the time-out period of Watchdog Timer first.
If the time-out value is not zero, the Watchdog Timer will start counting down.
While the timer value reaches zero, the system will reset. To ensure that this
reset condition does not occur, please make sure that the Watchdog Timer is
being periodically refreshed by calling sub-function 2. However the Watchdog
timer will be disabled if you set the time-out value to zero.
A tolerance of at least 10% must be maintained to avoid unknown routines within
the operating system (DOS), such as disk I/O that can be very time-consuming.
Note:
When exiting a program it is necessary to disable the Watchdog Timer,
otherwise the system will reset.
Example program:
;
INITIAL TIMER PERIOD COUNTER
;
W_LOOP:
MOV AX, 6F02H
;setting the time-out value
MOV BL, 30
;time-out value is 48 seconds
INT 15H
;
;
ADD YOUR APPLICATION PROGRAM HERE
;
CMP EXIT_AP, 1
;is your application over?
JNE W_LOOP
;No, restart your application
MOV AX, 6F02H
;disable Watchdog Timer
MOV BL, 0
;
INT 15H
;
;
EXIT
;
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