DR
Framing bit
B5
B6
B7
FSR
CLKR
Á
Á
Á
Á
2-bit delay
B5
B6
B7
B4
B5
B6
B7
B3
B4
B5
B6
B7
Data delay 2
D(R/X)
Data delay 1
D(R/X)
Data delay 0
D(R/X)
FS(R/X)
CLK(R/X)
1-bit delay
Á
Á
Á
Á
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
ÁÁ
0-bit delay
2-bit delay
Transmitter Configuration
1144
SPRUHE8E – October 2012 – Revised November 2019
Copyright © 2012–2019, Texas Instruments Incorporated
C28 Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP)
Figure 15-56. Range of Programmable Data Delay
15.9.12.2 0-Bit Data Delay
Normally, a frame-synchronization pulse is detected or sampled with respect to an edge of serial clock
internal CLK(R/X). Thus, on the following cycle or later (depending on the data delay value), data can be
received or transmitted. However, in the case of 0-bit data delay, the data must be ready for reception
and/or transmission on the same serial clock cycle.
For reception this problem is solved because receive data is sampled on the first falling edge of MCLKR
where an active-high internal FSR is detected. However, data transmission must begin on the rising edge
of the internal CLKX clock that generated the frame synchronization. Therefore, the first data bit is
assumed to be present in XSR1, and thus DX. The transmitter then asynchronously detects the frame
synchronization, FSX, going active high and immediately starts driving the first bit to be transmitted on the
DX pin.
15.9.12.3 2-Bit Data Delay
A data delay of two bit-periods allows the serial port to interface to different types of T1 framing devices
where the data stream is preceded by a framing bit. During reception of such a stream with data delay of
two bits (framing bit appears after a 1-bit delay and data appears after a 2-bit delay), the serial port
essentially discards the framing bit from the data stream, as shown in the following figure. In this figure,
the data transferred is an 8-bit value with bits labeled B7, B6, B5, and so on.
Figure 15-57. 2-Bit Data Delay Used to Skip a Framing Bit