Question

Reading the MCIMX50 Application Processor Reference Manuals on page 1368 (Section 33.3) there is a list of the different possible control functions of the processors pads.

The list is:

  • SRE (1 bit slew rate control).
  • DSE (2 bits drive strength control).
  • ODE (1 bit open drain control).
  • HYS (1 bit hysteresis control).
  • PULL_KEEP_CTL (4 bits pull up/down and keeper controls)
  • PUS (2 bits pull up/down configuration value)
  • PUE (1 bit pull/keep select)
  • PKE (1 bit enable/disable pull up, pull down or keeper capability)
  • DDR_MODE_SEL (1 bit ddr_mode control)
  • DDR_INPUT (1 bit ddr_input control)

Can someone explain what each one of these are, preferably in an educative manner with links to additional information?

Thanks in advance.

Was it helpful?

Solution

SRE (1 bit slew rate control) - How fast the pin state changes from 0 to 1, since rapidly changing states takes more power & emits RF spikes, slowing it down if you can helps EMC. We run most of our GPIO pins at low slew rate apart from SPI & I2C which need to be fast.

DSE (2 bits drive strength control). - How much current the IO pin will source/sink, again a power-saving / EMC thing as it's generally bad practice to hang loads directly from micro pins.

ODE (1 bit open drain control). - Whether the pin pulls down to 0V for a low output or goes "open drain" (disconnected/floating), this is useful for some things like I2C where parts take it in turns to hold lines low or high.

HYS (1 bit hysteresis control). - Look up Hysteresis on wikipedia, should tell you all you need to know.

Pullups/downs etc. - basically whether the pin has an internal resistor connected to +v or 0v to stop things floating to some random/undesired value, usually used when the pin is an input.

DDR_MODE_SEL (1 bit ddr_mode control) - Probably Data Direction Register, in other words is the pin an input or output

DDR_INPUT (1 bit ddr_input control) - Not sure, the micro reference manual should give you some clue to this and all the others.

Hope this helps!

OTHER TIPS

There is more detail on this in app note AN5078 on the Freescale site.

Link: http://cache.freescale.com/files/32bit/doc/app_note/AN5078.pdf

Summarized: The keeper keeps the output level the same even if you turn the driver off. There's an associated internal resistance of ~130kohms, so it won't drive much but it'll keep the pin from floating.

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