System Interface Unit (SIU)
MPC8260 PowerQUICC II Family Reference Manual, Rev. 2
4-12 Freescale Semiconductor
Notice the lack of SDMA interrupt sources, which are reported through each individual FCC, SCC, SMC,
SPI, or I2C channel. The only true SDMA interrupt source is the SDMA channel bus error entry that is
reported when a bus error occurs during an SDMA access. There are two ways to add flexibility to the table
of CPM interrupt priorities—the FCC, MCC, and SCC relative priority option, described in
Section 4.2.2.1, “SCC, FCC, and MCC Relative Priority,” and the highest priority option, described in
Section 4.2.2.3, “Highest Priority Interrupt.”
4.2.2.1 SCC, FCC, and MCC Relative Priority
The relative priority between the four SCCs, three FCCs, and MCC is programmable and can be changed
dynamically. In Table 4 -2 there is no entry for SCC1–SCC4, MCC1–MCC2, FCC1–FCC3, but rather there
are entries for XCC1–XCC8 and YCC1–YCC8. Each SCC can be mapped to any YCC location and each
FCC and MCC can be mapped to any XCC location. The SCC, FCC, and MCC priorities are programmed
in the CPM interrupt priority registers (SCPRR_H and SCPRR_L) and can be changed dynamically to
implement a rotating priority.
In addition, the grouping of the locations of the YCC entries has the following two options
Group. In the group scheme, all SCCs are grouped together at the top of the priority table, ahead
of most other CPM interrupt sources. This scheme is ideal for applications where all SCCs, FCCs,
and MCCs function at a very high data rate and interrupt latency is very important.
60 Parallel I/O–PC4 No
61 XSIU7 (GSIU = 1) No (TMCNT,PIT,PCI1 = Yes)
62 IDMA4 Yes
63 SPI Yes
64 Parallel I/O–PC3 No
65 Parallel I/O–PC2 No
66 SMC1 Yes
67 YCC7 (spread) Yes
68 SMC2 Yes
69 Parallel I/O–PC1 No
70 Parallel I/O–PC0 No
71 XSIU8 (GSIU = 1) No (TMCNT,PIT,PCI1 = Yes)
72 YCC8(spread) Yes
73 Reserved
1MPC8250, MPC8265, and MPC8266 only
Table4-2. In terrupt Source Priority Levels (continued)
Priority Level Interrupt Source Description Multiple Events