Serial Communications C ontrollers (SCCs)
MPC8260 PowerQUICC II Family Reference Manual, Rev. 2
20-22 Freescale Semiconductor
Figure 20-14. DPLL Transmitter Block Diagram
The DPLL can be driven by one of the baud rate generator outputs or an external clock, CLKx. In the block
diagrams, this clock is labeled HSRCLK/HSTCLK. The HSRCLK/HSTCLK should be approximately 8x,
16x, or 32x the data rate, depending on the coding chosen. The DPLL uses this clock, along with the data
stream, to construct a data clock that can be used as the SCC Rx and/or Tx clock. In all modes, the DPLL
uses the input clock to determine the nominal bit time. If the DPLL is bypassed, HSRCLK/HSTCLK is
used directly as RCLK/TCLK.
At the beginning of operation, the DPLL is in search mode, whereas the first transition resets the internal
DPLL counter and begins DPLL operation. While the counter is counting, the DPLL watches the incoming
data stream for transitions; when one is detected, the DPLL adjusts the count to produce an output clock
that tracks incoming bits.
The DPLL has a carrier-sense signal that indicates w hen data transfers are on RXD. The carrier-sense
signal asserts as soon as a transition is detected on RXD; it negates after the programmed number of clocks
in GSMR_L[TSNC] when no transitions are detected.
To prevent itself from locking on the wrong edges and to provide fast synchronization, the DPLL should
receive a preamble pattern before it receives the data. In some protocols, the preceding flags or syncs can
function as a preamble; others use the patterns in Table20-8. When transmission occurs, the SCC can
generate preamble patterns, as programmed in GSMR_L[TPP, TPL].
Table20-8. Preamble Requirem ents
Decoding Method Preamble Pattern Minimum Preamble Length Required
NRZI Mark All zeros 8-bit
NRZI Space All ones 8-bit
FM0 All ones 8-bit
DPLL
HSTCLK
TEND
TENC
Transmitter
0
S
Divided Clock
HSTCLK TCLK
1
1x Mode
0
S
1
TENC = NRZI
D
CLK
Q
SCCT Data
0
S
1
1x Mode
TDCR
D
CLK
Q
HSTCLK
TXEN
HSTCLK
TXD
TINV
Encoded