UM10237_2 © NXP B.V. 2008. All rights reserved.
User manual Rev. 02 — 19 December 2008 374 o f 792
NXP Semiconductors UM10237
Chapter 13: LPC24XX USB device controller
14.2 USB device communication area
The CPU and DMA controller communicate through a common area of memory, called the
USB Device Communication Area, or UDCA. The UDCA is a 32-word array of DMA
Descriptor Pointers (DDPs), each of which corresponds to a physical endpoint. Each DDP
points to the start address of a DMA Descriptor, if one is defined for the endpoint. DDPs
for unrealized endpoints and endpoints disabled for DMA operation are ignored and can
be set to a NULL (0x0) value.
The start address of the UDCA is stored in the USBUDCAH register. The UDCA can
reside at any 128-byte boundary of RAM that is accessible to both the CPU and DMA
controller.
Figure 36 illustrates the UDCA and its relationship to the UDCA Head (USBUDCAH)
register and DMA Descriptors.
14.3 Triggering the DMA engine
An endpoint raises a DMA request when Slave mode is disabled by setting the
corresponding bit in the USBEpIntEn register to 0 (Section 13–9.4.2) and an endpoint
interrupt occurs (see Section 13–9.8.1 “USB DMA Request Status register (USBDMARSt
- 0xFFE0 C250)).
A DMA transfer for an endpoint starts when the endpoint is enabled for DMA operation in
USBEpDMASt, the corresponding bit in USBDMARSt is set, and a valid DD is found for
the endpoint.
All endpoints share a single DMA channel to minimize hardware overhead. If more than
one DMA request is active in USBDMARSt, the endpoint with the lowest physical endpoint
number is processed first.
Fig 48. UDCA Head register and DMA Descriptors
UDCA HEAD
REGISTER
1
31
DDP-EP2 2
DD-EP2-a
NULL
NULL Next_DD_pointer
0NULL
DDP-EP31
NULL
DDP-EP16 16
NULL
DD-EP2-b
Next_DD_pointer
DD-EP2-c
Next_DD_pointer
DD-EP16-a
Next_DD_pointer
DD-EP16-b
Next_DD_pointer
UDCA