MOTOROLA
M68020 USER’S MANUAL
5- 25
for asynchronous operation can be ignored. All timing parameters referred to are
described
in
Section
10
Electrical
Characteristics. If a system asserts
DSACK1/DSACK0 for the required window around the falling edge of state 2 and obeys
the proper bus protocol by maintaining DSACK1/DSACK0 (and/or BERR/HALT) until and
throughout the clock edge that negates AS (with the appropriate asynchronous input hold
time specified by parameter #47B), no wait states are inserted. The bus cycle runs at its
maximum speed of three clocks per cycle for bus cycles terminated with
DSACK1/DSACK0.
To ensure proper operation in a synchronous system when BERR or BERR/HALT is
asserted after DSACK1/DSACK0, BERR (and HALT) must meet the appropriate setup time
(parameter #27A) prior to the falling clock edge one clock cycle after DSACK1/DSACK0 is
recognized. This setup time is critical, and the MC68020/EC020 may exhibit erratic
behavior if it is violated.
When operating synchronously, the data-in setup (parameter #27) and hold (parameter
#30) times for synchronous cycles may be used instead of the timing requirements for
data relative to the DS signal.
5.3 DATA TRANSFER CYCLES
The transfer of data between the processor and other devices involves the following
signals:
Address Bus (A31–A0 for the MC68020) (A23–A0 for the MC68EC020)
Data Bus (D31–D0)
Control Signals
The address and data buses are both parallel, nonmultiplexed buses. The bus master
moves data on the bus by issuing control signals, and the bus uses a handshake protocol
to ensure correct movement of the data. In all bus cycles, the bus master is responsible
for de-skewing all signals it issues at both the start and end of the cycle. In addition, the
bus master is responsible for de-skewing DSACK1/DSACK0, D31–D0, BERR, HALT, and,
for the MC68020, DBEN from the slave devices. The following paragraphs define read,
write, and read-modify-write cycle operations.
Each of the bus cycles is defined as a succession of states. These states apply to the bus
operation and are different from the processor states described in Section 2 Processing
States. The clock cycles used in the descriptions and timing diagrams of data transfer
cycles are independent of the clock frequency. Bus operations are described in terms of
external bus states.
F
re
e
sc
a
le
S
e
m
ic
o
n
d
u
c
to
r,
I
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
For More Information On This Product,
Go to: www.freescale.com
n
c
..
.