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Old 05-21-2011, 09:52 AM   #1
mornning1358
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from an engineer Comprehension the VXI/VME Interrupt and Signal Acknowledge Cycle
The VME bus specification defines the Priority Interrupt Bus in order that a VME system can
asynchronously request service from a controller. This provides a VME/VXI device a way of finding
the controller’s interest at any time.
A VXI/VME bus technique has seven interrupt lines physically connected to all slots inside the chassis.
This document addresses interrupts on each VME and VXI methods.
Interrupt line seven has the highest priority, and interrupt line one has the lowest priority.
Additionally for the actual interrupt lines, the Priority Interrupt Bus also consists of the
daisy-chained interrupt acknowledge signal and elements of the Information Transfer Bus
(the information lines, the info acknowledge line, along with the decrease 3 handle lines).
The table beneath summarizes every signal utilized in the Priority Interrupt Bus and
summarizes the function of each signal. A gadget that requests service by asserting
1 of the interrupt lines is called an interrupter. A practical gadget called
an interrupt handler companies the interrupt. There can be more than a single
interrupt handler in a VXI/VMEbus method. National Instruments embedded controllers
and exterior MXI bus controllers enable you to configure many interrupt handlers
(from a single to 7).
Table I. Priority Interrupt Bus Signals

Signal
Function
IRQ1*-IRQ7*
An interrupter uses this signal to indicate that it is requesting services.
IACK*
An interrupt handler uses this signal to indicate that it has received an interrupt and is ready to receive a status/ID that will tell the handler how to proceed with servicing the interrupt.
IACKIN*/
IACKOUT*
A module receives the IACK* on IACKIN*. It places a status/ID on the bus if the interrupt level being serviced matches the module’s interrupt level and if the gadget is interrupting. Otherwise, the module passes the signal on using IACKOUT*.
A01-A03
The interrupt handler asserts these lines with the value corresponding to
the interrupt level being serviced.
D00-D31
The interrupter being serviced places the status/ID on these lines once IACK* has been received.
DTACK*
The interrupter uses this signal to indicate that its status/ID is asserted on the data lines.

A much more detailed explanation of what happens in the interrupt cycle is outlined below.
A device that requests services by asserting one particular of the interrupt lines is called an interrupter. A useful gadget known as an interrupt handler providers the interrupt. There can be a lot more than 1 interrupt handler in a very VXI/VME bus technique. However, there can only be a single interrupt handler per interrupt level within the method. National Instruments embedded controllers and exterior MXI bus controllers permit you to configure numerous interrupt handlers (from one to seven).
Therefore, two types of interrupt handler techniques are possible:
A single handler system A distributed method
In a very single handler program, one particular interrupt handler system services all interrupt lines. Inside a distributed program, there are two or more handlers, every servicing an exclusive subset with the seven interrupt lines. Most programs are single handler techniques, where the system controller handles all interrupt lines within the chassis. It is possible for VXI devices to act as programmable interrupt handlers,Office Enterprise 2007 Product Key, but this is not very common. The Resource manager detects programmable VXI interrupt handlers and uses information stored in the device’s configuration registers to assign the interrupt levels that will be handled by the VXI gadget. Note that VME devices do not define a standard set of configuration registers - you must use Test and Measurement Explorer or VXI Edit/vxitedit to enter any configuration information associated with the VME system.
There are two types of interrupters:
Release On ACKnowledge (ROAK) Release On Register Access (RORA)
Most VXI and VME instruments fall under the ROAK category and the sequence of events described under is only applicable to ROAK devices.
The Sequence of Events During an Interrupt (IACK*) Cycle
After a gadget asserts an interrupt, it waits for a response from the interrupt handler. When the interrupt handler detects that an interrupt line has been asserted, the interrupt handler asserts the IACK* (interrupt acknowledge) signal. It also sets the decrease three tackle lines A01 – A03 to indicate which interrupt line it is trying to acknowledge with the IACK* signal. The IACK* line that the handler drives is related for the IACKIN* pin of slot 0 from the chassis (Slot one in VME bus methods). If the module from the first slot is not asserting the interrupt line being acknowledged,Office 2007 Standard Product Key, the module must propagate the IACK* signal to its IACKOUT* pin,Office Home And Business 2010 Sale, which is related to your next slot’s IACKIN* pin. The propagation from the IACK* signal from slot to slot continues until the IACK* signal reaches the first module that is interrupting on the line being acknowledged. When the interrupter sees IACK*, it places its status/ID on the data/bus.
The interrupt handler reads the status/ID. Because the interrupt lines are open collector lines, over 1 gadget can assert the same interrupt line at the same time. Therefore, the module asserting the interrupt does not propagate the IACK* signal. This action prevents other devices that are interrupting on the same line from obtaining the IACK* signal and attempting to respond at the same time. After the interrupt handler services the interrupter, the interrupter releases the line. If other devices are interrupting on the same line,Windows 7 Enterprise 64, the handler then begins another interrupt acknowledge cycle to support the next interrupter on that line. The following figure illustrates the interrupt acknowledge daisy-chain.
Figure one. Interrupt Acknowledge Daisy-Chain
Note: RORA devices require you to read/write a system distinct register in order to complete the interrupt acknowledge cycle.
In this figure, the gadget in slot 4 has asserted an interrupt. The figure shows that if a lot more than a single gadget asserts the same interrupt line, the device closest to slot 0 (slot one in VME) has the greatest priority for interrupt services because it receives the IACK* signal first. The next closest device has the next greatest priority, and so on. It is important to remember that the IACK daisy chain must be related across unoccupied backplane slots, or else interrupts coming from devices towards the right from the empty slot will not be acknowledged. Most chassis have jumperless backplanes where this daisy-chain connection happens automatically. However, on older backplanes that are jumpered, jumpers must be utilised to connect the IACK daisy chain across unoccupied slots. On jumpered backplanes, you should also pull the jumpers from the occupied slots so that the IACK daisy-chain is not mistakenly linked through the slot containing the interrupter.

Status/ID Value
The status/ID in most VME methods is an 8-bit value. In VXI techniques, the status/ID is either a 16-bit or 32-bit status/ID value. Message-Based devices that have interrupter capability must return at least a 16-bit status/ID with an optional 32-bit value. Currently, 32-bit status/IDs are uncommon. In VME techniques,Microsoft Office Standard 2010 Key, the status/ID is usually a vector. The processor uses this vector to calculate an deal with to a position in an interrupt jump table. The entry in that table is the deal with of the start of your interrupt support routine.
Therefore, when the processor handles the interrupt and receives the status/ID, it jumps directly for the beginning from the interrupt service routine and executes the interrupt services routine code. The technique integrator installs the interrupt service routine at the memory location that the jump table specifies.
In VXI programs (and all Nationwide Instruments VXI/VME Controllers), the status/ID is no longer a
vector. It is de-coupled from the processor operation. After the interrupt handler receives the
status/ID, controller software invokes the appropriate service subroutine and passes the
status/ID value to the subroutine.
The general format of the status/ID for a Register-Based VXI device is shown
within the following table.
Table II. General Status/ID Format for VXI Bus Devices

Bits
31-16
15-8
7-0
Contents
Device-Dependent
Cause/Status
(Device-Dependent)
Logical Address
of Interrupter
For Message-Based VXI devices, there is a further definition from the status/ID format. The status/ID can take on either a Response format or an Event format. Under the Event Format, bit 15 of your status/ID must be set. The values of status/ID bits 8 through 14 define the Event condition. The VXI bus specification currently defines these bits for 3 certain events. It also defines a syntax for defining your own events. The events defined within the VXI bus specification and their corresponding values for status/ID bits 8 through 15 are listed under.
No Cause Given (0xFF) - This event is sent by a Register-Based device that has only a single reason to signal its Commander. Usually, this event is issued when an operation completes.
Request True (0xFD) — This event is sent by a gadget when the system requires service.
Request False (0xFC) — This event is sent by the device when the gadget no longer requires service. The VXI bus specification also defines a syntax for sending user-defined
events. This format specifies that bit 15 must be 1 and bit 14 must be 0. Bits 8 – 13 can then be used to specify a user-defined event, as shown within the following table.

Table III. Message-Based Device Status/ID—User-Defined Event Format

Bits
31-16
15
14
13-8
7-0
Contents
Device-Dependent
1
0
User-Defined Event
Logical Address
of Interrupter
Except for defining the reduced 8 bits of your status/ID value to be the logical address of the interrupter, the VXI bus specification defines only a few particular values from the status/ID. Usually, when you are working with a gadget capable of producing interrupts, you need to refer for the documentation accompanying the gadget to see what meaning, if any, the other bits of your status/ID have. Often, you control the conditions under which the interrupt is generated, and the real status/ID is not important because you will know in advance why the device is sending interrupts.

Signals
Instead of asserting an interrupt line, some devices can request service by producing a signal. "Signal" in this context is not an electrical signal (such as the backplane signals discussed earlier in the course), but rather a write of a 16-bit value to your signal register of another system. The signal register is simply a VXI configuration register that has a value written to it by another gadget capable of taking control of your bus. Not all devices implement a signal register. The term signal originates from its use in UNIX, where a signal is a means of inter-process communication. To use signals, the following two conditions must apply:
The signaling system must be able to take control with the VXI bus The gadget to which the signal is being sent must implement a signal register.
The signaling system uses the Data Transfer Bus to write a 16-bit value for the signal register, which is located at offset 8 inside the configuration registers for the device being signaled. The 16-bit value has exactly the same format as the 16-bit status/ID.
The procedure for handling a signal through software is the same as for an interrupt. The processes discussed above for signals along with the interrupt cycle happen completely on the hardware level. These processes are transparent to a user’s application. When a controller senses an interrupt or sees that its signal register has been written to, the controller generates a local processor interrupt that lets the software driver know the event has occurred.
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