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SED1374 Datasheet, PDF (289/420 Pages) Epson Company – SED1374 Embedded Memory Color LCD Controller
Epson Research and Development
Vancouver Design Center
Page 11
3.3 MC68K #1 Interface Mode
The MC68K #1 Interface Mode can be used to interface to the MC68328 microprocessor
if the previously mentioned, multiplexed, bus signals will not be used for other purposes.
The interface requires the following signals:
• BUSCLK is a clock input which synchronizes transfers between the host CPU and the
SED1374. It is separate from the input clock (CLKI) and is typically driven by the host
CPU system clock.
• The address inputs AB1 through AB15, and the data bus DB0 through DB15, connect
directly to the CPU address and data bus, respectively. On 32-bit big endian architec-
tures such as the Power PC, the data bus would connect to the high-order data lines; on
little endian hosts, or 16-bit big endian hosts, they would connect to the low-order data
lines. The hardware engineer must ensure that CNF3 selects the proper endian mode
upon reset.
• Chip Select (CS#) is driven by decoding the high-order address lines to select the proper
IO or memory address space.
• A0 and WE1# are the enables for the low-order and high-order bytes, respectively, to be
driven low when the host CPU is reading or writing data to the SED1374. These must be
generated by external decode hardware based upon the control outputs from the host
CPU.
• RD/WR# is the read/write signal that is driven low when the CPU writes to the
SED1374 and is driven high when the CPU is doing a read from the SED1374. This
signal must be generated by external decode hardware based upon the control output
from the host CPU.
• WAIT# is a signal which is output from the SED1374 to the host CPU that indicates
when data is ready (read cycle) or accepted (write cycle) on the host bus. Since host
CPU accesses to the SED1374 may occur asynchronously to the display update, it is
possible that contention may occur in accessing the SED1374 internal registers and/or
refresh memory. The WAIT# line resolves these contentions by forcing the host to wait
until the resource arbitration is complete.
• The Bus Status (BS#) signal indicates that the address on the address bus is valid. This
signal must be generated by external decode hardware based upon the control outputs
from the host CPU.
• The WE0# signal is not used in the bus interface for MC68K #1 and must be tied high
(tied to IO VDD).
Interfacing to the Motorola MC68328 ‘Dragonball’ Microprocessor
Issue Date: 99/01/05
SED1374
X26A-G-007-02