W83195R-08
Publication Release Date: Mar. 1999
8.0 FUNTION DESCRIPTION
8.1 POWER MANAGEMENT FUNCTIONS
All clocks can be individually enabled or disabled via the 2-wire control interface. On power up,
external circuitry should allow 3 ms for the VCO? to stabilize prior to enabling clock outputs to assure
correct pulse widths. When MODE=0, pins 3 and 47 are inputs (PCI_STOP#), (CPU_STOP#), when
MODE=1, these functions are not available. A particular clock can be enabled as both the 2-wire
serial control interface and one of these pins indicate that it should be enable.
The W83195R-08 may be disabled in the low state according to the following table in order to reduce
power consumption. All clocks are stopped in the low state, but maintain a valid high period on
transitions from running to stop. The CPU and PCI clocks transform between running and stop by
waiting for one positive edge on PCICLK_F followed by negative edge on the clock of interest, after
which high levels of the output are either enabled or disabled.
CPU_STOP# PCI_STOP# CPUCLK[1:2]
IOAPIC0 &
SDRAM [0:15]
PCI OTHER CLKs XTAL & VCOs
0 0 LOW LOW RUNNING RUNNING
0 1 LOW RUNNING RUNNING RUNNING
1 0 RUNNING LOW RUNNING RUNNING
1 1 RUNNING RUNNING RUNNING RUNNING
8.2 2-WIRE I2C CONTROL INTERFACE
The clock generator is a slave I2C component which can be read back the data stored in the
latches for verification. All proceeding bytes must be sent to change one of the control bytes. The 2-
wire control interface allows each clock output individually enabled or disabled. On power up, the
W83195R-08 initializes with default register settings. Use of the 2-wire control interface is then
optional.
The SDATA signal only changes when the SDCLK signal is low, and is stable when SDCLK is high
during normal data transfer. There are only two exceptions. One is a high-to-low transition on
SDATA while SDCLK is high used to indicate the beginning of a data transfer cycle. The other is a
low-to-high transition on SDATA while SDCLK is high used to indicate the end of a data transfer cycle.
Data is always sent as complete 8-bit bytes followed by an acknowledge generated.
Byte writing starts with a start condition followed by 7-bit slave address and a write command bit [1101
0010], command code checking [0000 0000], and byte count checking. After successful reception of
each byte, an acknowledge (low) on the SDATA wire will be generated by the clock chip. Controller
can start to write to internal I2C registers after the string of data. The sequence order is as follows:
Bytes sequence order for I2C controller :
- 7 - Revision 1.0