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Copyright 1991 David Jurgens |
8259 Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC)
Initialization Command Word 1 at Port 20h and A0h
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ ICW1
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──── 1=ICW4 is needed, 0=no ICW4 needed
│ │ │ │ │ │ └───── 1=single 8259, 0=cascading 8259's
│ │ │ │ │ └────── 1=4 byte interrupt vectors, 0=8 byte int vectors
│ │ │ │ └─────── 1=level triggered mode, 0=edge triggered mode
│ │ │ └──────── must be 1 for ICW1 (port must also be 20h or A0h)
└─┴─┴───────── must be zero for PC systems
Initialization Command Word 2 at Port 21h and A1h
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ ICW2
│ │ │ │ │ └─┴─┴──── 000= on 80x86 systems
└─┴─┴─┴─┴───────── A7-A3 of 80x86 interrupt vector
Initialization Command Word 3 at Port 21h and A1h
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ ICW3 for Master Device
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──── 1=interrupt request 0 has slave, 0=no slave
│ │ │ │ │ │ └───── 1=interrupt request 1 has slave, 0=no slave
│ │ │ │ │ └────── 1=interrupt request 2 has slave, 0=no slave
│ │ │ │ └─────── 1=interrupt request 3 has slave, 0=no slave
│ │ │ └──────── 1=interrupt request 4 has slave, 0=no slave
│ │ └───────── 1=interrupt request 5 has slave, 0=no slave
│ └────────── 1=interrupt request 6 has slave, 0=no slave
└─────────── 1=interrupt request 7 has slave, 0=no slave
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ ICW3 for Slave Device
│ │ │ │ │ └─┴─┴──── master interrupt request slave is attached to
└─┴─┴─┴─┴───────── must be zero
Initialization Command Word 4 at Port 21h and A1h
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ ICW4
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──── 1 for 80x86 mode, 0 = MCS 80/85 mode
│ │ │ │ │ │ └───── 1 = auto EOI, 0=normal EOI
│ │ │ │ └─┴────── slave/master buffered mode (see below)
│ │ │ └───────── 1 = special fully nested mode (SFNM), 0=sequential
└─┴─┴────────── unused (set to zero)
Bits
32 Buffering Mode
00 not buffered
01 not buffered
10 buffered mode slave (PC mode)
11 buffered mode master (PC mode)
Operation Control Word 1 / Interrupt Mask Reg. (Ports 21h & A1h)
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ OCW1 - IMR Interrupt Mask Register
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └──── 0 = service IRQ0, 1 = mask off
│ │ │ │ │ │ └───── 0 = service IRQ1, 1 = mask off
│ │ │ │ │ └────── 0 = service IRQ2, 1 = mask off
│ │ │ │ └─────── 0 = service IRQ3, 1 = mask off
│ │ │ └──────── 0 = service IRQ4, 1 = mask off
│ │ └───────── 0 = service IRQ5, 1 = mask off
│ └────────── 0 = service IRQ6, 1 = mask off
└─────────── 0 = service IRQ7, 1 = mask off
Operation Control Word 2 / Interrupt Command Reg. (Ports 20h & A0h)
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ OCW2 - ICR Interrupt Command Register
│ │ │ │ │ └─┴─┴──── interrupt request level to act upon
│ │ │ │ └───────── must be 0 for OCW2
│ │ │ └────────── must be 0 for OCW2
└─┴─┴─────────── EOI type (see table)
Bits
765 EOI - End Of Interrupt code (PC specific)
001 non-specific EOI command
010 NOP
011 specific EOI command
100 rotate in automatic EOI mode
101 rotate on non-specific EOI command
110 set priority command (uses bits 2-0)
111 rotate on specific EOI command
Operation Control Word 3 (Ports 20h & A0h)
│7│6│5│4│3│2│1│0│ OCW3
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─── 1=read IRR on next read, 0=read ISR on next read
│ │ │ │ │ │ └──── 1=act on value of bit 0, 0=no action if bit 0 set
│ │ │ │ │ └───── 1=poll command issued, 0=no poll command issued
│ │ │ │ └────── must be 1 for OCW3
│ │ │ └─────── must be 0 for OCW3
│ │ └──────── 1=set special mask, 0=reset special mask
│ └───────── 1=act on value of bit 5, 0=no action if bit 5 set
└────────── not used (zero)
Other Registers
IRR - Interrupt Request Register, maintains a bit vector indicating
which IRQ hardware events are awaiting service. Highest
level interrupt is reset when the CPU acknowledges interrupt.
ISR - In Service Register, tracks IRQ line currently being serviced.
Updated by EOI command.
Hardware Interrupt Sequence of Events:
1. 8259 IRQ signal is raised high by hardware setting the
corresponding IRR bits true.
2. PIC evaluates the interrupt requests and signals the CPU
where appropriate.
3. CPU acknowledges the INT by pulsing INTA (inverted)
4. INTA signal from CPU is received by the PIC, which then sets the
highest priority ISR bit, and clears the corresponding IRR bit
5. CPU sends a second INTA pulse which causes the PIC to send the
interrupt ID byte onto the bus. CPU begins interrupt processing.
6. Interrupts of lower and equal priority are blocked until a
Non-Specific EOI (20h) is sent to the command port.
Initialization Procedure
Initialization
1. write ICW1 to port 20h
2. write ICW2 to port 21h
3. if ICW1 bit D1=1 do nothing
if ICW1 bit D1=0 write ICW3 to port 20h
4. write ICW4 to port 21h
5. OCW's can follow in any order
8259 Programmable Interrupt Controller Notes
- Operation Command Word (OCW), commands that set the 8259 in
various interrupt modes. These can be written to the 8259
anytime after initialization.
- The 8259 differentiates between the OCW1, OCW2 and OCW3 by the
port address and the value of the data bits D4 and D3. ICW2
through ICW4 are order related and must follow ICW1. ICW1 is
identified by an even port number and data bit D4 set to 1.
- PCs operate in fully nested mode, where a Non-Specific EOI resets
the interrupt identified by the highest bit value in the ISR
- 8259s can be chained together where the INT pin (output) of a
slave 8259 can be used as the input to an IRQ line allowing up
to 64 priority vectored interrupts. AT level machines use two
8259's for a total of 16 hardware interrupt levels
- the first 8259 ports are located at 20h and 21h
- the second 8259 ports are located at A0h and A1h
- PC and AT interrupts are Edge Triggered while PS/2's are Level
Triggered
- some ASIC chips designed for Tandy 1000 Systems malfunction if
specific and non-specific EOIs are mixed
- for a more in-depth discussion of the 8259, see Intel's "Micro-
processor and Peripherals Handbook, Volume I"
- see PORTS and INT TABLE
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