Almost fully describing the access timings and flags.
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@ -41,7 +41,71 @@ For Expansion 3, the address seems to be fixed (1FA00000h).<br/>
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30 Wide DMA (0=use bit 12, 1=override to full 32 bits)
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31 Wait (1=wait on external device before being ready)
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```
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Trying to access addresses that exceed the selected size causes an exception.
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When booting, all these registers are using the maximum cycle delays for both
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reads and writes. When booting, the BIOS will immediately select a faster read
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access delay, resulting in a visible speed up when booting. The effects aren't
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immediate however. The BIOS boots using the following instructions:
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```mips
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bfc00000 lui $t0, 0x0013
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bfc00004 ori $t0, 0x243f
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bfc00008 lui $at, 0x1f80
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bfc0000c sw $t0, 0x1010($at)
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bfc00010 nop
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bfc00014 li $t0, 0x0b88
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bfc00018 lui $at, 0x1f80
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bfc0001c sw $t0, 0x1060($at)
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bfc00020 nop
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```
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When using a logic analyzer to monitor the boot sequence, the instruction at
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bfc00014 is still read using the old timings since reset, and then the instruction
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at bfc00018 is finally read using the sped up timings.
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Reads and writes access times aren't symmetrical, and are each controlled with
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their own values. By default, EXP1 will be set to 16 cycles when writing, which
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is the slowest possible. If the programmer wants to write to a flash chip on
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EXP1, or communicate with a computer, speeding up write access is recommended.
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The fastest a port could go would be by setting the lowest 16 bits to zero, which
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will result in 3 CPU cycles for a single byte access.
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!CS always goes active at least one cycle before !WR or !RD go active. The various
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timing changes are between all the events inside the data read/write waveform. The
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whole formula for computing the total access time is fairly complex overall, and
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difficult to properly describe.
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- The pre-strobe period will add delays between the moment the data bus is set,
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and the moment !CS goes active.
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- The hold period will keep the data in the data bus for some more cycles after
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!WR goes inactive, and before !CS goes inactive. The accessed device is supposed
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to sample the data bus during this interval.
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- The floating period will keep the data bus floating for some more cycles after
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!RD goes inactive, and before !CS goes inactive. The accessed device is supposed
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to stop driving the data bus during this interval. The CPU will sample the data
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bus somewhere before or exactly when !CS goes inactive.
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- The recovery period will add delays between two operations.
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The data bus width will influence if the CPU does full 16 bits reads, or only
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8 bits. When doing 32 bits operations, the CPU will issue 2 16-bits operations,
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or 4 8-bits operations, keeping !CS active the whole time, and strobing !WR or
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!RD accordingly. When doing these sequences, the address bus will also increment
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automatically between each operation, if the auto-increment bit is active.
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This means it is possible to slightly shorten the read time of 4 bytes off the
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same address by disabling auto-increment, and reading a full word. The CPU will
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then read 4 bytes off the same address, and place them all into each byte of
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the loaded register.
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The DMA timing override portion will replace the access timing when doing DMA,
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only if the DMA override flag is set.
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The Wide DMA flag will enable full 32 bits DMA operations on the bus, by reusing
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the low 16-bits address signals as the high 16-bits data. This means that if
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the CPU is doing Wide DMA reads, the low 16-bits of the address bus will become
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inputs.
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Trying to access addresses that exceed the selected size causes a bus exception.
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Maximum size would be Expansion 1 = 17h (8MB), BIOS = 16h (4MB), Expansion 2 =
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0Dh (8KB), Expansion 3 = 15h (2MB). Trying to select larger sizes would overlap
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the internal I/O ports, and crash the PSX. The Size bits seem to be ignored for
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@ -73,8 +137,6 @@ Access(es), eg. for a 32bit access with 8bit bus: Total=1ST+SEQ+SEQ+SEQ.<br/>
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If the access is done from code in (uncached) RAM, then 0..4 cycles are added
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to the Total value (the exact number seems to vary depending on the used COMx
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values or so).<br/>
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And the purpose... probably allows to define the length of the chipselect
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signals, and of gaps between that signals...?<br/>
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#### 1F801060h - RAM\_SIZE (R/W) (usually 00000B88h) (or 00000888h)
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```
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