Difference between revisions of "84PCE:Ports:1005"
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'''Function:''' Controls flash wait states. Each read from flash will have at least 5 wait states, plus the number of wait states specified in this port. The OS defaults to 04 in this port, so by default, every read from flash incurs a 9 wait state penalty, for a total of 10 clock cycles to read a byte from flash. (V/RAM gets 3 wait states for reads, and 1 waitvstate for writes, for totals of 4 and 2, respectively.) | '''Function:''' Controls flash wait states. Each read from flash will have at least 5 wait states, plus the number of wait states specified in this port. The OS defaults to 04 in this port, so by default, every read from flash incurs a 9 wait state penalty, for a total of 10 clock cycles to read a byte from flash. (V/RAM gets 3 wait states for reads, and 1 waitvstate for writes, for totals of 4 and 2, respectively.) | ||
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+ | This port is only applicable to older devices which feature a [[84PCE:Ports:1000|parallel flash chip.]] | ||
== Details == | == Details == |
Latest revision as of 07:24, 18 April 2020
Synopsis
Port Number: 1005
Memory-mapped Address: E00005
Function: Controls flash wait states. Each read from flash will have at least 5 wait states, plus the number of wait states specified in this port. The OS defaults to 04 in this port, so by default, every read from flash incurs a 9 wait state penalty, for a total of 10 clock cycles to read a byte from flash. (V/RAM gets 3 wait states for reads, and 1 waitvstate for writes, for totals of 4 and 2, respectively.)
This port is only applicable to older devices which feature a parallel flash chip.
Details
Value | Effect |
00 | Instant hard crash & reset if OS ISR is enabled |
01 | Makes OS a little faster, perhaps 30%. Used by the C toolchain between October 2016 and April 2017. Occasional crashes reported on calculators across all revisions (see: fix commit message, this post). Not recommended for regular use. |
02 | Used by the C toolchain between April 2016 and October 2016. Insufficient usage data was collected to determine the stability of this value. |
03 | Used by the C toolchain since February 2017. No crashes attributed to this value (as of April 2018). |
04 | Normal value |
10 | OS feels noticeably sluggish |
20 | OS is unbearably sluggish |
FF | Don't even bother trying to do anything |