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4 counter unit – Rainbow Electronics ATmega64C1 User Manual

Page 112

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112

7647A–AVR–02/08

ATmega32/64/M1/C1

13.4

Counter Unit

The main part of the 16-bit Timer/Counter is the programmable 16-bit bi-directional counter unit.

Figure 13-2

shows a block diagram of the counter and its surroundings.

Figure 13-2. Counter Unit Block Diagram

Signal description (internal signals):

Count

Increment or decrement TCNTn by 1.

Direction

Select between increment and decrement.

Clear

Clear TCNTn (set all bits to zero).

clk

T

n

Timer/Counter clock.

TOP

Signalize that TCNTn has reached maximum value.

BOTTOM

Signalize that TCNTn has reached minimum value (zero).

RTG

An external event (ICP1A or ICP1B) asks for a TOP like action.

The 16-bit counter is mapped into two 8-bit I/O memory locations: Counter High (TCNTnH) con-
taining the upper eight bits of the counter, and Counter Low (TCNTnL) containing the lower eight
bits. The TCNTnH Register can only be indirectly accessed by the CPU. When the CPU does an
access to the TCNTnH I/O location, the CPU accesses the high byte temporary register (TEMP).
The temporary register is updated with the TCNTnH value when the TCNTnL is read, and
TCNTnH is updated with the temporary register value when TCNTnL is written. This allows the
CPU to read or write the entire 16-bit counter value within one clock cycle via the 8-bit data bus.
It is important to notice that there are special cases of writing to the TCNTn Register when the
counter is counting that will give unpredictable results. The special cases are described in the
sections where they are of importance.

Depending on the mode of operation used, the counter is cleared, incremented, or decremented
at each timer clock (clk

T

n

). The clk

T

n

can be generated from an external or internal clock source,

selected by the Clock Select bits (CSn2:0). When no clock source is selected (CSn2:0 = 0) the
timer is stopped. However, the TCNTn value can be accessed by the CPU, independent of
whether clk

T

n

is present or not. A CPU write overrides (has priority over) all counter clear or

count operations.

The counting sequence is determined by the setting of the Waveform Generation mode bits
(WGMn3:0) located in the Timer/Counter Control Registers A and B (TCCRnA and TCCRnB).
There are close connections between how the counter behaves (counts) and how waveforms
are generated on the Output Compare outputs OCnx. For more details about advanced counting
sequences and waveform generation, see

“16-bit Timer/Counter1 with PWM” on page 106

.

The Timer/Counter Overflow Flag (TOVn) is set according to the mode of operation selected by
the WGMn3:0 bits. TOVn can be used for generating a CPU interrupt.

TEMP (8-bit)

DATA BUS

(8-bit)

TCNTn (16-bit Counter)

TCNTnH (8-bit)

TCNTnL (8-bit)

Control Logic

Count

Clear

Direction

TOVn
(Int.Req.)

Clock Select

TOP BOTTOM

Tn

Edge

Detector

( From Prescaler )

clk

Tn

RTG