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Large amounts of data can be stored in external memory. The READPROG and WRITPROG macros copy data between internal memory and external memory.

Introduction

The TI DSP evaluation boards you use have a large amount of memory; in addition to the 32K words internal to the DSP,there are another 256K words of memory installed on the EVM board. For many exercises, the data sets are small, and youworked with only the on-chip memory of the DSP and were not expected to consider how the use of memory impactedperformance. However, the large delays often required in audio processing, for example, require that many thousands ofsamples be stored in memory. There is not enough memory on the DSP microprocessor itself to store a second or more of samplesat a 44.1 kHz sample rate, so the off-chip memory must be used.

Evm memory maps

As you have seen, the TI TMS320C54x DSP has two separate memory spaces, called Program and Data. Usually, Programcontains your assembled program, and Data contains data, but sometimes it may be convenient or more efficient to violatethis convention. (For instance, the firs instruction requires filter coefficients in the Program address space.) The Data space is 64K long and is accessedusing the 16-bit auxiliary registers ( ARx ). Although the Program space is normally accessed using 16-bit literals stored in your program code,the Program space is, in fact, significantly larger than 64K. Using special "extended addressing" instructions, the TI DSPcan access up to 8192K-words of memory in the Program space. The extended addressing instructions include far calls andjumps that reset the full 23-bit program counter, as well as accumulator-addressed data-transfer instructions.

Internal and external memory

In many exercises, it is possible to store program instructions and data entirely in the DSP's on-chip("internal") memory. This internal memory has several advantages over off-chip ("external") memory: it is muchfaster (data stored can be accessed without delay), and multiple reads and writes can access the DSP's on-chipmemory simultaneously. However, many applications (including the audio delay effect of Using External Memory ) require a data buffer too large to fit into the on-chip memory. For these large buffers, wemust use the larger but slower external memory.

When writing programs that require large amounts of memory, use the internal memory to hold your code, filtercoefficients, and any small buffers you need. External memory should be used for large buffers that you only accessa few times per sample, like the delay buffer described in Audio Effects: Using External Memory .

Tms320c549x dsp evm memory maps

DSP EVM memory maps

As these memory maps show, the EVM's Data address space is addressed fully by the 16-bit auxiliary registers( ARx ) and address-extension words and the mapping of Data memory is not affected by the OVLY bit. However, because the Program memory space is much larger than can be addressed by the 16-bitaddressing register or the 16-bit literals stored in the program, it is split up into 64K (16-bit) pages by thehardware. Normal instructions, such as call , firs , and mvpd accept only 16-bit addresses, and can therefore only address the current "page"(usually address in the form 00xxxxh , which corresponds to the addresses the linker uses for yourprogram's code). To access the full 23-bit address space, the DSP offers special accumulator-addressed load, store,and jump instructions.

Further complicating matters is the fact that the OVLY bit affects the mapping of the Program memory space. If you remember, before we load our DSPprogram, we have to change the PMST to FFE0h . We do this to set the OVLY bit in the PMST , which maps the internal memory into both the Program and Data spaces of the DSP. If OVLY is 1, the internal memory appears in both the Data and Program memory address space at locations 0080h to 07FFFh . Therefore, with OVLY set, anything written into Data memory below 07FFFh will overwrite a program stored in the same location.

This is why the memory allocated for your program - 6000h - 7FFFh - does not overlap with any of the space allocated for the datasegments.
In addition, copies of the internal memory also appear in the extended Program address space, occupyinglocations 0080h - 7FFFh of each page. Therefore, with OVLY set, any addresses to Program memory locations in the form of xx0000h - xx7FFFh reference internal memory.

When OVLY is zero, internal memory is not mapped into the Program space at all; in this case, theProgram space includes only external memory. In this mode, all 192K words of external Program RAM are accessible,although several wait states will be required for accessing each item of memory. In the overlay mode, only addresses inthe ranges of 08000h - 0FF00h , 1800h - 1FFFFh , and 28000h - 2FFFFh are available to store your data buffers; the remaining addresses areunmapped or map to the on-chip RAM.

To escape this confusion and allow the full 192K-words of external Program RAM to be used for your data buffers, thecore file provides mechanisms for manipulating the PMST indirectly. Instead of accessing the external Program RAM directly, we can use the special macrosto access the RAM that is normally "hidden" by the internal memory. This allows us to use the full range of externalmemory available: addresses 000000h - 00FF00h and 010000h - 02FFFF . However, since addresses 00FF00h - 00FFFFh are reserved by the core file, you must be careful not to writeto addresses in this range.

Accessing extended program ram

The core file provides two macros for accessing data stored in the external Program RAM: READPROG and WRITPROG . These macros allow the processor to copy data between data memory and external Programmemory. Both macros address external Program memory using the value in accumulator A . READPROG reads data from the external Program memory location pointed to by A and writes it to the data memory location pointed toby AR1 . WRITPROG reads data from the memory location pointed to by AR1 and writes it to the location in external Program RAM specified byaccumulator A . Both macros take one parameter, a count; specifying 1 reads or writes one word from externalmemory, and specifying some other number n transfers n words starting at the locations pointed to by A and AR1 . AR1 is left pointing at the word after the last word read or written; noother registers are modified.

For instance, the following code fragment loads the value contained in memory location 023456h into the location 0064h in data memory using the READPROG macro:

1 stm #64h,AR1 ; load 64h into AR1 2 ld #02h,16,A ; load 02h in high part of A 3 adds #3456h,A ; fill in low part of A 4 ; A contains 023456h 5 READPROG 1 ; read from 023456h in external Program RAM 6 ; into *AR1 in Data RAM

The WRITPROG macro can be used similarly to write into extended Program RAM:

1 stm #64h,AR1 ; load 64h into AR1 2 ld #02h,16,A ; load 02h in high part of A 3 adds #3456h,A ; fill in low part of A 4 ; A contains 023456h 5 WRITPROG 1 ; write from *AR1 in Data RAM to 6 ; 023456h in external Program RAM

Note that Code Composer will not display or allow you to change the contents of the external Program RAM on thememory-dump or disassembly screen, though you can view or change it indirectly by watching the effects of the READPROG and WRITPROG macros on data memory.

Questions & Answers

A golfer on a fairway is 70 m away from the green, which sits below the level of the fairway by 20 m. If the golfer hits the ball at an angle of 40° with an initial speed of 20 m/s, how close to the green does she come?
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2. A sled plus passenger with total mass 50 kg is pulled 20 m across the snow (0.20) at constant velocity by a force directed 25° above the horizontal. Calculate (a) the work of the applied force, (b) the work of friction, and (c) the total work.
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Nevermind i just realied that the graph is the phons output for a person with normal hearing and not just the phons output of the sound waves power, I should read the entire thing next time
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Follow up question, does anyone know where I can find a graph that accuretly depicts the actual relative "power" output of sound over its frequency instead of just humans hearing
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"Generation of electrical energy from sound energy | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore" ***ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7150687?reload=true
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A string is 3.00 m long with a mass of 5.00 g. The string is held taut with a tension of 500.00 N applied to the string. A pulse is sent down the string. How long does it take the pulse to travel the 3.00 m of the string?
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Source:  OpenStax, Digital signal processing laboratory (ece 420). OpenStax CNX. Sep 27, 2006 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10236/1.14
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