Samsung S3C2440A User Manual

Page 51

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PROGRAMMER'S MODEL

S3C2440A RISC MICROPROCESSOR

2-10

EXCEPTIONS

Exceptions arise whenever the normal flow of a program has to be halted temporarily, for example to service an
interrupt from a peripheral. Before an exception can be handled, the current processor state must be preserved so
that the original program can resume when the handler routine has finished.

It is possible for several exceptions to arise at the same time. If this happens, they are dealt with in a fixed order.
See Exception Priorities on page 2-14.

Action on Entering an Exception

While handling an exception, the ARM920T does following activities:

1. Preserves the address of the next instruction in the appropriate Link Register. If the exception has been

entered from ARM state, then the address of the next instruction is copied into the Link Register (that is,

current PC + 4 or PC + 8 depending on the exception. See Table 2-2 on for details). If the exception has

been entered from THUMB state, then the value written into the Link Register is the current PC offset by a

value such that the program resumes from the correct place on return from the exception. This means that

the exception handler need not determine which state the exception was entered from. For example, in the

case of SWI, MOVS PC, R14_svc will always return to the next instruction regardless of whether the SWI

was executed in ARM or THUMB state.

2. Copies the CPSR into the appropriate SPSR

3. Forces the CPSR mode bits to a value which depends on the exception

4. Forces the PC to fetch the next instruction from the relevant exception vector

It may also set the interrupt disable flags to prevent otherwise unmanageable nestings of exceptions.

If the processor is in THUMB state when an exception occurs, it will automatically switch into ARM state when the
PC is loaded with the exception vector address.

Action on Leaving an Exception

On completion, the exception handler:

1. Moves the Link Register, minus an offset where appropriate, to the PC. (The offset will vary depending on the

type of exception.)

2. Copies the SPSR back to the CPSR

3. Clears the interrupt disable flags, if they were set on entry

NOTES

An explicit switch back to THUMB state is never needed, since restoring the CPSR from the SPSR
automatically sets the T bit to the value it held immediately prior to the exception.

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