Logic Analyser Usage Advice

Paul Berger phb.hfx at gmail.com
Fri Mar 26 06:54:08 CDT 2021


On 2021-03-26 6:08 a.m., Rob Jarratt via cctalk wrote:
> I have an old HP 1630G logic analyser. I am trying to use it to debug a
> problem with an 82C206 peripheral controller (or rather I think damage
> between the CPU and the peripheral controller). I am not very experienced
> with logic analysers and I wonder if I am using it correctly.
>
>   
>
> What I am trying to do is see which internal registers are being
> read/written and the values. To do this there are two signals (XIOR and
> XIOW) that trigger the read/write on their rising edge. So I have connected
> the XIOR and XIOW signals to the J and K clock inputs and set the LA to
> clock on the rising edge. I have then told the LA to trigger on a particular
> address range (in the State Trace screen if anyone is familiar with this
> LA).
>
>   
>
> When I run the analyser it complains of a slow clock. This makes sense,
> because I am using the read/write signals to drive the clock inputs so that
> I only capture actual reads and writes to the peripheral controller.
> However, I don't seem to be getting sensible values in the trace and I am
> wondering if the LA is really not capturing anything because of the slow
> clock?
>
>   
>
> I don't think it makes sense to clock the LA on the actual clock signal
> because I won't be able to capture the address and data values on the rising
> edge of the read/write signals and I would end up with traces full of
> useless data.
>
>   
>
> Am I doing it right, or is there a technique that I am missing here?
>
>   
>
> Thanks
>
>   
>
> Rob
>
I think you are the right track, If you wish to only capture register 
accesses you may want to qualify on the -ACK signal as the datasheet 
says it must be high for register access.  I would also clock on the 
rising edge  of the -XIOR and -XIOW signals as the data sheet seems to 
indicate that data is not valid on the falling edge.

Paul.



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