DLPS043B June 2014 – February 2018 DLPA2000
PRODUCTION DATA.
The interrupt pin is used to signal events and fault conditions to the host processor. Whenever a fault or event occurs in the IC, the corresponding interrupt bit is set in the INT register, and the open-drain output is pulled low. The INTZ pin is released (returns to HiZ state) and fault bits are cleared when the INT register is read by the host.
However, if a failure persists, the corresponding INT bit remains set and the INTZ pin is pulled low again after a maximum of 32 µs.
Interrupt events include fault conditions such as power-good faults, over-voltage, over-temperature shutdown, and UVLO. For all interrupt conditions see the interrupt register on Figure 27.
The MASK register is used to mask events from generating interrupts, that is, from pulling the INTZ pin low. The MASK settings affect the INTZ pin only and have no impact on protection and monitor circuits themselves. When an interrupt is masked, the event causing the interrupt still sets the corresponding bit in the INT register. However, it does not pull the INTZ pin low.