JAJSJA4L June 2011 – February 2021 F28M35E20B , F28M35H22C , F28M35H52C , F28M35H52C-Q1 , F28M35M22C , F28M35M52C
PRODUCTION DATA
The USB controller provides full OTG negotiation by supporting both the SRP and the HNP. The SRP allows devices on the B side of a cable to request the A-side devices' turn on VBUS. The HNP is used after the initial session request protocol has powered the bus and provides a method to determine which end of the cable will act as the Host controller. When the device is connected to non-OTG peripherals or devices, the controller can detect which cable end was used and provides a register to indicate if the controller should act as the Host controller or the Device controller. This indication and the mode of operation are handled automatically by the USB controller. This autodetection allows the system to use a single A/B connector instead of having both A and B connectors in the system, and supports full OTG negotiations with other OTG devices.
In addition, the USB controller provides support for connecting to non-OTG peripherals or Host controllers. The USB controller can be configured to act as either a dedicated Host or Device, in which case, the USB0VBUS and USB0ID signals can be used as GPIOs. However, when the USB controller is acting as a self-powered Device, a GPIO input must be connected to VBUS and configured to generate an interrupt when the VBUS level drops. This interrupt is used to disable the pullup resistor on the USB0DP signal.
When the USB is used, the system clock frequency (SYSCLK) must be at least 20 MHz.