VXI Microwave Oven Microwave Matrix User Manual

SM7100  
MICROWAVE MATRIX  
USERS MANUAL  
P/N: 82-0055-000  
Released February 13, 2006  
VXI Technology, Inc.  
2031 Main Street  
Irvine, CA 92614-6509  
(949) 955-1894  
bus  
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TABLE OF CONTENTS  
INDTRODUCTION  
TABLE OF CONTENTS................................................................................................................................................3  
Certification..........................................................................................................................................................4  
Warranty...............................................................................................................................................................4  
Limitation of Warranty.........................................................................................................................................4  
Restricted Rights Legend......................................................................................................................................4  
DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY ...............................................................................................................................5  
GENERAL SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS.............................................................................................................................6  
Terms and Symbols ..............................................................................................................................................6  
Warnings ..............................................................................................................................................................6  
SUPPORT RESOURCES ...............................................................................................................................................8  
SECTION 1....................................................................................................................................................................9  
INTRODUCTION .........................................................................................................................................................9  
Overview ..............................................................................................................................................................9  
Programming ........................................................................................................................................................9  
Automatic Scanning........................................................................................................................................9  
Programmable Timing Delays.......................................................................................................................10  
Safety Interrupt..............................................................................................................................................10  
SM7100 Specifications.......................................................................................................................................10  
SECTION 2..................................................................................................................................................................11  
PREPARATION FOR USE...........................................................................................................................................11  
Introduction ........................................................................................................................................................11  
Calculating System Power and Cooling Requirements ......................................................................................11  
Setting the Chassis Backplane Jumpers..............................................................................................................11  
Setting the Logical Address................................................................................................................................12  
Example 1......................................................................................................................................................12  
Example 2......................................................................................................................................................13  
Selecting the Extended Memory Space ..............................................................................................................13  
SECTION 3..................................................................................................................................................................15  
SWITCH CONFIGURATION .......................................................................................................................................15  
Front Panel Connection - SM7000 .....................................................................................................................15  
SECTION 4..................................................................................................................................................................21  
PROGRAMMING.......................................................................................................................................................21  
Register Access...................................................................................................................................................21  
Addressing..........................................................................................................................................................21  
Description of Registers - A16 ...........................................................................................................................23  
Description of SMIP II Module Registers - A24 / A32 - Extended Memory.....................................................29  
DEVICE MEMORY MAP...........................................................................................................................................33  
Relay Register Offset..........................................................................................................................................33  
Writing to the Relays..........................................................................................................................................33  
Programming ......................................................................................................................................................34  
INDEX.........................................................................................................................................................................35  
SM7100 Preface  
3
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
CERTIFICATION  
VXI Technology, Inc. (VTI) certifies that this product met its published specifications at the time of shipment from  
the factory. VTI further certifies that its calibration measurements are traceable to the United States National  
Institute of Standards and Technology (formerly National Bureau of Standards), to the extent allowed by that  
organization’s calibration facility, and to the calibration facilities of other International Standards Organization  
members.  
WARRANTY  
The product referred to herein is warranted against defects in material and workmanship for a period of one year  
from the receipt date of the product at customer’s facility. The sole and exclusive remedy for breach of any warranty  
concerning these goods shall be repair or replacement of defective parts, or a refund of the purchase price, to be  
determined at the option of VTI.  
For warranty service or repair, this product must be returned to a VXI Technology authorized service center. The  
product shall be shipped prepaid to VTI and VTI shall prepay all returns of the product to the buyer. However, the  
buyer shall pay all shipping charges, duties, and taxes for products returned to VTI from another country.  
VTI warrants that its software and firmware designated by VTI for use with a product will execute its programming  
when properly installed on that product. VTI does not however warrant that the operation of the product, or  
software, or firmware will be uninterrupted or error free.  
LIMITATION OF WARRANTY  
The warranty shall not apply to defects resulting from improper or inadequate maintenance by the buyer, buyer-  
supplied products or interfacing, unauthorized modification or misuse, operation outside the environmental  
specifications for the product, or improper site preparation or maintenance.  
VXI Technology, Inc. shall not be liable for injury to property other than the goods themselves. Other than the  
limited warranty stated above, VXI Technology, Inc. makes no other warranties, express or implied, with respect to  
the quality of product beyond the description of the goods on the face of the contract. VTI specifically disclaims the  
implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.  
RESTRICTED RIGHTS LEGEND  
Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in subdivision (b)(3)(ii) of  
the Rights in Technical Data and Computer Software clause in DFARS 252.227-7013.  
VXI Technology, Inc.  
2031 Main Street  
Irvine, CA 92614-6509 U.S.A.  
4
SM7100 Preface  
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D E C L A R A T I O N O F C O N F O R M I T Y  
Declaration of Conformity According to ISO/IEC Guide 22 and EN 45014  
MANUFACTURERS NAME  
VXI Technology, Inc.  
MANUFACTURERS ADDRESS  
2031 Main Street  
Irvine, California 92614-6509  
PRODUCT NAME  
Microwave Matrix  
MODEL NUMBER(S)  
PRODUCT OPTIONS  
PRODUCT CONFIGURATIONS  
SM7100  
All  
All  
VXI Technology, Inc. declares that the aforementioned product conforms to the requirements of  
the Low Voltage Directive 73/23/EEC and the EMC Directive 89/366/EEC (inclusive 93/68/EEC)  
and carries the “CE” mark accordingly. The product has been designed and manufactured  
according to the following specifications:  
SAFETY  
EN61010 (2001)  
EMC  
EN61326 (1997 w/A1:98) Class A  
CISPR 22 (1997) Class A  
VCCI (April 2000) Class A  
ICES-003 Class A (ANSI C63.4 1992)  
AS/NZS 3548 (w/A1 & A2:97) Class A  
FCC Part 15 Subpart B Class A  
EN 61010-1:2001  
The product was installed into a C-size VXI mainframe chassis and tested in a typical configuration.  
I hereby declare that the aforementioned product has been designed to be in compliance with the relevant sections  
of the specifications listed above as well as complying with all essential requirements of the Low Voltage Directive.  
February 2006  
Steve Mauga, QA Manager  
SM7100 Preface  
5
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
GENERAL SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS  
Review the following safety precautions to avoid bodily injury and/or damage to the product.  
These precautions must be observed during all phases of operation or service of this product.  
Failure to comply with these precautions, or with specific warnings elsewhere in this manual,  
violates safety standards of design, manufacture, and intended use of the product.  
Service should only be performed by qualified personnel.  
TERMS AND SYMBOLS  
These terms may appear in this manual:  
Indicates that a procedure or condition may cause bodily injury or death.  
WARNING  
CAUTION  
Indicates that a procedure or condition could possibly cause damage to  
equipment or loss of data.  
These symbols may appear on the product:  
ATTENTION - Important safety instructions  
Frame or chassis ground  
Indicates that the product was manufactured after August 13, 2005. This mark is  
placed in accordance with EN 50419, Marking of electrical and electronic  
equipment in accordance with Article 11(2) of Directive 2002/96/EC (WEEE).  
End-of-life product can be returned to VTI by obtaining an RMA number. Fees  
for take-back and recycling will apply if not prohibited by national law.  
WARNINGS  
Follow these precautions to avoid injury or damage to the product:  
To avoid hazard, only use the power cord specified for this product.  
Use Proper Power Cord  
Use Proper Power Source  
To avoid electrical overload, electric shock, or fire hazard, do not  
use a power source that applies other than the specified voltage.  
To avoid fire hazard, only use the type and rating fuse specified for  
this product.  
Use Proper Fuse  
6
SM7100 Preface  
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WARNINGS (CONT.)  
To avoid electric shock or fire hazard, do not operate this product  
with the covers removed. Do not connect or disconnect any cable,  
probes, test leads, etc. while they are connected to a voltage source.  
Remove all power and unplug unit before performing any service.  
Service should only be performed by qualified personnel.  
Avoid Electric Shock  
This product is grounded through the grounding conductor of the  
power cord. To avoid electric shock, the grounding conductor must  
be connected to earth ground.  
Ground the Product  
Operating Conditions  
To avoid injury, electric shock or fire hazard:  
-
-
-
-
Do not operate in wet or damp conditions.  
Do not operate in an explosive atmosphere.  
Operate or store only in specified temperature range.  
Provide proper clearance for product ventilation to prevent  
overheating.  
-
DO NOT operate if you suspect there is any damage to this  
product. Product should be inspected or serviced only by  
qualified personnel.  
The operator of this instrument is advised that if the equipment is  
used in a manner not specified in this manual, the protection  
provided by the equipment may be impaired.  
Improper Use  
Conformity is checked by inspection.  
SM7100 Preface  
7
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
SUPPORT RESOURCES  
Support resources for this product are available on the Internet and at VXI Technology customer  
support centers.  
VXI Technology  
World Headquarters  
VXI Technology, Inc.  
2031 Main Street  
Irvine, CA 92614-6509  
Phone: (949) 955-1894  
Fax: (949) 955-3041  
VXI Technology  
Cleveland Instrument Division  
5425 Warner Road  
Suite 13  
Valley View, OH 44125  
Phone: (216) 447-8950  
Fax: (216) 447-8951  
VXI Technology  
Lake Stevens Instrument Division  
VXI Technology, Inc.  
1924 - 203 Bickford  
Snohomish, WA 98290  
Phone: (425) 212-2285  
Fax: (425) 212-2289  
Technical Support  
Phone: (949) 955-1894  
Fax: (949) 955-3041  
Visit http://www.vxitech.com for worldwide support sites and service plan information.  
8
SM7100 Preface  
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SECTION 1  
INTRODUCTION  
OVERVIEW  
The SM7100 Microwave Matrix is a member of the VXI Technology SMIP II(Switch  
Modularity Interface Platform) family. It offers a modular design allowing custom switching  
configurations in a single chassis.  
The SM7100 is a double-wide, C-size VXI module, which can support customized microwave  
switch configurations for many applications.  
Using the SMIP II family for microwave switching, the user obtains the following benefits over  
other VXI microwave switch solutions:  
Density:  
Weight:  
Up to eight (1x6) microwave relays can be housed in a double-wide VXIbus  
slot, saving a complete C-Size slot.  
The miniature relay technology reduces the overall weight considerably. Where  
possible, ultralight cabling is used maintaining the total weight under five  
pounds.  
PROGRAMMING  
The SMIP II family of switch modules is programmed using direct register access for fast data  
throughput.  
Automatic Scanning  
A predefined sequence of channels can be programmed into an extensive scan list that can be  
incremented by a trigger. This approach relieves the host controller from having to tie up the  
VXIbus backplane when scanning.  
SM7100 Introduction  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
Programmable Timing Delays  
A delay can be programmed between relay closures to allow for settling times of other system  
resources. When used with triggers, a controlled synchronous switching system can easily be  
configured.  
Safety Interrupt  
This is a programmable fail-safe feature that allows all relays to open based upon the occurrence  
of a selected TTL backplane trigger. This allows signals to be removed from the unit under test if  
a system fail-safe occurs, such as inadvertent removal of a test adapter.  
SM7100 SPECIFICATIONS  
SM7000 SPECIFICATIONS  
MAXIMUM POWER HANDLING (CW)  
20 W, 100 W peak pulse  
At 18 GHz  
SWITCHING TIME  
< 15 ms  
RF IMPEDANCE  
50  
FREQUENCY (GHz)  
Isolation (dB min)  
Insertion Loss (dB max)  
VSWR  
dc – 3  
90  
1.0  
3 – 18  
80  
2.8  
18 – 20  
60  
3.0  
1.2:1  
1.6:1  
2.0:1  
SWITCH LIFE  
1,000,000 cycles per switch  
SMA  
CONNECTORS  
POWER REQUIREMENTS  
+5 V @ 0.30 A  
-5.2 V @ 0.10 A  
-2 V @ 0.10 A  
160 mA current draw per relay closure at +24 V  
2.22 L/s  
COOLING REQUIREMENTS  
10  
SM7100 Introduction  
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SECTION 2  
PREPARATION FOR USE  
INTRODUCTION  
When the SMIP is unpacked from its shipping carton, the contents should include the following  
items:  
(1) SMIP VXIbus module  
(1) SM7100 Microwave Matrix User’s Manual (this manual)  
All components should be immediately inspected for damage upon receipt of the unit.  
Once the SMIP II is assessed to be in good condition, it may be installed into an appropriate C-  
size or D-size VXIbus chassis in any slot other than slot zero. The chassis should be checked to  
ensure that it is capable of providing adequate power and cooling for the SMIP II. Once the  
chassis is found adequate, the SMIP’s logical address and the chassis’ backplane jumpers should  
be configured prior to the SMIP’s installation.  
CALCULATING SYSTEM POWER AND COOLING REQUIREMENTS  
It is imperative that the chassis provide adequate power and cooling for this module. Referring to  
the chassis operation manual, confirm that the power budget for the system (the chassis and all  
modules installed therein) is not exceeded and that the cooling system can provide adequate  
airflow at the specified backpressure.  
It should be noted that if the chassis cannot provide adequate power to the module, the instrument  
may not perform to specification or possibly not operate at all. In addition, if adequate cooling is  
not provided, the reliability of the instrument will be jeopardized and permanent damage may  
occur. Damage found to have occurred due to inadequate cooling would also void the warranty of  
the module.  
SETTING THE CHASSIS BACKPLANE JUMPERS  
Please refer to the chassis operation manual for further details on setting the backplane jumpers.  
SM7100 Preparation for Use  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
SETTING THE LOGICAL ADDRESS  
The logical address of the SMIP II is set by two rotary switches located on the top edge of the  
interface card, near the backplane connectors. Each switch is labeled with positions 0 through F.  
The switch closer to the front panel of the module is the least significant bit (LSB or “Front”),  
and the switch located towards the back of the module is the most significant bit (MSB or  
Back”). To set the Logical Address (LA), simply rotate the pointer to the desired value. For  
example, to set the LA to 25, first convert the decimal number to the hexadecimal value of 19.  
Next, set the back switch to 1, and the front switch to 9. See Figure 2-1. Two examples are  
provided below:  
Example 1  
LA  
(decimal)  
Divide  
by 16  
MSB LSB  
25  
25 / 16  
=
1
w/ 9 remaining Divide the decimal value by 16 to get  
the MSB and the LSB.  
=
=
0001 1001  
The 1 is the MSB, and the remainder of  
9 is the LSB.  
1
9
Convert to hexadecimal. Set the back  
switch to 1 and the front switch to 9.  
BACK  
FRONT  
5
6
6
1
1
0
B A  
B
D
F
F
D
FIGURE 2-1: LOGICAL ADDRESS EXAMPLE 1  
12  
SM7100 Preparation for Use  
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Example 2  
LA  
(decimal)  
Divide  
by 16  
MSB LSB  
200  
200 / 16  
=
=
=
12  
w/ 8 remaining Divide by 16.  
1100 1000  
Convert to MSB and LSB.  
C
8
Convert to hexadecimal. Set the back  
switch to C and the front switch to 8.  
BACK  
FRONT  
6
6
7
7
9
A
D
FIGURE 2-2: LOGICAL ADDRESS EXAMPLE 2  
Here is another way of looking at the conversion:  
LA = (back switch x 16) + front switch  
LA = (1 x 16) + 9  
LA = 16 + 9  
LA = 25  
Set the address switches to FF for dynamic configuration. Upon power-up, the resource manager  
will assign a logical address. See Section F - Dynamic Configuration in the VXIbus Specification  
for further information.  
There is only one logical address per SMIP II base unit. Address assignments for individual  
modules are handled through the A24/A32 address space allocation.  
SELECTING THE EXTENDED MEMORY SPACE  
The Extended Memory Space of the SMIP II is set by a dip switch that is located on the bottom  
edge of the interface card. Position 1, located to the left on the dip switch, selects between A24  
and A32 memory address space. In the UP position, the SMIP II will request A24 space. In the  
DOWN position, the SMIP II will request A32 space. (Position 2 is not currently used.) The  
selection of the address space should be based upon the memory allocation requirements of the  
system that the SMIP II module will be installed. The amount of memory allocated to the SMIP II  
module is independent of the address space selected.  
SM7100 Preparation for Use  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
14  
SM7100 Preparation for Use  
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SECTION 3  
SWITCH CONFIGURATION  
FRONT PANEL CONNECTION - SM7000  
This section details the SM7100 schematics, relays, and pinouts. See Section 4,  
PWR/  
FAIL  
ACC/  
ERR  
Programming, for information on relay addressing.  
SM7100 EXPANDABLE  
MICROWAVE SWITCH MATRIX  
NOTE  
Although pin numbers between the SM7000 and the HP equivalent  
differ, the signals remain in the same location. This makes it possible to  
use the same mating connector and cabling for either system. See Table  
3-1 and Figure 3-3 for more information on connector J17.  
INPUTS  
2
4
1
3
EXP INPUTS  
1
OUTPUTS  
1
2
3
4
2
3
4
EXPANSION OUTPUTS  
2
4
1
3
EXTERNAL DRIVE  
FIGURE 3-1FIGURE 3-1 SM7100 FRONT PANEL  
SM7100 Module Configuration  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
TABLE 3-1: SM7100 FRONT-PANEL EXTERNAL DRIVE CONNECTOR PIN ASSIGNMENTS – J17  
SIGNAL  
RELAY NUMBER  
PIN NUMBER  
HP EQUIVALENT  
EXT 1  
EXT 2  
EXT 3  
EXT 4  
EXT 5  
EXT 6  
EXT 7  
EXT 8  
EXT 9  
EXT 10  
N/C  
K49  
K51  
K53  
K55  
K57  
K59  
K61  
K63  
K65  
K67  
N/C  
+24V  
GND  
K50  
K52  
K54  
K56  
K58  
K60  
K62  
K64  
K66  
K68  
+24V  
GND  
J17-1  
J17-2  
J17-3  
J17-4  
J17-5  
J17-6  
J17-7  
J17-8  
J17-9  
J17-10  
J17-11  
J17-12  
J17-13  
J17-14  
J17-15  
J17-16  
J17-17  
J17-18  
J17-19  
J17-20  
J17-21  
J17-22  
J17-23  
J17-24  
J17-25  
1
3
5
7
9
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
2
+24V  
GND  
EXT 14  
EXT 15  
EXT 16  
EXT 17  
EXT 18  
EXT 19  
EXT 20  
EXT 21  
EXT 22  
EXT 23  
+24V  
4
6
8
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
RETURN  
FIGURE 3-2: TYPICAL DRIVER OUTPUT  
13 12  
10  
9
7
6
4
3
25 23  
19 17  
13 11  
7
8
5
11  
8
5
2
1
21  
15  
9
3
1
25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14  
24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10  
6
4
2
SM7100 PIN LOCATION  
HP PIN LOCATION  
FIGURE 3-3: SM7100/HP EXTERNAL DRIVE PIN CROSS-REFERENCE  
16  
SM7100 Module Configuration  
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SM7100 Module Configuration  
17  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
INPUTS  
1
2
3
4
K1 - K6  
K7 - K12  
K13 - K18  
K19 - K24  
COAX  
K25 - K30  
1
1
2
3
4
K31 - K36  
2
K37 - K42  
3
K43 - K48  
4
50Ω  
1
2
3
4
EXPANSION OUTPUTS  
FIGURE 3-4: SM7100 MATRIX SCHEMATIC  
18  
SM7100 Module Configuration  
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TABLE 3-2: SM7100 RELAY REGISTER MAP  
Offset  
(Hex)  
12  
10  
E
C
A
8
K68 K67 K66 K65  
K64 K63 K62 K61 K60 K59 K58 K57 K56 K55 K54 K53 K52 K51 K50 K49  
K48 K47 K46 K45 K44 K43 K42 K41 K40 K39 K38 K37 K36 K35 K34 K33  
K32 K31 K30 K29 K28 K27 K26 K25 K24 K23 K22 K21 K20 K19 K18 K17  
6
4
2
0
K16 K15 K14 K13 K12 K11 K10 K9  
K8  
K7  
K6  
K5  
K4  
K3  
K2  
K1  
SM7100 Module Configuration  
19  
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SM7100 Module Configuration  
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SECTION 4  
PROGRAMMING  
REGISTER ACCESS  
The SMIP II modules are VXIbus register-based devices for high-speed data transfers. Register-  
based programming is a series of reads and writes directly to the switch module registers. This  
eliminates the time for command parsing thus increasing speed.  
ADDRESSING  
The VTI switching modules utilize either the A24 or A32 space of the shared-memory  
architecture. To read or write to a module register, a register address needs to be specified. This is  
done by using the offset value (assigned by the resource manager) and multiplying it by 256 or 64  
k to get the base address in A24 or A32 address space, respectively  
A24 Base Address = Offset value * 0x0100 (or 256)  
A32 Base Address = Offset value * 0x10000 (or 65,536)  
The A24 or A32 offset value, assigned by the resource manager, can also be accessed by reading  
the A16 Offset Register. To address the A16 Offset Register use the following formula:  
A16 Base Address = (Logical Address * 64) + 0xC000 (or 49,152)  
then  
A16 Offset Register Address = A16 Base Address + 6  
See Table 4-1 for A16 Memory Map and A24/A32 address space allocation.  
SM7100 Programming  
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TABLE 4-1: SMIP II REGISTER MAP - A16  
OFFSET  
WRITE FUNCTION  
READ FUNCTION  
Board Busy  
Trace Advance  
Busy Trigger Control  
Trace RAM Control  
TTL Trigger Polarity  
Open Trigger Select  
Trace ADV Trigger Select  
Trace RAM Address LOW  
Trace RAM Address HIGH  
Trace RAM End LOW  
Trace RAM End HIGH  
Trace RAM Start LOW  
Trace RAM Start HIGH  
Module 5, 4 Used Address  
Module 3, 2 Used Address  
Module 1, 0 Used Address  
NVM Access Register  
Reserved  
3E  
3C  
3A  
38  
36  
34  
32  
30  
2E  
2C  
2A  
28  
26  
24  
22  
20  
1E  
1C  
1A  
18  
16  
14  
12  
10  
E
Busy Trigger Control  
Trace RAM Control  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Trace RAM Address LOW  
Trace RAM Address HIGH  
Trace RAM End LOW  
Trace RAM End HIGH  
Trace RAM Start LOW  
Trace RAM Start HIGH  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
NVM Access Register  
Subclass Register  
Interrupt Control  
Interrupt Status  
Reserved  
Interrupt Control  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Reserved  
Version Number  
Serial Number LOW  
Serial Number HIGH  
Reserved  
C
A
8
Reserved  
Offset Register  
Control Register  
Reserved  
Offset Register  
Status Register  
Device Type Register  
ID Register  
6
4
2
0
LA Register  
22  
SM7100 Programming  
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DESCRIPTION OF REGISTERS - A16  
The following describes the registers shown in the SMIP II Register Map for A16 address space.  
ID Register (0x00) — Read Only  
D11-D0  
D13-D12  
D15-D14  
Manufacturer's ID  
Address Space  
Device Class  
VXI Technology, Inc., set to F4B16  
A16/A24 = 002  
A16/A32 = 012  
Extended register based device, set to 012  
Logical Address Register (0x00) — Write Only  
Sets the new logical address in a dynamically configured module.  
When set for dynamic configuration (set to FF16) a soft reset will not  
alter the configured logical address, while a hard reset will set the  
register back to FF16.  
D7-D0  
Logical Address  
D15-D8  
Reserved  
Writing to this range has no effect.  
Device Type Register (0x02) — Read Only  
Model Code Model 277, set to 11516  
D11-D0  
2 Mbytes, set to 216, for A24  
2 Mbytes, set to A16, for A32  
D15-D12  
Required Memory  
Status Register (0x04) — Read Only  
1 = indicates that A24/A32 memory space access is enabled  
0 = indicates that A24/A32 memory space access is locked out  
1 = indicates that the module is not selected by the MODID line  
0 = indicates that the module is selected by the MODID line.  
D15  
D14  
A24/A32 Active  
MODID*  
D13-D4  
D3  
Reserved  
Ready  
These bits always read as 11,1111,11112  
This bit always reads as 12  
D2  
Passed  
This bit always reads as 12  
D1-D0  
Reserved  
These bits always read as 112  
Control Register (0x04) — Write Only  
1 = write a 1 to this bit to enable A24/A32 memory access  
0 = to disable access  
D15  
D14-D2  
D1  
A24/A32 Enable  
Reserved  
Writes to these bits have no effect.  
Write a 1 to this bit to prevent the module from asserting the  
SYSFAIL* line.  
Sysfail Inhibit  
1 = write a 1 to this bit to force the module into a reset state  
0 = write a 0 to release the reset state  
D0  
Reset  
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Offset Register (0x06) — Read and Write  
The value written to this 16-bit register, times 256, sets the base  
address of the A24 memory space used by the module. The value  
written to this 16-bit register, times 65,536, sets the base address of  
the A32 memory space used by the module. A read from this register  
reflects the previously written value. Because of the required memory  
size, bits D4 - D0 are disregarded on writes and always read back as 0.  
Upon receiving a hard reset, all bits in this register are set to 0. A soft  
reset does not affect the value in this register.  
A24/A32 Memory  
Offset  
D15-D0  
Reserved Register (0x0A) — Read Only  
D15-D0  
D15-D0  
Not Implemented  
Not Implemented  
Always read back as FFFF16  
Reserved Register (0x0C) — Read Only  
Always read back as FFFF16  
Version Number Register (0x0E) — Read Only  
Firmware Version  
D15-D8  
D7-D4  
D3-D0  
Not applicable, reads back as 0016  
Number  
Major Hardware  
Version Number  
Minor Hardware  
Version Number  
Depends on the specific hardware revision of the SMIP II interface board.  
Depends on the specific hardware revision of the SMIP II interface board.  
Interrupt Status Register (0x1A) — Read Only  
D15  
D14  
Scan Function done  
The latest scan list update is complete.  
Openbus Active Event  
true  
The Openbus was activated by one or more programmed inputs. See  
description of the Openbus in the module register section.  
D13-D9  
Unused  
Module Busy Complete  
Reserved  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
The programmed Busy signal from the module has timed out. This  
indicates that the relays actuated for that Busy cycle have settled and a  
measurement may take place.  
D8  
D7-D0  
Always reads back as FFFF16  
Note: This status register may be used in a polled fashion rather than allowing the events above to generate an  
Interrupt. A read of this register will clear any active bits. Bits that are not set, or are about to be set are not  
affected by a read of this register.  
24  
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Interrupt Control Register (0x1C) — Read and Write  
Scan Function done  
mask bit  
Openbus Active Event  
true mask bit  
0 = enabled  
1 = disabled  
0 = enabled  
1 = disabled  
D15  
D14  
D13-D9  
D8  
Unused  
Data written to these bits has no effect  
0 = enabled  
1 = disabled  
Module Busy Complete  
0 = writing a 0 to this bit enables interrupter capabilities  
1 = writing a 1 to this bit disables interrupter capabilities  
The module has no interrupt handler capability; therefore writing a 1 or  
0 has no effect. A 1 is always read back for this bit.  
The complement of the value programmed into these three bits reflects  
the selected IRQ line used by the module. A value of 0112 would select  
IRQ4, a value of 0002 would select IRQ7, and a value of 1112 would  
disconnect the IRQ lines.  
D7  
D6  
IR ENA*  
IH ENA*  
D5-D3  
Interrupter IRQ Line  
The module has no interrupt handler capability; therefore writing to  
these bits has no effect. A 1112 is always read back for these bits.  
D2-D0  
Handler IRQ Line  
Note that all bits in this register are set to 1 upon receipt of a hard or soft reset.  
Subclass Register (0x1E) — Read Only  
VXIbus Extended  
D15  
Always reads as 1.  
Device  
Extended Memory  
Device  
D14-D0  
Always reads as 7FFD16  
NVM Access Resister (0x20) — Read Only  
D15-D1  
D0  
Unused  
Unused  
All Bits are always 1.  
Reads back the serial data stream from the selected SMIP II board.  
Note that only one SMIP II board may be read back at a time.  
NVM Access Resister (0x20) — Write Only  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
D15-D2  
D1  
Serial clock for the switch module; should be a logic 1 when not used.  
Serial data input for the switch module; must be a logic 1 when not  
used.  
D0  
Board X, Y Used Address Register (0x22, 0x24, 0x26) — Read and Write  
Sets the actual number of words of address space used by the relays on  
board's X.  
Sets the actual number of words of address space used by the relays on  
board's Y.  
D15-D8  
D7-D0  
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Trace RAM Start High Register (0x28) — Read and Write  
D15-D4  
D3-D0  
Unused  
Data written to these bits have no effect and always read back as 1.  
Sets the four most significant bits of the starting address of the Trace  
RAM, allowing the available RAM to be divided into multiple traces.  
Trace RAM Start Low Register (0x2A) — Read and Write  
Sets the 16 least significant bits of the starting address of the Trace  
RAM, allowing the available RAM to be divided into multiple traces.  
D15-D0  
Trace RAM End High Register (0x2C) — Read and Write  
D15-D4  
D3-D0  
Unused  
Data written to these bits have no effect and always read back as 1.  
Sets the four most significant bits of the ending address of the Trace  
RAM, allowing the available RAM to be divided into multiple traces.  
Trace RAM End Low Register (0x2E) — Read and Write  
Sets the 16 least significant bits of the ending address of the Trace  
RAM, allowing the available RAM to be divided into multiple traces.  
D15-D0  
Trace RAM Address HIGH Register (0x30) — Read and Write  
D15-D4  
D3-D0  
Unused  
Data written to these bits have no effect and always read back as 1.  
Sets and reads back the four most significant bits of the current  
address of the Trace RAM, allowing the current trace RAM address to  
be queried and changed.  
Trace RAM Address LOW Register (0x32) — Read and Write  
Sets and reads back the sixteen least significant bits of the current  
D15-D0  
address of the Trace RAM, allowing the current trace RAM address to  
be queried and changed.  
Trace Advance Trigger Select Register (0x34) —Write Only  
Sets the TTLTRIG line or lines, which are configured as outputs, and  
will toggle when Trace Advance condition occurs in the module. D15  
corresponds to TTLTRIG7, D14 to TTLTRIG6, … and D8 to  
TTLTRIG0. Setting a bit to a 1 enables the trigger line, setting a bit to  
0 disables the corresponding line. All bits are set to 0 when either a  
soft or a hard reset is received by the module.  
Sets the TTLTRIG line or lines, which are configured as inputs, and  
will cause a Trace Advance event to occur in the module. D7  
corresponds to TTLTRIG7, D6 to TTLTRIG6, … and D0 to  
TTLTRIG0. Setting a bit to a 1 enables the trigger line, setting a bit to  
0 disables the corresponding line. All enabled TTLTRIG lines are  
OR'd together to allow more than one TTLTRIG line to cause a Trace  
Advance event to occur. All bits are set to 0 when the module receives  
either a soft or a hard reset.  
D15-D8  
D7-D0  
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Open Trigger Select Register (0x36) —Write Only  
Sets the TTLTRIG line or lines, which are configures as outputs, and  
will toggle when Relay Open condition occurs in the module. D15  
corresponds to TTLTRIG7, D14 to TTLTRIG6, … and D8 to  
TTLTRIG0. Setting a bit to a 1 enables the trigger line, setting a bit to  
0 disables the corresponding line. All bits are set to 0 when either a  
soft or a hard reset is received by the module.  
Sets the TTLTRIG line or lines, which are configured as inputs, and  
will cause a Relay Open event to occur in the module. D7 corresponds  
to TTLTRIG7, D6 to TTLTRIG6, … and D0 to TTLTRIG0. Setting a  
bit to a 1 enables the trigger line, setting a bit to 0 disables the  
corresponding line. All enabled TTLTRIG lines are OR'd together to  
allow more than one TTLTRIG line to cause a Relay Open event to  
occur. All bits are set to 0 when the module receives either a soft or a  
hard reset.  
D15-D8  
D7-D0  
TTL Trigger Polarity Register (0x38) —Write Only  
D15-D9  
D8  
Unused  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
0 = off  
1 = on  
FAIL LED Control  
Board Busy Trigger  
Slope  
D4  
0 acts on the falling edge, 1 acts on the rising edge.  
0 acts on the falling edge, 1 acts on the rising edge.  
0 sets the falling edge active, 1 sets the rising edge active.  
D3  
D2  
Relay Open Input Slope  
Relay Open Output  
Slope  
Trace Advance Input  
Slope  
Trace Advance Output  
Slope  
D1  
D0  
0 advances on the falling edge, 1 advances on the rising edge.  
0 sets the falling edge active, 1 sets the rising edge active.  
Note: A hard or a soft reset sets D3 - D0 to 0.  
Trace RAM Control Register (0x3A) — Read and Write  
D15-D11  
D15-D10  
Unused  
Modules Installed  
Unused  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
Set to 0 if the module is installed or set to a 1 if not installed. These  
bits are set to 0 at power on. By setting a 1, the SMIP II Interface PCB  
will generate DTACK for any read or write cycles to the memory  
space of the uninstalled plug-in module.  
D9-D5  
D4  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
Modules used in trace  
mode  
D9 is for module 5, D4 is for module 0. Set to 1 if the module is used  
in trace mode, set to 0 if not in trace mode.  
Data written to these bits have no effect. The value written is read  
back.  
D3-D2  
D1  
Unused  
1 = Enabled, 0 = Disabled. If enabled, the trace resumes at the start of  
active RAM and continues from there. If disabled, the trace stops at  
the end of active RAM and clears the TRACE ENABLE bit.  
1 = enabled, 0 = disabled. If the LOOP ENABLE bit is set and the end  
of active trace RAM is reached, this bit will not be reset.  
LOOP ENABLE  
TRACE ENABLE  
D0  
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Busy Trigger Control Register (0x3C) — Read and Write  
Sets the TTLTRIG Line or Lines, which are configured as outputs, and  
will toggle at the de-assertion of a Board Busy condition sent by the  
plug-in modules. D15 corresponds to TTLTRIG7, D14 to TTLTRIG6,  
… and D8 to TTLTRIG0. Setting a bit to a 1 enables the trigger line,  
setting a bit to a 0 disables the corresponding line. All bits are set to 0  
when either a soft or a hard reset is received by the module.  
Data written to these bits have no effect. The value written is read  
back.  
Enables the Board Busy signal received from the switch module to  
generate a trigger condition on the TTL Trigger Bus. Setting a bit to 1  
enables the generation of a Trigger condition, setting a bit to a 0  
disables the corresponding line. This bit is set to 0 when either a soft  
or a hard reset is received by the module.  
D15-D8  
TTLTRIG Select  
D7-D1  
D0  
Unused  
Busy Trigger Enable  
Trigger Advance Register (0x3E) — Write Only  
The act of writing to this location causes a Trace Advance event to  
occur in the module. The specific data written to these bits has no  
effect.  
D15-D0  
Unused  
Board Busy Register (0x3E) — Read Only  
D15-D7  
D6  
Unused  
Unused  
These bits always read back as 1.  
Indicates whether the SMIP II platform is a single or double wide.  
0 = single wide  
1 = double wide  
D5-D1  
Data written to these bits have no effect.  
A 0 read from this bit indicates the relays on the switch module have  
settled, a 1 indicates that the relays on the switch module are still  
changing state.  
D0  
Reserved Registers — Read and Write  
Writing to these registers has no effect and will always read back as  
FFFF16.  
D15-D0  
Unused  
28  
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DESCRIPTION OF SMIP II MODULE REGISTERS - A24 / A32 - EXTENDED MEMORY  
Each module is assigned 1 k (1024) bytes of memory as shown in the SMIP II  
Configuration/Relay Register Map for A24/A32 address space. The upper 512 bytes of memory  
space is used for module configuration registers. The following describes these registers.  
Control Register - Read and Write  
ADDR  
Plug-In LA+0x200  
D15-D10  
Unused  
0 = Normal polarity relay data is read back from this module  
1 = Inverted polarity relay data is read back from this module  
Pon state = 0  
VXI  
Backplane  
SMIP  
Interface  
Board  
SMIP  
Relay  
Module  
Write a "1" to  
close relay  
"1" to close  
relay  
Relay:  
1 = Closed  
0 = Open  
"1"  
Relay Data  
Read Back  
Polarity Bit  
D9  
"0" returned  
from module  
w/ bit set to 0:  
write a "1" =  
"0" returned  
Relay Data  
Read Back  
Polarity Bit  
w/ bit set to 1:  
write a "1" =  
"1" returned  
0=non-inverted  
1=inverted  
1
0
This bit may be used to invert the relay data read back from the plug-in module.  
Control, Delay, and Status Register read backs are not effected by this bit.  
0 = ACFAILN is enabled to reset this module's relays  
1 = ACFAILN is disabled from resetting this module's relays  
Pon state = 0  
ACFAILN  
Enable Bit  
D8  
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Control Register - Read and Write (continued)  
0 = BBM (Break-Before-Make) / MBB (Make-Before-Break) is disabled  
1 = BBM/MBB operation is enabled  
Pon state = 0  
NOTE: This bit should remain a 0 (disabled) for the SM7100.  
If this bit is set, the relays will be sequenced to effect proper BBM or MBB  
operation. If this bit is not set, the module will process the newly written relay data  
as immediate data, writing it directly to the relay driver ports. No BBM or MBB  
sequencing will take place.  
While this feature is enabled, the initial write to the module will start the delay  
timer running and begin the BBM or MBB operation. Since the relays are  
controlled by the 16-bit registers, only the effected 16 relays will perform the  
BBM/MBB operation. To overcome this fact, any subsequent writes to the module,  
during the initial delay timer time-out period, will be accepted and processed. In  
addition, the delay time will be reset and begin counting down again. Once the  
delay timer has timed-out (this indicates that the relays have settled into their  
BBM/MBB state), writes to the module will not be accepted and may result in a  
Bus Error depending on the value programmed into the delay timer. This is because  
the delay timer is reset at the end of the initial time-out and is used to time the final  
relay closure into their post BBM/MBB state. The module Busy signal will only  
complete once the final relay closure state is reached.  
BBM/MBB  
Enable Bit  
D7  
If this bit is set and no value has been loaded into the Delay Register, the module  
will act as if this enable bit is not set and load all of the relay drivers with  
immediate data.  
0 = BBM operation is selected  
1 = MBB operation is selected  
Pon state = 0  
BBM/MBB  
Select Bit  
D6  
NOTE: This bit should remain a 0 (BBM) for the SM7100.  
0 = non-active  
1 = active  
Pon state = 0  
Access  
LED Fail  
Bit  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
Lights the Access LED red when activated.  
Relay  
Reset  
Enable Bit  
0 = The Openbus and Front Panel Open signals are not enabled to reset the relays  
1 = The Openbus or Front Panel Open signal may be selected to reset the relays  
Pon state = 0  
0 = Front Panel Open signal is selected to reset the relays  
1 = The Openbus signal is selected to reset the relays  
Pon state = 0  
Relay  
Reset  
Select Bit  
Many plug-in modules may be programmed to be listeners on the Openbus.  
0 = Disables the Front Panel Open signal from driving the Openbus signal  
1 = Enables the Front Panel Open signal to drive the Openbus  
Pon state = 0.  
Openbus  
Out Enable  
Bit  
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Control Register - Read and Write (continued)  
0 = Non-inverted Front Panel Open signal polarity  
1 = Inverted Front Panel Open signal polarity  
Pon state = 0  
Front Panel  
Non-inverted: If set in pulse mode, the Front Panel Open signal will generate a  
reset pulse on a falling edge. If set in level mode, the Front Panel Open signal will  
generate a reset signal on a low input signal.  
Open  
Signal  
Polarity Bit  
D1  
Inverted: If set in pulse mode, the Front Panel Open signal will generate a reset  
pulse on a rising edge. If set in level mode, the Front Panel Open signal will  
generate a reset signal on a high input signal.  
0 = Pulse mode  
1 = Level mode  
Pon state = 0  
Pulse mode: An edge seen at the Front Panel Open signal pin will generate a reset  
pulse that may be used to reset system relays. The pulse is of approximately 300 ns  
duration.  
Level mode: A level present on the Front Panel Open signal pin will generate a  
reset signal that may be used to reset system relays. This signal will remain active  
Front Panel as long as the input is active.  
Open  
D0  
Signal  
On the front panel of most SMIP II plug-in modules, there are two pins for access  
Operation  
Select Bit  
to the Front Panel Open signal of the module. These are the Front Panel Open  
signal pin and a ground reference pin. The purpose of the Front Panel Open signal  
is to allow user access to a configurable interlock feature that will reset all of the  
SMIP II system relays. The Front Panel Open signal may be used to reset the relays  
only on the module, which initiated the Front Panel Open signal fault condition. It  
also may be used to broadcast to all the other SMIP II plug-in modules installed in  
a SMIP II Interface Module via what is called the Openbus. Any plug-in module  
may be programmed to drive and/or listen to the Openbus. The Openbus signal  
may also be used to generate a wider chassis level fault signal via the TTL Trigger  
Bus (see the register definitions for A16 address space). The Front Panel Open  
signal is meant to be driven by either a switch closure or TTL/CMOS logic gate. It  
is pulled high on the module.  
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Delay Register - Read and Write  
ADDR  
Plug-In LA+0x202  
This register is used to set the time that the plug-in module will hold the Board  
Busy signal active. The Board Busy signal is set every time the plug-in receives a  
Write to a relevant Relay Register memory space. The Board Busy signal will be  
removed at the end of the time out that is set by the value contained in this register.  
For each count loaded into this register, the Board Busy signal will be held active  
for 1 µs. The delay may be set from 0 to approximately 65 ms, thus accommodating  
a wide variation in test station requirements.  
Data Bus  
16 Bit  
D15-D0  
The Board Busy signal may be monitored by the user, in either a polled or an  
interrupt fashion, and is to be used as an indication that the relays in the newly  
actuated path have settled. Alternatively, the Board Busy signal may also be used to  
drive the TTL Trigger Bus. See the Board Busy, Interrupt Control and Busy  
Trigger Control Register descriptions in the A16 address space.  
Status Register - Read Only  
ADDR  
D15-D13  
D12-D1  
Plug-In LA+0x204  
Hardware  
Revision  
Code  
Unused  
0 = Indicates that the module's Front Panel Open signal was not activated by the  
user  
Front Panel 1 = An indication that the module's Front Panel Open signal was activated as  
Open  
signal set  
by this  
programmed by the user  
Pon state = 0  
D0  
module  
A read of this bit location will indicate whether the Front Panel Open signal was  
triggered from the front panel of the module. A read of this register clears this bit to  
0.  
32  
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DEVICE MEMORY MAP  
RELAY REGISTER OFFSET  
The Relay Register Offset is located within the A24/32 address space of the module. When you  
send data to the register, the relay register offset is added to the A24/A32 base address and  
module base address:  
Relay Register Address = A24/A32 Base Address + Module Base Address + Register Offset  
or  
Relay Register Address = Module Relay Address + Register Offset  
WRITING TO THE RELAYS  
Each bit of a 16-bit register represents the state of the relay (1 = closed, 0 = open). To change the  
state of any relay, it is only necessary to write a 16-bit integer to the specified register with the  
new configuration:  
Relay Register Address, data  
For example:  
writing a data value of "0" to the register at offset "0" would open the first sixteen relays  
writing a data value of 65535 to the same register would close the first 16 relays  
writing a data value of 65534 to the same register would close all relays except K1, which  
would be open  
NOTE  
Energize only one coil in a group of six at one time.  
SM7100 Programming  
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PROGRAMMING  
With the introduction of VISA, sending a command to a register-based device is as simple as  
sending a command to a message-based device. Whether the application is graphical or standard,  
sending commands to the register-based device is just as intuitive. The VISA template for  
transferring data to a register-based device, utilizing A32 extended memory space, is as follows:  
viOut16 (Handle, VI_A32_SPACE, Offset, Data)  
Handle is passed by reference whenever a VISA session to a particular device is opened.  
VI_A32_SPACE is defined in the VISA header file.  
(VI_A16_SPACE  
and  
VI_A24_SPACE are also valid.)  
Offset is determined from the memory map and is in decimal format.  
Data is a 16-bit signed integer value representing the state of the relays.  
The following example is for a SM5001, 80 channel SPST relay card utilizing A32 extended  
memory space. To close relays K1, K33 and K48 while leaving the other relays open, the  
following commands would be sent:  
viOut16 (Handle, VI_A32_SPACE, 0, 1)  
'closes relay 1  
viOut16 (Handle, VI_A32_SPACE, 4, 32769) 'closes relay 33 and 48  
VISA is the software architecture standard instituted by the VXIplug&play Alliance and is at a  
very high level of communication to a VXIbus device. The same philosophy and simplicity  
applies if the instrument is being programmed via lower level commands of an API (Application  
Programmer's Interface).  
The device Relay Register Map is shown in the following table.  
34  
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INDEX  
A
I
A16 address space.............................................................23  
A16 Base Address.............................................................21  
A16 Offset Register..........................................................21  
A16 Offset Register Address ............................................21  
A24 address space.............................................................21  
A24 Base Address.............................................................21  
A24/A32 Active................................................................23  
A24/A32 Enable ...............................................................23  
A24/A32 Memory Offset..................................................24  
A32 address space.............................................................21  
A32 Base Address.............................................................21  
Access LED Fail Bit.........................................................30  
ACFAILN Enable Bit.......................................................29  
address space ....................................................................13  
Address Space...................................................................23  
IH ENA* .......................................................................... 25  
Interrupt Mask.................................................................. 25  
Interrupter IRQ Line ........................................................ 25  
IR ENA* .......................................................................... 25  
IRQ line............................................................................ 25  
L
logical address................................................ 11, 12, 13, 23  
LSB (least significant bit) .......................................... 12, 13  
M
Major Hardware Version Number.................................... 24  
Manufacturer's ID ............................................................ 23  
memory space .................................................................. 29  
message-based.................................................................. 21  
Minor Hardware Version Number.................................... 24  
Model Code...................................................................... 23  
MODID*.......................................................................... 23  
Module Relay Address..................................................... 33  
MSB (most significant bit)......................................... 12, 13  
B
backplane jumpers ............................................................11  
BBM/MBB Bit .................................................................30  
BBM/MBB Enable Bit .....................................................30  
C
O
Cause/Status......................................................................24  
command parsing..............................................................21  
configuration registers ......................................................29  
cooling..............................................................................11  
Offset Register ................................................................. 21  
offset value....................................................................... 21  
Openbus Out Enable Bit................................................... 30  
P
D
polled fashion................................................................... 24  
power................................................................................ 11  
Data Bus ...........................................................................32  
delay .................................................................................10  
delay timer........................................................................30  
Device Class .....................................................................23  
direct register access...........................................................9  
dynamic configuration......................................................23  
R
register address................................................................. 21  
register-based device........................................................ 34  
registers...................................................................... 21, 23  
Relay Data Read Back Polarity Bit.................................. 29  
Relay Register Address.................................................... 33  
Relay Register Offset....................................................... 33  
Relay Reset Enable Bit .................................................... 30  
Relay Reset Select Bit...................................................... 30  
Required Memory ............................................................ 23  
Reset................................................................................. 23  
E
Extended Memory Device ................................................25  
Extended Memory Space..................................................13  
F
Firmware Version Number ...............................................24  
Front Panel Open Signal Operation Select Bit..................31  
Front Panel Open Signal Polarity Bit................................31  
Front Panel Open signal set by this module......................32  
S
scan list............................................................................... 9  
Sysfail Inhibit................................................................... 23  
H
T
Handler IRQ Line .............................................................25  
Hardware Revision Code..................................................32  
triggers ............................................................................. 10  
SM7100 Index  
35  
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VXI Technology, Inc.  
U
utilizing A32 extended memory space..............................34  
V
VISA.................................................................................34  
VXIbus .......................................................................11, 21  
VXIbus Extended Device .................................................25  
W
WEEE.................................................................................6  
36  
SM7100  
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