Datasheet

Table Of Contents
16
8493A–AVR–02/12
XMEGA C4
8. Event System
8.1 Features
System for direct peripheral-to-peripheral communication and signaling
Peripherals can directly send, receive, and react to peripheral events
CPU independant operation
100% predictable signal timing
Short and guaranteed response time
Four event channels for up to four different and parallel signal routing configurations
Events can be sent and/or used by most peripherals, clock system, and software
Additional functions include
Quadrature decoders
Digital filtering of I/O pin state
Works in active mode and idle sleep mode
8.2 Overview
The event system enables direct peripheral-to-peripheral communication and signaling. It allows
a change in one peripheral’s state to automatically trigger actions in other peripherals. It is
designed to provide a predictable system for short and predictable response times between
peripherals. It allows for autonomous peripheral control and interaction without the use of inter-
rupts, and CPU, and is thus a powerful tool for reducing the complexity, size and execution time
of application code. It also allows for synchronized timing of actions in several peripheral
modules.
A change in a peripheral’s state is referred to as an event, and usually corresponds to the
peripheral’s interrupt conditions. Events can be directly passed to other peripherals using a ded-
icated routing network called the event routing network. How events are routed and used by the
peripherals is configured in software.
Figure 8-1 on page 17 shows a basic diagram of all connected peripherals. The event system
can directly connect together analog to digital converter, analog comparators, I/O port pins, the
real-time counter, timer/counters, IR communication module (IRCOM), and USB interface.
Events can also be generated from software and the peripheral clock.