Specifications

1260-14 User Manual
Module Specific Syntax 3-8 EADS North America Defense
Test and Services, Inc. © 1992
NOTE:
There is a space following the period on each line except for
the line containing the END string. This allows the user to
detect when the last line of a multiple line reply has occurred
by looking at the fifth character of each line to see if it is a
space or an ASCII "E". This convention is true for all
commands returning multiple line outputs.
Output data for the specified modules and ports are in the same
order as requested in the command. Each port’s data is preceded
with the port number and a colon. The type and format of the data
returned will depend on how the port is defined and the last
operation performed on the port. This is determined as follows:
If the port is defined as a synchronous mode read port, the
command will return the data from the most recent synchronous
test, using the same data width and format that was specified
when the test was defined. If the port has been defined as
synchronous but no test has been run since the port was defined,
no values are returned (e.g, "001. 07:").
If the port is defined as a synchronous mode write port, the
command will return the most recent write data loaded for this port,
using the same data width and format used to load the data. If no
data is loaded, no values are returned (e.g., "001. 07:").
If the port is defined as an asynchronous port, the command will
return the results of the most recent READ or WRITE command,
using the same data width and format used in that command. If no
READ or WRITE commands have been sent, no values are
returned (e.g., "001. 07:").
Example:
Assume that port 0 is a synchronous mode byte-wide (8-bit) port
that read in the hex values 9f, 7f, 3f and 1f during vectors 1-4 of
the last synchronous test. Port 1 is a synchronous mode byte wide
port that wrote out the decimal values 21, 31, 41 and 51 during
vectors 1-4 during the last synchronous test. Port 2, along with
port 3, is an asynchronous word-wide (16-bit) port that was last
used to read a hex 7AA6. Port 4 is an asynchronous byte wide
port that was last used to write a binary 10101101. The command:
PD 1.0-4
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