Peripheral Simulation
For NXP (founded by Philips) LPC2124 — GPIO Port 0: (30-bit)
Simulation support for this peripheral or feature is comprised of:
- Dialog boxes which display and allow you to change peripheral configuration.
- VTREGs (Virtual Target Registers) which support I/O with the peripheral.
These simulation capabilities are described below.
General Purpose Input/Output 0 (GPIO 0) Dialog
The General Purpose Input/Output 0 (GPIO 0) Dialog controls the
direction of the general purpose port 0 pins. You may use the
following controls to select and configure the external interrupt
settings.
GPIO0 Group
-
IODIR0 (Input Output Direction Register) contains the
direction assignments for each I/O port bit. The checkboxes are
checked for output and unchecked for input.
-
IOSET0 (Input Output Set Register) bits are checked to
force a high level for a that port bit during output.
-
IOCLR0 (Input Output Clear Register) bits are checked to
force a low level for a that port bit during output.
-
IOPIN0 (Input Output Pin Value Register) contains the
current condition of the GPIO 0 pins.
- Pins is used to manually control a pin value.
PORT VTREG
Data Type: unsigned long
The PORT VTREGs represent the I/O pins of the simulated MCU
Port. You may read PORT to determine the state of the output
pins. For example, in the command window you may type,
PORT
to obtain the value corresponding to the set pins of the port. You
may also change the input values of port pins by changing the value
of the VTREG. For example,
PORT=0x000000F0
sets the upper four port pins to a value of 1 and all other port
pins to a value of 0. You may use the bitwise operators AND(&),
OR(|) and XOR(^) to change individual bits of the PORT VTREGs. For
example:
PORT |= 0x00000001; /* Set P0 Pin */
PORT &= ~0x00000200; /* Clr P9 Pin */
PORT ^= 0x00800000; /* Toggle P23 Pin */
PORTx VTREG
Data Type: unsigned long
The PORTx VTREGs represent the I/O pins of the simulated
MCU for Port A, Port B, and so on. PORTA represents Port A, PORTB
represents Port B, etc. You may read PORTx to determine the
state of the output pins of that port. For example, in the command
window you may type,
PORTA
to obtain value corresponding to the set pins of Port A. You may
also change the input values of port pins by changing the value of
the VTREG. For example,
PORTA=0x000000F0
sets the upper four port pins of Port A to a value of 1 and all
other port pins to a value of 0. You may use the bitwise operators
AND(&), OR(|) and XOR(^) to change individual bits of the PORTx
VTREGs. For example:
PORTA |= 0x00000001; /* Set PA0 Pin */
PORTB &= ~0x00000200; /* Clr PB9 Pin */
PORTA ^= 0x00800000; /* Toggle PA23 Pin */