SAA7109AE [NXP]
HD-CODEC; HD- CODEC型号: | SAA7109AE |
厂家: | NXP |
描述: | HD-CODEC |
文件: | 总197页 (文件大小:939K) |
中文: | 中文翻译 | 下载: | 下载PDF数据表文档文件 |
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
DATA SHEET
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
HD-CODEC
Product specification
2004 Jun 29
Supersedes data of 2003 Mar 26
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
CONTENTS
10
INPUT/OUTPUT INTERFACES AND PORTS
OF DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
1
FEATURES
10.1
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
Analog terminals
Audio clock signals
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
Video decoder
Video scaler
Video encoder
Common features
Clock and real-time synchronization signals
Video expansion port (X port)
Image port (I port)
Host port for 16-bit extension of video data I/O
(H port)
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
APPLICATIONS
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
ORDERING INFORMATION
QUICK REFERENCE DATA
BLOCK DIAGRAMS
PINNING
10.7
Basic input and output timing diagrams for the
I and X ports
11
BOUNDARY SCAN TEST
11.1
11.2
Initialization of boundary scan circuit
Device identification codes
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF DIGITAL
VIDEO ENCODER PART
12
13
14
LIMITING VALUES
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
8.1
Reset conditions
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIGITAL
VIDEO ENCODER PART
8.2
Input formatter
8.3
RGB LUT
15
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIGITAL
VIDEO DECODER PART
8.4
Cursor insertion
8.5
8.6
RGB Y-CB-CR matrix
Horizontal scaler
16
TIMING
8.7
8.8
8.9
Vertical scaler and anti-flicker filter
FIFO
Border generator
Oscillator and Discrete Time Oscillator (DTO)
Low-pass Clock Generation Circuit (CGC)
Encoder
RGB processor
Triple DAC
HD data path
Timing generator
Pattern generator for HD sync pulses
I2C-bus interface
Power-down modes
Programming the graphics acquisition scaler of
the video encoder
16.1
16.2
Digital video encoder part
Digital video decoder part
17
APPLICATION INFORMATION
8.10
8.11
8.12
8.13
8.14
8.15
8.16
8.17
8.18
8.19
8.20
17.1
17.2
17.3
Reconstruction filter
Analog output voltages
Suggestions for a board layout
18
I2C-BUS DESCRIPTION
18.1
18.2
Digital video encoder part
Digital video decoder part
19
PROGRAMMING START SET-UP OF
DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
19.1
19.2
19.3
19.4
Decoder part
Audio clock generation part
Data slicer and data type control part
Scaler and interfaces
8.21
9
Input levels and formats
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF DIGITAL
VIDEO DECODER PART
20
21
22
23
24
25
PACKAGE OUTLINE
SOLDERING
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
Decoder
Decoder output formatter
Scaler
VBI data decoder and capture
(subaddresses 40H to 7FH)
Image port output formatter
(subaddresses 84H to 87H)
Audio clock generation
(subaddresses 30H to 3FH)
DATA SHEET STATUS
DEFINITIONS
DISCLAIMERS
PURCHASE OF PHILIPS I2C COMPONENTS
9.5
9.6
2004 Jun 29
2
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
1
FEATURES
1.1
Video decoder
• Six analog inputs, internal analog source selectors, e.g.
6 × CVBS or (2 × Y/C and 2 × CVBS) or (1 × Y/C and
4 × CVBS)
• Enhanced ITU 656 output format on IPD output bus
• Two analog preprocessing channels in differential
containing:
CMOS style for best S/N performance
– active video
• Fully programmable static gain or Automatic Gain
Control (AGC) for the selected CVBS or Y/C channel
– raw CVBS data for INTERCAST applications
(27 MHz data rate)
• Switchable white peak control
– decoded VBI data
• Two built-in analog anti-aliasing filters
• Detection of copy protected input signals according to
the Macrovision (1) standard. Can be used to prevent
unauthorized recording of pay-TV or video tape signals.
• Two 9-bit video CMOS Analog-to-Digital Converters
(ADCs), digitized CVBS or Y/C signals are available on
the Image Port Data (IPD) port under I2C-bus control
• On-chip clock generator
1.2
Video scaler
• Line-locked system clock frequencies
• Both up and downscaling
• Digital PLL for horizontal sync processing and clock
• Conversion to square pixel format
• NTSC to 288 lines (video phone)
generation, horizontal and vertical sync detection
• Requires only one crystal (either 24.576 MHz or
• Phase accuracy better than 1/64 pixel or line, horizontally
32.11 MHz) for all standards
or vertically
• Automatic detection of 50 and 60 Hz field frequency,
and automatic switching between PAL and NTSC
standards
• Independent scaling definitions for odd and even fields
• Anti-alias filter for horizontal scaling
• Provides output as:
• Luminance and chrominance signal processing for
PAL BGHI, PAL N, combination PAL N, PAL M,
NTSC M, NTSC-Japan, NTSC N, NTSC 4.43 and
SECAM
– scaled active video
– raw CVBS data for INTERCAST, WAVE-PHORE,
POPCON applications or general VBI data decoding
(27 MHz or sample rate converted)
• User programmable luminance peaking or aperture
correction
• Local video output for Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 format (VMI,
VIP, ZV).
• Cross-colour reduction for NTSC by chrominance comb
filtering
• PAL delay line for correcting PAL phase errors
• Brightness Contrast Saturation (BCS) and hue control
on-chip
• Two multi functional real-time output pins controlled by
the I2C-bus
• Multi-standard VBI data slicer decoding World Standard
Teletext (WST), North-American Broadcast Text
System (NABTS), Closed Caption (CC), Wide Screen
Signalling (WSS), Video Programming System (VPS),
Vertical Interval Time Code (VITC) variants
(EBU/SMPTE) etc.
• Standard ITU 656 Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 format (8-bit) on IPD
output bus
(1) Macrovision is a trademark of the Macrovision Corporation.
2004 Jun 29
3
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
1.3
Video encoder
• Adjustable output levels for the DACs
• Programmable horizontal and vertical input
synchronization phase
• Digital PAL/NTSC encoder with integrated high quality
scaler and anti-flicker filter for TV output from a PC
• Programmable horizontal sync output phase
• Internal Colour Bar Generator (CBG)
• Supports Intel Digital Video Out (DVO) low voltage
interfacing to graphics controller
• 27 MHz crystal-stable subcarrier generation
• Optional support of various Vertical Blanking Interval
(VBI) data insertion
• Maximum graphics pixel clock 85 MHz at double edged
clocking, synthesized on-chip or from external source
• Macrovision Pay-per-View copy protection system
rev. 7.01, rev. 6.1 and rev. 1.03 (525p) as option;
this applies to SAA7108AE only. The device is protected
by USA patent numbers 4631603, 4577216 and
4819098 and other intellectual property rights. Use of
the Macrovision anti-copy process in the device is
licensed for non-commercial home use only. Reverse
engineering or disassembly is prohibited. Please
contact your nearest Philips Semiconductors sales
office for more information.
• Programmable assignment of clock edge to bytes (in
double edged mode)
• Synthesizable pixel clock (PIXCLK) with minimized
output jitter, can be used as reference clock for the VGC,
as well
• PIXCLK output and bi-phase PIXCLK input (VGC clock
loop-through possible)
• Hot-plug detection through dedicated interrupt pin
• Supported VGA resolutions for PAL or NTSC legacy
video output up to 1280 × 1024 graphics data at
60 or 50 Hz frame rate
1.4
Common features
• 5 V tolerant digital I/O ports
• I2C-bus controlled (full read-back ability by an external
controller, bit rate up to 400 kbits/s)
• Supported VGA resolutions for HDTV output up to
1920 × 1080 interlaced graphics data at 60 or 50 Hz
frame rate
• Versatile power-save modes
• Three Digital-to-Analog Converters (DACs) for CVBS
(BLUE, CB), VBS (GREEN, CVBS) and C (RED, CR) at
27 MHz sample rate (signals in parenthesis are
optionally selected), all at 10-bit resolution
• Boundary scan test circuit complies with the “IEEE Std.
1149.b1-1994” (separate ID codes for decoder and
encoder)
• Monolithic CMOS 3.3 V device
• BGA156 package
• Non-interlaced CB-Y-CR or RGB input at maximum
4 : 4 : 4 sampling
• Moisture Sensitive Level (MSL): e3.
• Downscaling and upscaling from 50 to 400 %
• Optional interlaced CB-Y-CR input of Digital Versatile
2
APPLICATIONS
Disk (DVD) signals
• Optional non-interlaced RGB output to drive second
VGA monitor (bypass mode, maximum 85 MHz)
• Notebook (low-power consumption)
• PCMCIA card application
• AGP based graphics cards
• PC editing
• 3 × 256 bytes RGB Look-Up Table (LUT)
• Support for hardware cursor
• HDTV up to 1920 × 1080 interlaced and 1280 × 720
progressive, including 3-level sync pulses
• Image processing
• Video phone applications
• INTERCAST and PC teletext applications
• Security applications
• Programmable border colour of underscan area
• Programmable 5 line anti-flicker filter
• On-chip 27 MHz crystal oscillator (3rd-harmonic or
fundamental 27 MHz crystal)
• Hybrid satellite set-top boxes.
• Fast I2C-bus control port (400 kHz)
• Encoder can be master or slave
2004 Jun 29
4
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
3
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
All inputs intended to interface to the host graphics
controller are designed for low-voltage signals down to
1.1 V and up to 3.45 V.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is a new multi-standard
video decoder and encoder chip, offering high quality
video input and TV output processing as required by
PC-99 specifications. It enables hardware manufacturers
to implement versatile video functions on a significantly
reduced printed-circuit board area at very competitive
costs.
The video decoder, a 9-bit video input processor, is a
combination of a 2-channel analog pre-processing circuit
including source selection, anti-aliasing filter and
Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC), automatic clamp and
gain control, a Clock Generation Circuit (CGC), and a
digital multi-standard decoder (PAL BGHI, PAL M, PAL N,
combination PAL N, NTSC M, NTSC-Japan, NTSC N,
NTSC 4.43 and SECAM).
Separate pins for supply voltages as well as for I2C-bus
control and boundary scan test have been provided for the
video encoder and decoder sections to ensure both
flexible handling and optimized noise behaviour.
The decoder includes a brightness, contrast and
saturation control circuit, a multi-standard VBI data slicer
and a 27 MHz VBI data bypass. The pure 3.3 V (5 V
compatible) CMOS circuit SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE,
consisting of an analog front-end and digital video
decoder, a digital video encoder and analog back-end, is a
highly integrated circuit especially designed for desktop
video applications.
The video encoder is used to encode PC graphics data at
maximum 1280 × 1024 resolution (optionally 1920 × 1080
interlaced) to PAL (50 Hz) or NTSC (60 Hz) video signals.
A programmable scaler and anti-flicker filter (maximum
5 lines) ensures properly sized and flicker-free TV display
as CVBS or S-video output.
Alternatively, the three Digital-to-Analog Converters
(DACs) can output RGB signals together with a TTL
composite sync to feed SCART connectors.
The decoder is based on the principle of line-locked clock
decoding and is able to decode the colour of PAL, SECAM
and NTSC signals into ITU-R BT.601 compatible colour
component values.
When the scaler/interlacer is bypassed, a second VGA
monitor can be connected to the RGB outputs and
separate H and V-syncs as well, thereby serving as an
auxiliary monitor at maximum 1280 × 1024
resolution/60 Hz (PIXCLK < 85 MHz). Alternatively this
port can provide Y, PB and PR signals for HDTV monitors.
The encoder can operate fully independently at its own
variable pixel clock, transporting graphics input data, and
at the line-locked, single crystal-stable video encoding
clock.
As an option, it is possible to slave the video PAL/NTSC
encoding to the video decoder clock with the encoder FIFO
acting as a buffer to decouple the line-locked decoder
clock from the crystal-stable encoder clock.
The encoder section includes a sync/clock generator and
on-chip DACs.
4
ORDERING INFORMATION
TYPE
PACKAGE
NUMBER
NAME
DESCRIPTION
VERSION
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
BGA156
plastic ball grid array package; 156 balls; body 15 × 15 × 1.15 mm
SOT472-1
2004 Jun 29
5
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
5
QUICK REFERENCE DATA
SYMBOL
VDDD
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
3.15
3.15
0
TYP. MAX. UNIT
digital supply voltage
3.3
3.3
−
3.45
3.45
70
V
VDDA
Tamb
PA+D
analog supply voltage
V
ambient temperature
°C
W
analog and digital power dissipation note 1
−
−
1.7
Note
1. Power dissipation is extremely dependent on programming and selected application.
6
BLOCK DIAGRAMS
digital video
input and output
X port
ANALOG VIDEO
ACQUISITION AND
DEMODULATOR
I port
(IPD)
CVBS, Y/C
analog
video input
digital
video output
SCALER
VIDEO DECODER PART
VIDEO ENCODER PART
SCALER
AND
INTERLACER
Y-C -C /RGB
CVBS, Y/C
RGB
B
R
analog
video output
digital video
graphics input
VIDEO
ENCODER
PD
MHB903
Fig.1 Simplified block diagram.
2004 Jun 29
6
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C1, C2, B1,
B2, A2, B4,
B3, A3, F3,
FIFO
AND
UPSAMPLING
LUT
AND
CURSOR
H1, H2, H3
RGB TO Y-C -C
B
PD11 to
PD0
INPUT
FORMATTER
R
MATRIX
DECIMATOR
4 : 4 : 4 to 4 : 2 : 2
VERTICAL
SCALER
VERTICAL
FILTER
HORIZONTAL
SCALER
F2
PIXCLKI
C6
C7
C8
BLUE_CB_CVBS
BORDER
GENERATOR
VIDEO
ENCODER
TRIPLE
DAC
FIFO
GREEN_VBS_CVBS
RED_CR_C_CVBS
HD
OUTPUT
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
D7
VSM
D8
HSM_CSYNC
TVD
F12
2
G4
CRYSTAL
TIMING
I C-BUS
PIXEL CLOCK
SYNTHESIZER
PIXCLKO
OSCILLATOR
GENERATOR
CONTROL
A5
A6
C3
TTX_SRES
FSVGC
G1 F1 G3 E3
C4
G2
SDAe
TTXRQ_XCLKO2
E2
D2
XTALIe XTALOe
VSVGC
CBO
HSVGC
RESe
MBL785
27 MHz
SCLe
Fig.2 Block diagram (video encoder part).
g
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w
[
]
LLC2
RTS0
XCLK XPD 7:0
XRV
XTRI
TEST5
TEST3
TEST1
TEST0
[
]
LLC
RTCO
(1)
RTS1 XDQ
XRH XRDY
HPD 7:0
SDAd SCLd
TEST4
TEST2
M14 L14 L13 K13 L10 M3 M4 K2, K3,
L1 to L3
N2 L5 N3 K1
A13, D12, C12, L12
B12, A12, C11,
B11, A11
M11
J2
J1
J3
C10 B10 H13
M1, M2, N1
2
REAL-TIME OUTPUT
EXPANSION PORT PIN MAPPING
I/O CONTROL
I C-BUS
M12
N14
P4
RESd
CE
chrominance of 16-bit input
X PORT I/O FORMATTING
E14, D14,
C14, B14,
E13, D13,
C13, B13
CLOCK GENERATION
AND
POWER-ON CONTROL
XTOUTd
XTALId
XTALOd
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
P2
A/B
REGISTER
MUX
PROGRAMMING
REGISTER
ARRAY
[
]
IPD 7:0
P3
H14
G12
F13
F14
G13
IDQ
P13
P11
P10
P9
AI11
AI12
IGPH
IGPV
IGP0
IGP1
EVENT CONTROLLER
DIGITAL
AI21
DECODER
ANALOG
WITH
AI22
DUAL
ADC
FIR-PREFILTER
PRESCALER
AND
HORIZONTAL
FINE
ADAPTIVE
COMB
P7
LINE
VERTICAL
FIFO
AI23
P6
SCALING
BUFFER
(PHASE)
SCALING
VIDEO
FIFO
FILTER
AI24
SCALER BCS
32
to
8(16)
MUX
M10
AOUT
H12
P12
P8
ICLK
AI1D
AI2D
BOUNDARY
SCAN
AUDIO
CLOCK
GENERATION
GENERAL PURPOSE
VBI DATA SLICER
TEXT
FIFO
TEST
J14
N10
AGND
ITRDY
ITRI
G14
VIDEO/TEXT
ARBITER
M7,
D11, F11,
J4, J11,
L4, L11
D10, G11, M8, M9, E11, K4, H4, H11, N7 to N9,
N4 M6 M5 N6 N5 K12 J13 K14 J12 L8 P5
L7, L9
N11
K11
L6, M13 N12, N13
MBL791
V
TCLKd TDId AMCLK ASCLK
V
V
V
SSEd
DDXd
DDId
DDAd
TMSd TDOd ALRCLK AMXCLK
(1)
V
V
DDEd
TRSTd
V
V
SSAd
SSXd
SSId
(1) The pins RTCO and ALRCLK are used for configuration of the I2C-bus interface
and the definition of the crystal oscillator frequency at RESET (pin strapping).
Fig.3 Block diagram (video decoder part).
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
7
PINNING
SYMBOL
PIN TYPE(1)
DESCRIPTION
PD7
A2
A3
A4
I
MSB of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for pin
assignment
PD4
I
MSB − 3 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
TRSTe
I/pu
test reset input for Boundary Scan Test (BST) (encoder); active LOW; with
internal pull-up; notes 2 and 3
XTALIe
XTALOe
DUMP
VSSXe
RSET
VDDAe
HPD0
HPD3
HPD7
PD9
A5
A6
I
O
27 MHz crystal input (encoder)
27 MHz crystal output (encoder)
A7
O
DAC reference pin (encoder), 12 Ω resistor connected to VSSAe
ground for oscillator (encoder)
A8
S
A9
O
DAC reference pin (encoder), 1 kΩ resistor connected to VSSAe
3.3 V analog supply voltage (encoder)
MSB − 7 of Host Port Data (HPD) output bus
MSB − 4 of HPD output bus
A10
A11
A12
A13
B1
S
I/O
I/O
I/O
I
MSB of HPD output bus
see Tables 9, 14 and 15 for pin assignment with different encoder input
formats
PD8
PD5
PD6
B2
B3
B4
I
I
I
see Tables 9, 14 and 15 for pin assignment with different encoder input
formats
MSB − 2 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
MSB − 1 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
TDIe
B5
B6
I/pu
S
test data input for BST (encoder); note 4
3.3 V analog supply voltage (encoder)
DAC reference pin (encoder); connected to A7
analog ground (encoder)
VDDAe
DUMP
VSSAe
VDDAe
TEST1
HPD1
HPD4
IPD0
B7
O
S
B8
B9
S
3.3 V analog supply voltage (encoder)
scan test input 1, do not connect
MSB − 6 of HPD output bus
B10
B11
B12
B13
B14
C1
I
I/O
I/O
O
O
I
MSB − 3 of HPD output bus
MSB − 7 of IPD output bus
IPD4
MSB − 3 of Image Port Data (IPD) output bus
PD11
see Tables 9, 14 and 15 for pin assignment with different encoder input
formats
PD10
C2
I
see Tables 9, 14 and 15 for pin assignment with different encoder input
formats
TTX_SRES
C3
C4
I
teletext input or sync reset input (encoder)
TTXRQ_XCLKO2
O
teletext request output or 13.5 MHz clock output of the crystal oscillator
(encoder)
VSSIe
C5
C6
S
digital ground core (encoder)
BLUE or CB or CVBS output
BLUE_CB_CVBS
O
2004 Jun 29
9
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PIN TYPE(1)
DESCRIPTION
GREEN or VBS or CVBS output
RED or CR or C or CVBS output
GREEN_VBS_CVBS C7
O
O
S
RED_CR_C_CVBS
VDDAe
C8
C9
3.3 V analog supply voltage (encoder)
scan test input 2, do not connect
TEST2
HPD2
C10
C11
C12
C13
C14
D1
I
I/O
I/O
O
O
O
I
MSB − 5 of HPD output bus
HPD5
MSB − 2 of HPD output bus
IPD1
MSB − 6 of IPD output bus
IPD5
MSB − 2 of IPD output bus
TDOe
test data output for BST (encoder); note 4
reset input (encoder); active LOW
RESe
D2
TMSe
D3
I/pu
S
test mode select input for BST (encoder); note 4
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core and peripheral cells (encoder)
digital ground core (encoder)
VDDIEe
D4
VSSIe
D5
S
VDDXe
D6
S
3.3 V supply voltage for oscillator (encoder)
vertical synchronization output to VGA monitor (non-interlaced)
VSM
D7
O
O
HSM_CSYNC
D8
horizontal synchronization output to VGA monitor (non-interlaced) or
composite sync for RGB-SCART
VDDAe
VDDEd
VDDId
HPD6
IPD2
D9
D10
D11
D12
D13
D14
E1
S
S
3.3 V analog supply voltage (encoder)
3.3 V digital supply voltage for peripheral cells (decoder)
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
MSB − 1 of HPD output bus
S
I/O
O
MSB − 5 of IPD output bus
IPD6
O
MSB − 1 of IPD output bus
TCKe
SCLe
HSVGC
I/pu
I
test clock input for BST (encoder); note 4
I2C-bus serial clock input (encoder)
E2
E3
I/O
horizontal synchronization output to Video Graphics Controller (VGC)
(optional input)
VSSEe
VSSId
E4
E11
E12
E13
E14
F1
S
S
−
digital ground peripheral cells (encoder)
digital ground core (decoder)
not connected
n.c.
IPD3
O
O
I/O
I
MSB − 4 of IPD output bus
IPD7
MSB of IPD output bus
VSVGC
PIXCLKI
PD3
vertical synchronization output to VGC (optional input)
pixel clock input (looped through)
F2
F3
I
MSB − 4 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
VDD(DVO)
VDDId
TVD
F4
S
S
digital supply voltage for DVO cells
F11
F12
F13
F14
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
O
O
O
TV Detector; hot-plug interrupt pin, HIGH if TV is connected
multi-purpose vertical reference output with IPD output bus
general purpose output signal 0 with IPD output bus
IGPV
IGP0
2004 Jun 29
10
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PIN TYPE(1)
DESCRIPTION
FSVGC
SDAe
CBO
G1
G2
I/O
I/O
O
frame synchronization output to VGC (optional input)
I2C-bus serial data input/output (encoder)
G3
composite blanking output to VGC; active LOW
pixel clock output to VGC
PIXCLKO
VDDEd
IGPH
IGP1
G4
O
G11
G12
G13
G14
H1
S
3.3 V digital supply voltage for peripheral cells (decoder)
multi-purpose horizontal reference output with IPD output bus
general purpose output signal 1 with IPD output bus
programmable control signals for IPD output bus
O
O
ITRI
I/(O)
I
PD2
MSB − 5 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
PD1
PD0
H2
H3
I
I
MSB − 6 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
MSB − 7 of encoder input bus with CB-Y-CR 4 : 2 : 2; see Tables 9 to 15 for
pin assignment
VSSEd
H4
H11
H12
H13
H14
J1
S
S
digital ground for peripheral cells (decoder)
digital ground for peripheral cells (decoder)
clock for IPD output bus (optional clock input)
scan test output, do not connect
VSSEd
ICLK
I/O
O
O
O
I
TEST0
IDQ
data qualifier for IPD output bus
TEST4
TEST5
TEST3
VDDId
scan test output, do not connect
J2
scan test input, do not connect
J3
I
scan test input, do not connect
J4
S
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
audio master external clock input
VDDId
J11
J12
J13
S
AMXCLK
ALRCLK
I
(I/)O
audio left/right clock output; can be strapped to supply via a 3.3 kΩ resistor to
indicate that the default 24.576 MHz crystal (ALRCLK = 0; internal pull-down)
has been replaced by a 32.110 MHz crystal (ALRCLK = 1); notes 5 and 6
ITRDY
XTRI
J14
K1
I
target ready input for IPD output bus
control signal for all X port pins
MSB of XPD bus
I
XPD7
XPD6
VSSId
K2
I/O
I/O
S
K3
MSB − 1 of XPD bus
K4
digital ground core (decoder)
digital ground core (decoder)
audio master clock output, must be less than 50 % of crystal clock
real-time status or sync information line 0
audio serial clock output
VSSId
K11
K12
K13
K14
L1
S
AMCLK
RTS0
ASCLK
XPD5
XPD4
XPD3
VDDId
XRV
O
O
O
I/O
I/O
I/O
S
MSB − 2 of XPD bus
L2
MSB − 3 of XPD bus
L3
MSB − 4 of XPD bus
L4
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
vertical reference for XPD bus
L5
I/O
2004 Jun 29
11
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PIN TYPE(1)
DESCRIPTION
VSSEd
VDDEd
VDDXd
VDDEd
RTS1
VDDId
SDAd
RTCO
L6
L7
S
S
digital ground for peripheral cells (decoder)
3.3 V digital supply voltage for peripheral cells (decoder)
3.3 V supply voltage for oscillator (decoder)
3.3 V digital supply voltage for peripheral cells (decoder)
real-time status or sync information line 1
L8
S
L9
S
L10
L11
L12
L13
O
S
3.3 V digital supply voltage for core (decoder)
I2C-bus serial data input/output (decoder)
I/O
(I/)O
real-time control output; contains information about actual system clock
frequency, field rate, odd/even sequence, decoder status, subcarrier
frequency and phase and PAL sequence (see external document “RTC
Functional Description”, available on request); the RTCO pin is enabled via
I2C-bus bit RTCE; see notes 5 and 7 and Table 150
LLC2
XPD2
XPD1
XCLK
XDQ
L14
M1
O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/pu
I/pu
S
line-locked 1⁄2 clock output (13.5 MHz nominal)
MSB − 5 of XPD bus
M2
MSB − 6 of XPD bus
M3
clock for XPD bus
M4
data qualifier for XPD bus
TMSd
TCKd
VSSAd
VDDAd
VDDAd
AOUT
SCLd
RESd
VSSEd
LLC
M5
test mode select input for BST (decoder); note 4
test clock input for BST (decoder); note 4
analog ground (decoder)
M6
M7
M8
S
3.3 V analog supply voltage (decoder)
3.3 V analog supply voltage (decoder)
analog test output (do not connect)
I2C-bus serial clock input (decoder)
reset output signal; active LOW (decoder)
digital ground for peripheral cells (decoder)
line-locked clock output (27 MHz nominal)
MSB − 7 of XPD bus
M9
S
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
N1
O
I
O
S
O
XPD0
XRH
I/O
I/O
O
N2
horizontal reference for XPD bus
data input ready for XPD bus
XRDY
TRSTd
N3
N4
I/pu
test reset input for BST (decoder); active LOW; with internal pull-up;
notes 2 and 3
TDOd
TDId
N5
N6
O
I/pu
S
test data output for BST (decoder); note 4
test data input for BST (decoder); note 4
analog ground (decoder)
VSSAd
VSSAd
VSSAd
AGND
VDDAd
VSSAd
VSSAd
CE
N7
N8
S
analog ground (decoder)
N9
S
analog ground (decoder)
N10
N11
N12
N13
N14
S
analog ground (decoder) connected to substrate
3.3 V analog supply voltage (decoder)
analog ground (decoder)
S
S
S
analog ground (decoder)
I
chip enable or reset input (with internal pull-up)
2004 Jun 29
12
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PIN TYPE(1)
DESCRIPTION
27 MHz crystal input (decoder)
27 MHz crystal output (decoder)
XTALId
XTALOd
XTOUTd
VSSXd
AI24
P2
P3
I
O
O
S
I
P4
crystal oscillator output signal (decoder); auxiliary signal
P5
ground for crystal oscillator (decoder)
P6
analog input 24
AI23
P7
I
analog input 23
AI2D
P8
I
differential analog input for channel 2; connect to ground via a capacitor
AI22
P9
I
analog input 22
AI21
P10
P11
P12
P13
I
analog input 21
AI12
I
analog input 12
AI1D
I
differential analog input for channel 1; connect to ground via a capacitor
analog input 11
AI11
I
Notes
1. Pin type: I = input, O = output, S = supply, pu = pull-up.
2. For board design without boundary scan implementation connect TRSTe and TRSTd to ground.
3. This pin provides easy initialization of the Boundary Scan Test (BST) circuit. TRSTe and TRSTd can be used to force
the Test Access Port (TAP) controller to the TEST_LOGIC_RESET state (normal operation) at once.
4. In accordance with the “IEEE1149.1” standard the pads TDIe (TDId), TMSe (TMSd), TCKe (TCKd) and TRSTe
(TRSTd) are input pads with an internal pull-up resistor and TDOe (TDOd) is a 3-state output pad.
5. Pin strapping is done by connecting the pin to supply via a 3.3 kΩ resistor. During the power-up reset sequence the
corresponding pins are switched to input mode to read the strapping level. For the default setting no strapping
resistor is necessary (internal pull-down).
6. Pin ALRCLK: 0 = 24.576 MHz crystal (default); 1 = 32.110 MHz crystal.
7. Pin RTCO: operates as I2C-bus slave address pin; RTCO = 0 slave address 42H/43H (default); RTCO = 1 slave
address 40H/41H.
MBL788
handbook, halfpage
P
N
M
L
K
J
H
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
G
F
E
D
C
B
A
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Fig.4 Pin configuration.
13
2004 Jun 29
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Table 1 Pin assignment (top view)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
A
B
C
PD7
PD8
PD10
PD4
PD5
TRSTe XTALIe XTALOe
DUMP
DUMP
VSSXe
RSET VDDAe HPD0 HPD3
VDDAe TEST1 HPD1 HPD4
HPD7
IPD0
IPD1
PD9
PD6
TDIe
VDDAe
VSSAe
IPD4
IPD5
PD11
TTX_ TTXRQ_ VSSIe
SRES XCLKO2
BLUE_
CB_CVBS VBS_CVBS
GREEN_ RED_CR_C_ VDDAe TEST2 HPD2 HPD5
CVBS
D
E
TDOe
TCKe
RESe
TMSe
VDDIEe
VSSIe
VDDXe
VSM
HSM_CSYNC VDDAe VDDEd VDDId
HPD6
n.c.
IPD2
IPD3
IPD6
IPD7
IGP0
ITRI
SCLe HSVGC
VSSEe
VSSId
VDDId
VDDEd
VSSEd
F VSVGC PIXCLKI
G FSVGC SDAe
PD3
VDD(DVO)
TVD
IGPH
ICLK
IGPV
IGP1
CBO PIXCLKO
H
J
PD2
PD1
PD0
VSSEd
VDDId
VSSId
TEST0
IDQ
TEST4 TEST5 TEST3
VDDId AMXCLK ALRCLK ITRDY
K
L
XTRI
XPD5
XPD2
XPD0
XPD7
XPD4
XPD1
XRH
XPD6
XPD3
XCLK
XRDY
VSSId AMCLK
RTS0 ASCLK
VDDId
XDQ
XRV
TMSd
TDOd
VSSEd
TCKd
TDId
AI24
VDDEd
VSSAd
VSSAd
AI23
VDDXd
VDDAd
VSSAd
AI2D
VDDEd RTS1 VDDId
SDAd
RESd
RTCO
VSSEd
VSSAd
AI11
LLC2
LLC
CE
M
N
P
VDDAd AOUT SCLd
TRSTd
VSSAd AGND VDDAd VSSAd
XTALId XTALOd XTOUTd VSSXd
AI22
AI21
AI12
AI1D
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
8
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF DIGITAL VIDEO
ENCODER PART
For ease of analog post filtering the signals are twice
oversampled to 27 MHz before digital-to-analog
conversion.
The digital video encoder encodes digital luminance and
colour difference signals (CB-Y-CR) or digital RGB signals
into analog CVBS, S-video and, optionally, RGB or
CR-Y-CB signals. NTSC M, PAL B/G and sub-standards
are supported.
The total filter transfer characteristics (scaler and
anti-flicker filter are not taken into account) are illustrated
in Figs 5 to 10. All three DACs are realized with full 10-bit
resolution. The CR-Y-CB to RGB dematrix can be
bypassed (optionally) in order to provide the upsampled
CR-Y-CB input signals.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE can be directly connected
to a PC video graphics controller with a maximum
resolution of 1280 × 1024 (progressive) or 1920 × 1080
(interlaced) at a 50 or 60 Hz frame rate. A programmable
scaler scales the computer graphics picture so that it will fit
into a standard TV screen with an adjustable underscan
area. Non-interlaced-to-interlaced conversion is optimized
with an adjustable anti-flicker filter for a flicker-free display
at a very high sharpness.
The 8-bit multiplexed CB-Y-CR formats are “ITU-R BT.656”
(D1 format) compatible, but the SAV and EAV codes can
be decoded optionally, when the device is operated in
slave mode. For assignment of the input data to the rising
or falling clock edge see Tables 9 to 15.
In order to display interlaced RGB signals through a
euro-connector TV set, a separate digital composite sync
signal (pin HSM_CSYNC) can be generated; it can be
advanced up to 31 periods of the 27 MHz crystal clock in
order to be adapted to the RGB processing of a TV set.
Besides the most common 16-bit 4 : 2 : 2 CB-Y-CR input
format (using 8 pins with double edge clocking), other
CB-Y-CR and RGB formats are also supported; see
Tables 9 to 15.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE synthesizes all necessary
internal signals, colour subcarrier frequency and
synchronization signals from that clock.
A complete 3 × 256 bytes Look-Up Table (LUT), which can
be used, for example, as a separate gamma corrector, is
located in the RGB domain; it can be loaded either through
the video input port PD (Pixel Data) or via the I2C-bus.
It is also possible to connect pin RTCO of the decoder
section to pin RTCI of the encoder section. Thus,
information containing actual subcarrier frequency,
PAL-ID etc. is available in case the line-locked clock of the
decoder section is used for re-encoding of the encoder
section.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE supports a 32 × 32 × 2-bit
hardware cursor, the pattern of which can also be loaded
through the video input port or via the I2C-bus.
It is also possible to encode interlaced 4 : 2 : 2 video
signals such as PC-DVD; for that the anti-flicker filter, and
in most cases the scaler, will simply be bypassed.
Wide screen signalling data can be loaded via the I2C-bus
and is inserted into line 23 for standards using a 50 Hz
field rate.
Besides the applications for video output, the
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE can also be used for generating
a kind of auxiliary VGA output, when the RGB
non-interlaced input signal is fed to the DACs. This may be
of interest for example, when the graphics controller
provides a second graphics window at its video output
port.
VPS data for program dependent automatic start and stop
of such featured VCRs is loadable via the I2C-bus.
The IC also contains Closed Caption and extended data
services encoding (line 21), and supports teletext insertion
for the appropriate bit stream format at a 27 MHz clock rate
(see Fig.51). It is also possible to load data for the copy
generation management system into line 20 of every field
(525/60 line counting).
The basic encoder function consists of subcarrier
generation, colour modulation and insertion of
synchronization signals at a crystal-stable clock rate of
13.5 MHz (independent of the actual pixel clock used at
the input side), corresponding to an internal 4 : 2 : 2
bandwidth in the luminance/colour difference domain.
Luminance and chrominance signals are filtered in
accordance with the standard requirements of “RS-170-A”
and “ITU-R BT.470-3”.
A number of possibilities are provided for setting different
video parameters such as:
• Black and blanking level control
• Colour subcarrier frequency
• Variable burst amplitude etc.
2004 Jun 29
15
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MBE737
6
G
v
(dB)
0
−6
−12
−18
−24
−30
−36
(1)
(2)
−42
−48
−54
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
f (MHz)
(1) SCBW = 1.
(2) SCBW = 0.
Fig.5 Chrominance transfer characteristic 1.
MBE735
handbook, halfpage
2
G
v
(dB)
0
(1)
(2)
−2
−4
−6
0
0.4
0.8
1.2
1.6
f (MHz)
(1) SCBW = 1.
(2) SCBW = 0.
Fig.6 Chrominance transfer characteristic 2.
16
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MGD672
6
G
v
(dB)
(4)
0
(2)
(3)
−6
−12
−18
(1)
−24
−30
−36
−42
−48
−54
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
f (MHz)
(1) CCRS1 = 0; CCRS0 = 1.
(2) CCRS1 = 1; CCRS0 = 0.
(3) CCRS1 = 1; CCRS0 = 1.
(4) CCRS1 = 0; CCRS0 = 0.
Fig.7 Luminance transfer characteristic 1 (excluding scaler).
MBE736
handbook, halfpage
1
G
v
(dB)
(1)
0
−1
−2
−3
−4
−5
0
2
4
6
f (MHz)
(1) CCRS1 = 0; CCRS0 = 0.
Fig.8 Luminance transfer characteristic 2 (excluding scaler).
17
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MGB708
6
G
v
(dB)
0
−6
−12
−18
−24
−30
−36
−42
−48
−54
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
f (MHz)
Fig.9 Luminance transfer characteristic in RGB (excluding scaler).
MGB706
6
G
v
(dB)
0
−6
−12
−18
−24
−30
−36
−42
−48
−54
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
f (MHz)
Fig.10 Colour difference transfer characteristic in RGB (excluding scaler).
18
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
8.1
Reset conditions
If Y-CB-CR is being applied as a 27 Mbyte/s data stream,
the output of the input formatter can be used directly to
feed the video encoder block.
To activate the reset a pulse at least of 2 crystal clocks
duration is required.
The horizontal upscaling is supported via the input
formatter. According to the programming of the pixel clock
dividers (see Section 8.10), it will upsample the data
stream to 1 ×, 2 × or 4 × the input data rate. An optional
interpolation filter is available. The clock domain transition
is handled by a 4 entries wide FIFO which gets initialized
every field or explicitly at request. A bypass for the FIFO is
available, especially for high input data rates.
During reset (RESET = LOW) plus an extra 32 crystal
clock periods, FSVGC, VSVGC, CBO, HSVGC and
TTX_SRES are set to input mode and HSM_CSYNC and
VSM are set to 3-state. A reset also forces the I2C-bus
interface to abort any running bus transfer and sets it into
receive condition.
After reset, the state of the I/Os and other functions is
defined by the strapping pins until an I2C-bus access
redefines the corresponding registers; see Table 2.
8.3
RGB LUT
The three 256-byte RAMs of this block can be addressed
by three 8-bit wide signals, thus it can be used to build any
transformation, e.g. a gamma correction for RGB signals.
In the event that the indexed colour data is applied, the
RAMs are addressed in parallel.
Table 2 Strapping pins
PIN
TIED
PRESET
FSVGC (pin G1)
LOW NTSC M encoding, PIXCLK
fits to 640 × 480 graphics
input
The LUTs can either be loaded by an I2C-bus write access
or can be part of the pixel data input through the PD port.
In the latter case, 256 × 3 bytes for the R, G and B LUT are
expected at the beginning of the input video line, two lines
before the line that has been defined as first active line,
until the middle of the line immediately preceding the first
active line. The first 3 bytes represent the first RGB LUT
data, and so on.
HIGH PAL B/G encoding, PIXCLK
fits to 640 × 480 graphics
input
VSVGC (pin F1)
CBO (pin G3)
LOW 4 : 2 : 2 Y-CB-CR graphics
input (format 0)
HIGH 4 : 4 : 4 RGB graphics input
(format 3)
LOW input demultiplex phase:
LSB = LOW
8.4
Cursor insertion
A 32 × 32 dots cursor can be overlaid as an option; the bit
map of the cursor can be uploaded by an I2C-bus write
access to specific registers or in the pixel data input via the
PD port. In the latter case the 256 bytes defining the cursor
bit map (2 bits per pixel) are expected immediately
following the last RGB LUT data in the line preceding the
first active line.
HIGH input demultiplex phase:
LSB = HIGH
HSVGC (pin E3)
LOW input demultiplex phase:
MSB = LOW
HIGH input demultiplex phase:
MSB = HIGH
TTXRQ_XCLKO2 LOW slave (FSVGC, VSVGC and
The cursor bit map is set up as follows: each pixel
occupies 2 bits. The meaning of these bits depends on the
CMODE I2C-bus register as described in Table 5.
Transparent means that the input pixels are passed
through, the ‘cursor colours’ can be programmed in
separate registers.
(pin C4)
HSVGC are inputs, internal
colour bar is active)
HIGH master (FSVGC, VSVGC
and HSVGC are outputs)
8.2
Input formatter
The bit map is stored with 4 pixels per byte, aligned to the
least significant bit. So the first pixel is in bits 0 and 1, the
next pixel in bits 3 and 4 and so on. The first index is the
column, followed by the row; index 0,0 is the upper left
corner.
The input formatter converts all accepted PD input data
formats, either RGB or Y-CB-CR, to a common internal
RGB or Y-CB-CR data stream.
When double-edge clocking is used, the data is internally
split into portions PPD1 and PPD2. The clock edge
assignment must be set according to the I2C-bus control
bits SLOT and EDGE for correct operation.
2004 Jun 29
19
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 3 Layout of a byte in the cursor bit map
Table 5 Cursor modes
D7
pixel n + 3
D1 D0
D6
D5
pixel n + 2
D1 D0
D4
D3
pixel n + 1
D1 D0
D2
D1
D0
CURSOR MODE
CMODE = 0 CMODE = 1
second cursor colour second cursor colour
CURSOR
PATTERN
pixel n
D1
D0
00
01
10
11
first cursor colour
transparent
first cursor colour
transparent
For each direction, there are 2 registers controlling the
position of the cursor, one controls the position of the
‘hot spot’, the other register controls the insertion position.
The hot spot is the ‘tip’ of the pointer arrow. It can have any
position in the bit map. The actual position registers
describe the co-ordinates of the hot spot. Again 0,0 is the
upper left corner. While it is not possible to move the
hot spot beyond the left respectively upper screen border
this is perfectly legal for the right respectively lower border.
It should be noted that the cursor position is described
relative to the input resolution.
inverted input
auxiliary cursor
colour
8.5
RGB Y-CB-CR matrix
RGB input signals to be encoded to PAL or NTSC are
converted to the Y-CB-CR colour space in this block. The
colour difference signals are fed through low-pass filters
and formatted to a ITU-R BT.601 like 4 : 2 : 2 data stream
for further processing.
A gain adjust option corrects the level swing of the
graphics world (black-to-white as 0 to 255) to the required
range of 16 to 235.
Table 4 Cursor bit map
BYTE D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
0
1
2
row 0
column 3 column 2 column 1 column 0
row 0 row 0 row 0 row 0
column 7 column 6 column 5 column 4
row 0 row 0 row 0 row 0
column 11 column 10 column 9 column 8
row 0
row 0
row 0
The matrix and formatting blocks can be bypassed for
Y-CB-CR graphics input.
When the auxiliary VGA mode is selected, the output of the
cursor insertion block is immediately directed to the triple
DAC.
8.6
Horizontal scaler
...
6
...
...
...
...
row 0
row 0
row 0
row 0
The high quality horizontal scaler operates on the 4 : 2 : 2
data stream. Its control engines compensate the colour
phase offset automatically.
column 27 column 26 column 25 column 24
row 0 row 0 row 0 row 0
column 31 column 30 column 29 column 28
7
The scaler starts processing after a programmable
horizontal offset and continues with a number of input
pixels. Each input pixel is a programmable fraction of the
current output pixel (XINC/4096). A special case is
XINC = 0, this sets the scaling factor to 1.
...
...
...
...
...
254
row 31
row 31
row 31
row 31
column 27 column 26 column 25 column 24
row 31 row 31 row 31 row 31
column 31 column 30 column 29 column 28
255
If the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE input data is in
accordance with “ITU-R BT.656”, the scaler enters
another mode. In this event, XINC needs to be set to 2048
for a scaling factor of 1. With higher values, upscaling will
occur.
The phase resolution of the circuit is 12 bits, giving a
maximum offset of 0.2 after 800 input pixels. Small FIFOs
rearrange a 4 : 2 : 2 data stream at the scaler output.
2004 Jun 29
20
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
8.7
Vertical scaler and anti-flicker filter
8.10 Oscillator and Discrete Time Oscillator (DTO)
The functions scaling, Anti-Flicker Filter (AFF) and
re-interlacing are implemented in the vertical scaler.
The master clock generation is realized as a 27 MHz
crystal oscillator, which can operate with either a
fundamental wave crystal or a 3rd-harmonic crystal.
Besides the entire input frame, it receives the first and last
lines of the border to allow anti-flicker filtering.
The crystal clock supplies the DTO of the pixel clock
synthesizer, the video encoder and the I2C-bus control
block. It also usually supplies the triple DAC, with the
exception of the auxiliary VGA mode, where the triple DAC
is clocked by the pixel clock (PIXCLK).
The circuit generates the interlaced output fields by scaling
down the input frames with different offsets for odd and
even fields. Increasing the YSKIP setting reduces the
anti-flicker function. A YSKIP value of 4095 switches it off;
see Table 120.
The DTO can be programmed to synthesize all relevant
pixel clock frequencies between circa 40 and 85 MHz.
Two programmable dividers provide the actual clock to be
used externally and internally. The dividers can be
programmed to factors of 1, 2, 4 and 8. For the internal
pixel clock, a divider ratio of 8 makes no sense and is thus
forbidden.
An additional, programmable vertical filter supports the
anti-flicker function. This filter is not available at upscaling
factors of more than 2.
The programming is similar to the horizontal scaler. For the
re-interlacing, the resolutions of the offset registers are not
sufficient, so the weighting factors for the first lines can
also be adjusted. YINC = 0 sets the scaling factor to 1;
YIWGTO and YIWGTE must not be 0.
The internal clock can be switched completely to the pixel
clock input. In this event, the input FIFO is useless and will
be bypassed.
Due to the re-interlacing, the circuit can perform upscaling
by a maximum factor of 2. The maximum factor depends
on the setting of the anti-flicker function and can be derived
from the formulae given in Section 8.20.
The entire pixel clock generation can be locked to the
vertical frequency. Both pixel clock dividers get
re-initialized every field. Optionally, the DTO can be
cleared with each V-sync. At proper programming, this will
make the pixel clock frequency a precise multiple of the
vertical and horizontal frequencies. This is required for
some graphic controllers.
An additional upscaling mode enables the upscaling factor
to be increased to a maximum of 4 as it is required for the
old VGA modes like 320 × 240.
8.8
FIFO
8.11 Low-pass Clock Generation Circuit (CGC)
The FIFO acts as a buffer to translate from the PIXCLK
clock domain to the XTAL clock domain. The write clock is
PIXCLK and the read clock is XTAL. An underflow or
overflow condition can be detected via the I2C-bus read
access.
This block reduces the phase jitter of the synthesized pixel
clock. It works as a tracking filter for all relevant
synthesized pixel clock frequencies.
8.12 Encoder
In order to avoid underflows and overflows, it is essential
that the frequency of the synthesized PIXCLK matches to
the input graphics resolution and the desired scaling
factor.
8.12.1 VIDEO PATH
The encoder generates luminance and colour subcarrier
output signals from the Y, CB and CR baseband signals,
which are suitable for use as CVBS or separate Y and C
signals.
8.9
Border generator
Input to the encoder, at 27 MHz clock (e.g. DVD), is either
originated from computer graphics at pixel clock, fed
through the FIFO and border generator, or a ITU-R BT.656
style signal.
When the graphics picture is to be displayed as interlaced
PAL, NTSC, S-video or RGB on a TV screen, it is desired
in many cases not to lose picture information due to the
inherent overscanning of a TV set. The desired amount of
underscan area, which is achieved through appropriate
scaling in the vertical and horizontal direction, can be filled
in the border generator with an arbitrary true colour tint.
Luminance is modified in gain and in offset (the offset is
programmable in a certain range to enable different black
level set-ups). A blanking level can be set after insertion of
a fixed synchronization pulse tip level, in accordance with
standard composite synchronization schemes.
2004 Jun 29
21
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Other manipulations used for the Macrovision anti-taping
process, such as additional insertion of AGC super-white
pulses (programmable in height), are supported by the
SAA7108AE only.
8.12.3 VIDEO PROGRAMMING SYSTEM (VPS) ENCODING
Five bytes of VPS information can be loaded via the
I2C-bus and will be encoded in the appropriate format into
line 16.
To enable easy analog post filtering, luminance is
interpolated from a 13.5 MHz data rate to a 27 MHz data
rate, thereby providing luminance in a 10-bit resolution.
The transfer characteristics of the luminance interpolation
filter are illustrated in Figs 7 and 8. Appropriate transients
at start/end of active video and for synchronization pulses
are ensured.
8.12.4 CLOSED CAPTION ENCODER
Using this circuit, data in accordance with the specification
of Closed Caption or extended data service, delivered by
the control interface, can be encoded (line 21). Two
dedicated pairs of bytes (two bytes per field), each pair
preceded by run-in clocks and framing code, are possible.
Chrominance is modified in gain (programmable
separately for CB and CR), and a standard dependent
burst is inserted, before baseband colour signals are
interpolated from a 6.75 MHz data rate to a 27 MHz data
rate. One of the interpolation stages can be bypassed,
thus providing a higher colour bandwidth, which can be
used for the Y and C output. The transfer characteristics of
the chrominance interpolation filter are illustrated in
Figs 5 and 6.
The actual line number in which data is to be encoded, can
be modified in a certain range.
The data clock frequency is in accordance with the
definition for NTSC M standard 32 times horizontal line
frequency.
Data LOW at the output of the DACs corresponds to 0 IRE,
data HIGH at the output of the DACs corresponds to
approximately 50 IRE.
The amplitude (beginning and ending) of the inserted
burst, is programmable in a certain range that is suitable
for standard signals and for special effects. After the
succeeding quadrature modulator, colour is provided on
the subcarrier in 10-bit resolution.
It is also possible to encode Closed Caption data for 50 Hz
field frequencies at 32 times the horizontal line frequency.
8.12.5 ANTI-TAPING (SAA7108AE ONLY)
For more information contact your nearest Philips
Semiconductors sales office.
The numeric ratio between the Y and C outputs is in
accordance with the standards.
8.13 RGB processor
8.12.2 TELETEXT INSERTION AND ENCODING (NOT
SIMULTANEOUSLY WITH REAL-TIME CONTROL)
This block contains a dematrix in order to produce RED,
GREEN and BLUE signals to be fed to a SCART plug.
Pin TTX_SRES receives a WST or NABTS teletext
bitstream sampled at the crystal clock. At each rising edge
of the output signal (TTXRQ) a single teletext bit has to be
provided after a programmable delay at input pin
TTX_SRES.
Before Y, CB and CR signals are de-matrixed, individual
gain adjustment for Y and colour difference signals and
2 times oversampling for luminance and 4 times
oversampling for colour difference signals is performed.
The transfer curves of luminance and colour difference
components of RGB are illustrated in Figs 9 and 10.
Phase variant interpolation is achieved on this bitstream in
the internal teletext encoder, providing sufficient small
phase jitter on the output text lines.
8.14 Triple DAC
TTXRQ_XCLKO2 provides a fully programmable request
signal to the teletext source, indicating the insertion period
of bitstream at lines which can be selected independently
for both fields. The internal insertion window for text is set
to 360 (PAL WST), 296 (NTSC WST) or 288 (NABTS)
teletext bits including clock run-in bits. The protocol and
timing are illustrated in Fig.51.
Both Y and C signals are converted from digital-to-analog
in a 10-bit resolution at the output of the video encoder.
Y and C signals are also combined into a 10-bit CVBS
signal.
The CVBS output signal occurs with the same processing
delay as the Y, C and optional RGB or CR-Y-CB outputs.
Absolute amplitude at the input of the DAC for CVBS is
Alternatively, this pin can be provided with a buffered
crystal clock (XCLK) of 13.5 MHz.
reduced by 15
maximum use of the conversion ranges.
⁄16 with respect to Y and C DACs to make
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
RED, GREEN and BLUE signals are also converted from
digital-to-analog, each providing a 10-bit resolution.
Alternatively, the device can be triggered by auxiliary
codes in a ITU-R BT.656 data stream via PD7 to PD0.
The reference currents of all three DACs can be adjusted
individually in order to adapt for different output signals.
In addition, all reference currents can be adjusted
commonly to compensate for small tolerances of the
on-chip band gap reference voltage.
Only vertical frequencies of 50 and 60 Hz are allowed with
the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE. In slave mode, it is not
possible to lock the encoders colour carrier to the line
frequency with the PHRES bits.
In the (more common) master mode, the time base of the
circuit is continuously free-running. The IC can output a
frame sync at pin FSVGC, a vertical sync at pin VSVGC, a
horizontal sync at pin HSVGC and a composite blanking
signal at pin CBO. All of these signals are defined in the
PIXCLK domain. The duration of HSVGC and VSVGC are
fixed, they are 64 clocks for HSVGC and 1 line for VSVGC.
The leading slopes are in phase and the polarities can be
programmed.
Alternatively, all currents can be switched off to reduce
power dissipation.
All three outputs can be used to sense for an external load
(usually 75 Ω) during a pre-defined output. A flag in the
I2C-bus status byte reflects whether a load is applied or
not. An automatic sense mode can also be activated,
which will immediately indicate any 75 Ω load at any of the
three outputs at the dedicated interrupt pin TVD.
The input line length can be programmed. The field length
is always derived from the field length of the encoder and
the pixel clock frequency that is being used.
If the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is required to drive a
second (auxiliary) VGA monitor or an HDTV set, the DACs
receive the signal coming from the HD data path. In this
event, the DACs are clocked at the incoming PIXCLKI
instead of the 27 MHz crystal clock used in the video
encoder.
CBO acts as a data request signal. The circuit accepts
input data at a programmable number of clocks after CBO
goes active. This signal is programmable and it is possible
to adjust the following (see Figs 49 and 50):
8.15 HD data path
• The horizontal offset
This data path enables the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE to
be used with VGA or HDTV monitors. It receives its data
directly from the cursor generator and supports RGB and
Y-PB-PR output formats (RGB not with Y-PB-PR input
formats). No scaling is done in this mode.
• The length of the active part of the line
• The distance from active start to first expected data
• The vertical offset separately for odd and even fields
• The number of lines per input field.
A gain adjustment either leads the full level swing to the
digital-to-analog converters or reduces the amplitude by a
factor of 0.69. This enables sync pulses to be added to the
signal as it is required for display units that require signals
with sync pulses, either regular or 3-level syncs.
In most cases, the vertical offsets for odd and even fields
are equal. If they are not, then the even field will start later.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE will also request the first
input lines in the even field, the total number of requested
lines will increase by the difference of the offsets.
As stated above, the circuit can be programmed to accept
the look-up and cursor data in the first 2 lines of each field.
The timing generator provides normal data request pulses
for these lines; the duration is the same as for regular lines.
The additional request pulses will be suppressed with
LUTL set to logic 0; see Table 143. The other vertical
timings do not change in this case, so the first active line
can be number 2, counted from 0.
8.16 Timing generator
The synchronization of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is
able to operate in two modes; slave mode and master
mode.
In slave mode, the circuit accepts sync pulses on the
bidirectional FSVGC (frame sync), VSVGC (vertical sync)
and HSVGC (horizontal sync) pins: the polarities of the
signals can be programmed. The frame sync signal is only
necessary when the input signal is interlaced, in other
cases it may be omitted. If the frame sync signal is present,
it is possible to derive the vertical and the horizontal phase
from it by setting the HFS and VFS bits. HSVGC and
VSVGC are not necessary in this case, so it is possible to
switch the pins to output mode.
2004 Jun 29
23
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
8.17 Pattern generator for HD sync pulses
Each index of this table points to a particular line of the
next table in the linked list. This table is called the line
pattern array and each of the up to seven entries stores up
to four pairs of a duration in pixel clock cycles and an index
to a value table. The table entries are used to define
portions of a line representing a certain value for a certain
number of clock cycles.
The pattern generator provides an appropriate
synchronization pattern for the video data path in auxiliary
monitor or HDTV mode, respectively. It provides maximum
flexibility in terms of raster generation for all interlaced and
non-interlaced computer graphics or ATSC formats. The
sync engine is capable of providing a combination of
event-value pairs which can be used to insert certain
values at specified times in the outgoing data stream. It
can also be used to generate digital signals associated
with time events. They can be used as digital horizontal
and vertical synchronization signals on pins HSM_CSYNC
and VSM.
The value specified in this table is actually another 3-bit
index into a value array which can hold up to eight 8-bit
values. If bit 4 (MSB) of the index is logic 1, the value is
inserted into the G or Y signal only; if bit 4 = 0, the
associated value is inserted into all three signals.
Two additional bits of the entries in the value array (LSBs
of the second byte) determine if the associated events
appear as a digital pulse on the HSM_CSYNC and/or VSM
outputs.
The picture position is adjustable through the
programmable relationship between the sync pulses and
the video contents.
The generation of embedded analog sync pulses is bound
to a number of events which can be defined for a line.
Several of these line timing definitions can exist in parallel.
For the final sync raster composition a certain sequence of
lines with different sync event properties has to be defined.
The sequence specifies a series of line types and the
number of occurrences of this specific line type. After the
sequence has been completed, it restarts from the
beginning. All pulse shapes are filtered internally in order
to avoid ringing after analog post filters.
To ease the trigger set-up for the sync generation module,
a set of registers is provided to set up the screen raster
defined as width and height. A trigger position can be
specified as an x, y co-ordinate within the overall
dimensions of the screen raster. If the x, y counter
matches the specified co-ordinates, a trigger pulse is
generated which pre-loads the tables with their initial
values.
Table 6 outlines an example on how to set up the sync
tables for a 1080i HD raster.
The sequence of the generated pulse stream must fit
precisely to the incoming data stream in terms of the total
number of pixels per line and lines per frame.
Important note:
Due to a problem in the programming interface, writing to
the line pattern array (address D2) might destroy the data
of the line type array (address D1). A work around is to
write the line pattern array data before writing the line type
array. Reading of the arrays is possible but all address
pointers must be initialized before the next write operation.
The sync engines flexibility is achieved by using a
sequence of linked lists carrying the properties for the
image, the lines as well as fractions of lines. Figure 11
illustrates the context between the various tables.
The first table serves as an array to hold the correct
sequence of lines composing the synchronization raster. It
can contain up to 16 entries. Each entry holds a 4-bit index
to the next table and a 10-bit counter value which specifies
how often this particular line is invoked. If the necessary
line count for a particular line exceeds the 10 bits, it has to
use two table entries.
The 4-bit index in the line count array points to the line type
array. It holds up to 15 entries where, index 0 is not used,
index 1 points to the first entry, index 2 to the second entry
of the line type array etc.
Each entry of the line type array can hold up to 8 index
pointers to another table. These indices point to portions of
a line pulse pattern: A line could be split up e.g. into a sync,
a blank, and an active portion followed by another blank
portion, occupying four entries in one table line.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
4-bit line type index
10-bit line count
line
count
pointer
LINE COUNT ARRAY
16 entries
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
line type pointer
LINE TYPE ARRAY
15 entries
pattern pointer
3
3
3
3
event type pointer
10-bit duration
10-bit duration
10-bit duration
10-bit duration
4-bit value index 4-bit value index 4-bit value index 4-bit value index
LINE PATTERN ARRAY
7 entries
8 + 2-bit value
VALUE ARRAY
8 entries
line pattern pointer
MBL797
Fig.11 Context between the pattern generator tables for DH sync pulses.
2004 Jun 29
25
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 6 Example for set-up of the sync tables
SEQUENCE
COMMENT
Write to subaddress D0H
00
points to first entry of line count array (index 0)
05 20
generate 5 lines of line type index 2 (remember, it is the second entry of the line type
array); will be the first vertical raster pulse
01 40
generate 1 line of line type index 4; will be sync-black-sync-black sequence after the first
vertical pulse
0E 60
1C 12
02 60
01 50
generate 14 lines of line type index 6; will be the following lines with sync-black sequence
generate 540 lines of line type index 1; will be lines with sync and active video
generate 2 lines of line type index 6; will be the following lines with sync-black sequence
generate 1 line of line type index 5; will be the following line (line 563) with
sync-black-sync-black-null sequence (null is equivalent to sync tip)
04 20
01 30
generate 4 lines of line type index 2; will be the second vertical raster pulse
generate 1 line of line type index 3; will be the following line with sync-null-sync-black
sequence
0F 60
1C 12
02 60
generate 15 lines of line type index 6; will be the following lines with sync-black sequence
generate 540 lines of line type index 1; will be lines with sync and active video
generate 2 lines of line type index 6; will be the following lines with sync-black sequence;
now, 1125 lines are defined
Write to subaddress D2H (insertion is done into all three analog output signals)
00 points to first entry of line pattern array (index 1)
6F 33 2B 30 00 00 00 00 880 × value(3) + 44 × value(3); (subtract 1 from real duration)
6F 43 2B 30 00 00 00 00 880 × value(4) + 44 × value(3)
3B 30 BF 03 BF 03 2B 30 60 × value(3) + 960 × value(0) + 960 × value(0) + 44 × value(3)
2B 10 2B 20 57 30 00 00 44 × value(1) + 44 × value(2) + 88 × value(3)
3B 30 BF 33 BF 33 2B 30 60 × value(3) + 960 × value(3) + 960 × value(3) + 44 × value(3)
Write to subaddress D1H
00
points to first entry of line type array (index 1)
34 00 00 00
24 24 00 00
24 14 00 00
14 14 00 00
14 24 00 00
54 00 00 00
use pattern entries 4 and 3 in this sequence (for sync and active video)
use pattern entries 4, 2, 4 and 2 in this sequence (for 2 × sync-black-null-black)
use pattern entries 4, 2, 4 and 1 in this sequence (for sync-black-null-black-null)
use pattern entries 4, 1, 4 and 1 in this sequence (for sync-black-sync-black)
use pattern entries 4, 1, 4 and 2 in this sequence (for sync-black-sync-black-null)
use pattern entries 4 and 5 in this sequence (for sync-black)
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SEQUENCE
COMMENT
Write to subaddress D3H (no signals are directed to pins HSM_CSYNC and VSM)
00
points to first entry of value array (index 0)
black level, to be added during active video
sync level LOW (minimum output voltage)
sync level HIGH (3-level sync)
CC 00
80 00
0A 00
CC 00
80 00
black level (needed elsewhere)
null (identical with sync level LOW)
Write to subaddress DCH
0B
insertion is active, gain for signal is adapted accordingly
8.18 I2C-bus interface
So in most cases, DOWNA and DOWND should be set to
logic 1 simultaneously. If the EIDIV bit is logic 1, it should
be set to logic 0 before power-down.
The I2C-bus interface is a standard slave transceiver,
supporting 7-bit slave addresses and 400 kbits/s
guaranteed transfer rate. It uses 8-bit subaddressing with
an auto-increment function. All registers are read and
write, except two read only status bytes.
8.20 Programming the graphics acquisition scaler
of the video encoder
The encoder section needs to provide a continuous data
stream at its analog outputs as well as receive a
continuous stream from its data source. Due to the fact
that there is no frame memory isolating the data streams,
restrictions apply to the input frame timings.
The register bit map consists of an RGB Look-Up Table
(LUT), a cursor bit map and control registers. The LUT
contains three banks of 256 bytes, where each RGB triplet
is assigned to one address. Thus a write access needs the
LUT address and three data bytes following subaddress
FFH. For further write access auto-incrementing of the
LUT address is performed. The cursor bit map access is
similar to the LUT access but contains only a single byte
per address.
Input and output processing of the encoder section are
only coupled through the vertical frequencies. In master
mode, the encoder provides a vertical sync and an
odd/even pulse to the input processing, in slave mode, the
encoder receives them.
The I2C-bus slave address is defined as 88H.
The parameters of the input field are mainly given by the
memory capacity of the encoder section. The rule is that
the scaler and thus the input processing needs to provide
the video data in the same time frames as the encoder
reads them. So the vertical active video times (and the
vertical frequencies) need to be the same.
8.19 Power-down modes
In order to reduce the power consumption, the
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE supports 2 Power-down
modes, accessible via the I2C-bus. The analog
Power-down mode (DOWNA = 1) turns off the
digital-to-analog converters and the pixel clock
synthesizer. The digital down mode turns off all internal
clocks and sets the digital outputs to LOW except the
I2C-bus interface. The IC retains its programming and can
still be accessed in this mode, but not all registers can be
read from or written to. Reading or writing to the look-up
tables, the cursor and the HD sync generator require a
valid pixel clock. The typical supply current in full
power-down is approximately 5 mA.
The second rule is that there has to be data in the buffer
FIFO when the encoder enters the active video area.
So the vertical offset in the input path needs to be a bit
shorter than the offset of the encoder.
The following gives the set of equations required to
program the IC for the most common application: A post
processor in master mode with non-interlaced video input
data.
Due to the fact that the analog Power-down mode turns off
the pixel clock synthesizer, there are limitations in some
applications. If there is no pixel clock, the IC is not able to
set its outputs to LOW.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Some variables are defined below:
262.5 × 1716 × TXclk
Thus: TPclk =
(60 Hz)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
InLin + 2
• InPix: the number of active pixels per input line
• InPpl: the length of the entire input line in pixel clocks
• InLin: the number of active lines per input field/frame
• TPclk: the pixel clock period
InPpl × integer
× 262.5
----------------------
OutLin
312.5 × 1728 × TXclk
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
InLin + 2
TPclk =
(50 Hz)
InPpl × integer
× 312.5
----------------------
OutLin
• RiePclk: the ratio of internal to external pixel clock
• OutPix: the number of active pixels per output line
• OutLin: the number of active lines per output field
• TXclk: the encoder clock period (37.037 ns).
and for the pixel clock generator
TXclk
PCL =
× 220 + PCLE (all frequencies);
--------------
TPclk
see Tables 102, 104 and 105. The divider PCLE should
be set according to Table 104. PCLI may be set to a lower
or the same value. Setting a lower value means that the
internal pixel clock is higher and the data get sampled up.
The difference may be 1 at 640 × 480 pixels resolution and
2 at resolutions with 320 pixels per line as a rule of thumb.
This allows horizontal upscaling by a maximum factor of 2
respectively 4 (this is the parameter RiePclk).
8.20.1 TV DISPLAY WINDOW
At 60 Hz, the first visible pixel has the index 256,
710 pixels can be encoded; at 50 Hz, the index is 284,
702 pixels can be visible.
The output lines should be centred on the screen. It should
be noted that the encoder has 2 clocks per pixel;
see Table 93.
logRiePclk
PCLI = PCLE –
(all frequencies)
----------------------------
log2
ADWHS = 256 + 710 − OutPix (60 Hz);
ADWHS = 284 + 702 − OutPix (50 Hz);
ADWHE = ADWHS + OutPix × 2 (all frequencies)
The equations ensure that the last line of the field has the
full number of clock cycles. Many graphic controllers
require this. Note that the bit PCLSY needs to be set to
ensure that there is not even a fraction of a clock left at the
end of the field.
For vertical, the procedure is the same. At 60 Hz, the first
line with video information is number 19, 240 lines can be
active. For 50 Hz, the numbers are 23 and 287;
see Table 99.
8.20.3 HORIZONTAL SCALER
240 – OutLin
XOFS can be chosen arbitrarily, the condition being that
XOFS + XPIX ≤ HLEN is fulfilled. Values given by the
VESA display timings are preferred.
FAL = 19 +
FAL = 23 +
(60 Hz);
(50 Hz);
---------------------------------
2
287 – OutLin
---------------------------------
2
HLEN = InPpl × RiePclk − 1
LAL = FAL + OutLin (all frequencies)
InPix
2
XPIX =
XINC =
× RiePclk
------------
Most TV sets use overscan, and not all pixels respectively
lines are visible. There is no standard for the factor, it is
highly recommended to make the number of output pixels
and lines adjustable. A reasonable underscan factor is
10 %, giving approximately 640 output pixels per line.
OutPix
4096
×
----------------- -------------------
InPix RiePclk
XINC needs to be rounded up, it needs to be set to 0 for a
scaling factor of 1.
8.20.2 INPUT FRAME AND PIXEL CLOCK
8.20.4 VERTICAL SCALER
The total number of pixel clocks per line and the input
horizontal offset need to be chosen next. The only
constraint is that the horizontal blanking has at least
10 clock pulses.
The input vertical offset can be taken from the assumption
that the scaler should have just finished writing the first line
when the encoder starts reading it:
FAL × 1716 × TXclk
YOFS =
YOFS =
– 2.5 (60 Hz)
– 2.5 (50 Hz)
----------------------------------------------------
The required pixel clock frequency can be determined in
the following way: Due to the limited internal FIFO size, the
input path has to provide all pixels in the same time frame
as the encoders vertical active time. The scaler also has to
process the first and last border lines for the anti-flicker
function.
InPpl × TPclk
FAL × 1728 × TXclk
----------------------------------------------------
InPpl × TPclk
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
In most cases the vertical offsets will be the same for odd
and even fields. The results should be rounded down.
For C and CVBS outputs, deviating amplitudes of the
colour difference signals can be compensated for by
independent gain control setting, while gain for luminance
is set to predefined values, distinguishable for 7.5 IRE
set-up or without set-up.
YPIX = InLin
YSKIP defines the anti-flicker function. 0 means maximum
flicker reduction but minimum vertical bandwidth, 4095
gives no flicker reduction and maximum bandwidth. Note
that the maximum value for YINC is 4095. It might be
necessary to reduce the value of YSKIP to fulfil this
requirement.
The RGB, respectively CR-Y-CB path features an
individual gain setting for luminance (GY) and colour
difference signals (GCD). Reference levels are measured
with a colour bar, 100 % white, 100 % amplitude and
100 % saturation.
OutLin
----------------------
InLin + 2
YSKIP
-----------------
4095
The encoder section of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE has
special input cells for the VGC port. They operate at a
wider supply voltage range and have a strict input
threshold at 1/2VDD(DVO). To achieve full speed of these
cells, the EIDIV bit needs to be set to logic 1. In this case
the impedance of these cells is approximately 6 kΩ. This
may cause trouble with the bootstrapping pins of some
graphic chips. So the power-on reset forces the bit to
logic 0, the input impedance is regular in this mode.
YINC =
× 1 +
× 4096
YINC
2
YIWGTO =
YIWGTE =
+ 2048
-------------
YINC – YSKIP
-------------------------------------
2
When YINC = 0 it sets the scaler to scaling factor 1. The
initial weighting factors must not be set to 0 in this case.
YIWGTE may go negative. In this event, YINC should be
added and YOFSE incremented. This can be repeated as
often as necessary to make YIWGTE positive.
Table 7 “ITU-R BT.601” signal component levels
SIGNALS(1)
COLOUR
Note that these equations assume that the input is
non-interlaced while the output is interlaced. If the input is
interlaced, the initial weighting factors need to be adapted
to get the proper phase offsets in the output frame.
Y
CB
235 128 128 235 235 235
210 16 146 235 235 16
170 166 235 235
145 54
CR
R
G
B
White
Yellow
Cyan
16
34
16
16
If vertical upscaling beyond the upper capabilities is
required, the parameter YUPSC may be set to 1. This
extends the maximum vertical scaling factor by a factor 2.
Only the parameter YINC gets affected, it needs to be
divided by 2 to get the same effect.
Green
Magenta
Red
235
16
16
16
16
16
235
16
106 202 222 235
81
41
16
90
240 235
Blue
240 110
128 128
16
16
235
16
There are restrictions in this mode:
Black
• The vertical filter YFILT is not available in this mode; the
circuit will ignore this value
Note
• The horizontal blanking needs to be long enough to
transfer an output line between 2 memory locations.
This is 710 internal pixel clocks
1. Transformation:
a) R = Y + 1.3707 × (CR − 128)
b) G = Y − 0.3365 × (CB − 128) − 0.6982 × (CR − 128)
c) B = Y + 1.7324 × (CB − 128).
Or the upscaling factor needs to be limited to 1.5 and the
horizontal upscaling factor is also limited to less than
1.5. In this case a normal blanking length is sufficient.
8.21 Input levels and formats
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE accepts digital Y, CB, CR
or RGB data with levels (digital codes) in accordance with
“ITU-R BT.601”. An optional gain adjustment also allows
data to be accepted with the full level swing of 0 to 255.
2004 Jun 29
29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 8 Usage of bits SLOTand EDGE
Table 10 Pin assignment for input format 1
5 + 5 + 5-BIT 4 : 4 : 4 NON-INTERLACED RGB
DATA SLOT CONTROL
(EXAMPLE FOR FORMAT 0)
FALLING
CLOCK EDGE
RISING
CLOCK EDGE
PIN
SLOT EDGE
1st DATA
2nd DATA
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
at rising edge
G3/Y3
at falling edge
R7/CR7
PD7
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
G2
G1
G0
B4
B3
B2
B1
B0
X
R4
R3
R2
R1
R0
G4
G3
at falling edge
G3/Y3
at rising edge
R7/CR7
at rising edge
R7/CR7
at falling edge
G3/Y3
at falling edge
R7/CR7
at rising edge
G3/Y3
Table 9 Pin assignment for input format 0
Table 11 Pin assignment for input format 2
8 + 8 + 8-BIT 4 : 4 : 4 NON-INTERLACED
RGB/CB-Y-CR
5 + 6 + 5-BIT 4 : 4 : 4 NON-INTERLACED RGB
FALLING
CLOCK EDGE
RISING
CLOCK EDGE
FALLING
CLOCK EDGE
RISING
CLOCK EDGE
PIN
PIN
PD11
PD10
PD9
PD8
PD7
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
G3/Y3
G2/Y2
R7/CR7
R6/CR6
R5/CR5
R4/CR4
R3/CR3
R2/CR2
R1/CR1
R0/CR0
G7/Y7
PD7
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
G2
G1
G0
B4
B3
B2
B1
B0
R4
R3
R2
R1
R0
G5
G4
G3
G1/Y1
G0/Y0
B7/CB7
B6/CB6
B5/CB5
B4/CB4
B3/CB3
B2/CB2
B1/CB1
B0/CB0
Table 12 Pin assignment for input format 3
8 + 8 + 8-BIT 4 : 2 : 2 NON-INTERLACED CB-Y-CR
FALLING RISING FALLING RISING
G6/Y6
G5/Y5
G4/Y4
CLOCK
EDGE
n
CLOCK
EDGE
n
CLOCK
EDGE
n + 1
CLOCK
EDGE
n + 1
PIN
PD7
CB7(0)
CB6(0)
CB5(0)
CB4(0)
CB3(0)
CB2(0)
CB1(0)
CB0(0)
Y7(0)
Y6(0)
Y5(0)
Y4(0)
Y3(0)
Y2(0)
Y1(0)
Y0(0)
CR7(0)
CR6(0)
CR5(0)
CR4(0)
CR3(0)
CR2(0)
CR1(0)
CR0(0)
Y7(1)
Y6(1)
Y5(1)
Y4(1)
Y3(1)
Y2(1)
Y1(1)
Y0(1)
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
2004 Jun 29
30
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 13 Pin assignment for input format 4
Table 15 Pin assignment for input format 6
8 + 8 + 8-BIT 4 : 2 : 2 INTERLACED CB-Y-CR
(ITU-R BT.656, 27 MHz CLOCK)
8 + 8 + 8-BIT 4 : 4 : 4 NON-INTERLACED
RGB/CB-Y-CR
RISING
CLOCK
EDGE
n
RISING
CLOCK
EDGE
n + 1
RISING
CLOCK
EDGE
n + 2
RISING
CLOCK
EDGE
n + 3
FALLING
CLOCK EDGE
RISING
CLOCK EDGE
PIN
PIN
PD11
PD10
PD9
PD8
PD7
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
G4/Y4
G3/Y3
R7/CR7
R6/CR6
R5/CR5
R4/CR4
R3/CR3
G7/Y7
PD7
CB7(0)
CB6(0)
CB5(0)
CB4(0)
CB3(0)
CB2(0)
CB1(0)
CB0(0)
Y7(0)
Y6(0)
Y5(0)
Y4(0)
Y3(0)
Y2(0)
Y1(0)
Y0(0)
CR7(0)
CR6(0)
CR5(0)
CR4(0)
CR3(0)
CR2(0)
CR1(0)
CR0(0)
Y7(1)
Y6(1)
Y5(1)
Y4(1)
Y3(1)
Y2(1)
Y1(1)
Y0(1)
G2/Y2
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
B7/CB7
B6/CB6
B5/CB5
B4/CB4
B3/CB3
G0/Y0
G6/Y6
G5/Y5
R2/CR2
R1/CR1
R0/CR0
G1/Y1
B2/CB2
B1/CB1
B0/CB0
Table 14 Pin assignment for input format 5; note 1
8-BIT NON-INTERLACED INDEX COLOUR
FALLING
CLOCK EDGE
RISING
CLOCK EDGE
PIN
PD11
PD10
PD9
PD8
PD7
PD6
PD5
PD4
PD3
PD2
PD1
PD0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
INDEX7
INDEX6
INDEX5
INDEX4
INDEX3
INDEX2
INDEX1
INDEX0
Note
1. X = don’t care.
2004 Jun 29
31
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
Decoder
9.1
9.1.1
ANALOG INPUT PROCESSING
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE offers six analog signal inputs, two analog main channels with source switch, clamp
circuit, analog amplifier, anti-alias filter and video 9-bit CMOS ADC; see Fig.15.
9.1.2
ANALOG CONTROL CIRCUITS
The anti-alias filters are adapted to the line-locked clock frequency via a filter control circuit. The characteristics are
illustrated in Fig.12. During the vertical blanking period, gain and clamping control is frozen.
MGD138
6
V
(dB)
0
−6
−12
−18
−24
−30
−36
−42
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
f (MHz)
Fig.12 Anti-alias filter.
2004 Jun 29
32
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.1.2.1
Clamping
The AGC (automatic gain control for luminance) is used to
amplify a CVBS or Y signal to the required signal
amplitude, which is matched to the ADCs input voltage
range. The AGC active time is the sync bottom of the video
signal.
The clamping control circuit controls the correct clamping
of the analog input signals. A coupling capacitor is used to
store and filter the clamping voltage. An internal digital
clamp comparator generates the information with respect
to clamp-up or clamp-down. The clamping levels for the
two ADC channels are fixed for luminance (60) and
chrominance (128). Clamping time in normal use is set
with the HCL pulse at the back porch of the video signal.
Signal (white) peak control limits the gain at signal
overshoots. The influence of supply voltage variation
within the specified range is automatically eliminated by
clamping and automatic gain control. The flow charts show
more details of the AGC; see Figs 16 and 17.
9.1.2.2
Gain control
The gain control circuit receives (via the I2C-bus) the static
gain levels for the two analog amplifiers, or controls one of
these amplifiers automatically via a built-in Automatic Gain
Control (AGC) as part of the Analog Input Control (AICO).
TV line
analog line blanking
controlled
ADC input level
analog input level
255
maximum
+3 dB
GAIN
HSY
CLAMP
HCL
0 dB
range 9 dB
0 dB
60
1
(1 V (p-p) 18/56 Ω)
−6 dB
minimum
MGL065
MHB325
Fig.13 Analog line with clamp (HCL) and gain
range (HSY).
Fig.14 Automatic gain range.
2004 Jun 29
33
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a
TEST
SELECTOR
AND
M10
AOUT
BUFFER
P6
P7
AI24
AI23
[
]
AOSL 1:0
SOURCE
SWITCH
P8
AI2D
ANALOG
AMPLIFIER
DAC9
CLAMP
CIRCUIT
ANTI-ALIAS
FILTER
BYPASS
SWITCH
P9
ADC2
ADC1
AI22
AI21
P10
[
]
FUSE 1:0
P11
P12
P13
AI12
AI1D
AI11
ANALOG
AMPLIFIER
DAC9
CLAMP
CIRCUIT
ANTI-ALIAS
FILTER
BYPASS
SWITCH
SOURCE
SWITCH
[
]
FUSE 1:0
VERTICAL
BLANKING
CONTROL
MODE
CONTROL
CLAMP
CONTROL
GAIN
CONTROL
ANTI-ALIAS
CONTROL
HCL
VBLNK
SVREF
GLIMB HSY
GLIMT
WIPA
VBSL
HOLDG
GAFIX
WPOFF
MODE3
MODE2
MODE1
MODE0
9
9
[
]
]
]
SLTCA
GUDL 1:0
[
GAI 28:20
ANALOG CONTROL
[
GAI 18:10
HLNRS
UPTCV
CROSS MULTIPLEXER
9
9
9
9
MHB892
AD2BYP AD1BYP
CVBS/LUM CVBS/CHR
Fig.15 Analog input processing using the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE as differential front-end with 9-bit ADC.
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
ANALOG INPUT
AMPLIFIER
9
gain
DAC
ANTI-ALIAS FILTER
ADC
9
LUMA/CHROMA DECODER
1
0
NO ACTION
VBLK
1
0
HOLDG
1
0
X
1
0
HSY
0
1
>
254
0
1
1
0
1
0
<
<
>
254
4
1
X = 1
X = 0
1
0
>
248
+/− 0
+1/L
+1/F
+1/LLC2 −1/LLC2
−1/LLC2
STOP
GAIN ACCUMULATOR (18 BITS)
[
]
ACTUAL GAIN VALUE 9-BIT (AGV) −3/+6 dB
1
0
X
1
0
HSY
1
0
Y
AGV
UPDATE
FGV
X = system variable.
GAIN VALUE 9-BIT
Y = (IAGV − FGVI) > GUDL.
VBLK = vertical blanking pulse.
HSY = horizontal sync pulse.
AGV = actual gain value.
MHB531
FGV = frozen gain value.
Fig.16 Gain flow chart.
35
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
ANALOG INPUT
ADC
1
0
NO BLANKING ACTIVE
VBLK
<- CLAMP
GAIN ->
1
1
0
0
HCL
HSY
0
1
1
0
1
0
CLL
SBOT
WIPE
slow + GAIN
NO CLAMP
+ CLAMP
− CLAMP
fast − GAIN
+ GAIN
− GAIN
MGC647
WIPE = white peak level (254).
SBOT = sync bottom level (1).
CLL = clamp level [60 Y (128 C)].
HSY = horizontal sync pulse.
HCL = horizontal clamp pulse.
Fig.17 Clamp and gain flow.
2004 Jun 29
36
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CVBS-IN
or Y-IN
Y
DELAY
COMPENSATION
LUMINANCE-PEAKING
OR
SUBTRACTOR
LDEL
Y/CVBS
YCOMB
LOW-PASS,
CHR
UV
Y-DELAY ADJUSTMENT
[
]
]
]
DBRI 7:0
[
DCON 7:0
QUADRATURE
MODULATOR
INTERPOLATION
LOW-PASS 3
[
DSAT 7:0
[
]
]
RAWG 7:0
[
]
]
LUFI 3:0
SET_RAW
SET_VBI
[
RAWO 7:0
[
CSTD 2:0
COLO
[
]
YDEL 2:0
LUBW UV
CVBS-IN
or CHR-IN
QUADRATURE
DEMODULATOR
LOW-PASS 1
DOWNSAMPLING
ADAPTIVE
COMB FILTER
BRIGHTNESS
CONTRAST
SATURATION
CONTROL
UV
LOW-PASS 2
CHBW
Y-OUT/
CVBS-OUT
UV-OUT
CCOMB
YCOMB
LDEL
SET_RAW
SET_VBI
[
]
LCBW 2:0
SUBCARRIER
GENERATION 2
RAW DATA
GAIN AND
OFFSET
HREF-OUT
BYPS
CONTROL
SECAM
PROCESSING
LDEL
YCOMB
CHROMINANCE
INCREMENT
DELAY
UV SET_RAW
SET_VBI
CHROMINANCE
INCREMENT
DTO-RESET
PHASE
DEMODULATOR
CHROMA
GAIN
CONTROL
AMPLITUDE
DETECTOR
SUBCARRIER
GENERATION 1
SUBCARRIER
INCREMENT
GENERATION
AND
PAL DELAY LINE
BURST GATE
ACCUMULATOR
UV-
ADJUSTMENT
SECAM
RECOMBINATION
LOOP FILTER
DIVIDER
HUEC
CDTO INCS
DCVF
SET_RAW
SET_VBI
SECS
CODE
FCTC
ACGC
[
]
CSTD 2:0
[
]
CGAIN 6:0
[
]
IDEL 3:0
MHB532
RTCO
f
/2 switch signal
H
ahdnbok,uflapegwidt
Fig.18 Chrominance and luminance processing.
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.1.3.1
Chrominance path
• Baseband ‘bell’ filters to reconstruct the amplitude and
phase equalized 0° and 90° FM signals
The 9-bit CVBS or chrominance input signal is fed to the
input of a quadrature demodulator, where it is multiplied by
two time-multiplexed subcarrier signals from the subcarrier
generation block 1 (0 and 90° phase relationship to the
demodulator axis). The frequency is dependent on the
chosen colour standard.
• Phase demodulator and differentiator
(FM demodulation)
• De-emphasis filter to compensate the pre-emphasized
input signal, including frequency offset compensation
(DB or DR white carrier values are subtracted from the
signal, controlled by the SECAM switch signal).
The time-multiplexed output signals of the multipliers are
low-pass filtered (low-pass 1). Eight characteristics are
programmable via LCBW3 to LCBW0 to achieve the
desired bandwidth for the colour difference signals (PAL,
NTSC) or the 0° and 90° FM signals (SECAM).
The succeeding chrominance gain control block amplifies
or attenuates the CB-CR signal according to the required
ITU 601/656 levels. It is controlled by the output signal
from the amplitude detection circuit within the burst
processing block.
The chrominance low-pass 1 characteristic also influences
the grade of cross-luminance reduction during horizontal
colour transients (large chrominance bandwidth means
strong suppression of cross-luminance). If the Y comb
filter is disabled when YCOMB = 0 the filter directly
influences the width of the chrominance notch within the
luminance path (large chrominance bandwidth means
wide chrominance notch resulting to lower luminance
bandwidth).
The burst processing block provides the feedback loop of
the chrominance PLL and contains the following:
• Burst gate accumulator
• Colour identification and killer
• Comparison nominal/actual burst amplitude (PAL/NTSC
standards only)
• Loop filter chrominance gain control (PAL/NTSC
standards only)
The low-pass filtered signals are fed to the adaptive comb
filter block. The chrominance components are separated
from the luminance via a two-line vertical stage (four lines
for PAL standards) and a decision logic circuit between the
filtered and the non-filtered output signals: this block is
bypassed for SECAM signals. The comb filter logic can be
enabled independently for the succeeding luminance and
chrominance processing by YCOMB (subaddress 09H,
bit 6) and/or CCOMB (subaddress 0EH, bit 0). It is always
bypassed during VBI or raw data lines, programmable by
the LCRn registers (subaddresses 41H to 57H);
see Section 9.2.
• Loop filter chrominance PLL (only active for PAL/NTSC
standards)
• PAL/SECAM sequence detection, H/2-switch
generation.
The increment generation circuit produces the Discrete
Time Oscillator (DTO) increment for both subcarrier
generation blocks. It contains a division by the increment
of the line-locked clock generator to create a stable
phase-locked sine signal under all conditions (e.g. for
non-standard signals).
The PAL delay line block eliminates crosstalk between the
chrominance channels in accordance with the PAL
standard requirements. For NTSC colour standards, the
delay line can be used as an additional vertical filter.
If desired, it can be switched off by DCVF = 1. It is always
disabled during VBI or raw data lines programmable by the
LCRn registers (subaddresses 41H to 57H); see
Section 9.2. The embedded line delay is also used for
SECAM recombination (cross-over switches).
The separated CB-CR components are further processed
by a second filter stage (low-pass 2) to modify the
chrominance bandwidth without influencing the luminance
path. It’s characteristic is controlled by CHBW
(subaddress 10H, bit 3). For the complete transfer
characteristic of low-pass filters 1 and 2 see
Figs 19 and 20.
The SECAM processing (bypassed for QAM standards)
contains the following blocks:
2004 Jun 29
38
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB533
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000.
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010.
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100.
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001.
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011.
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101.
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0
f (MHz)
Fig.19 Transfer characteristics of the chrominance low-pass at CHBW = 0.
39
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB534
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000.
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010.
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100.
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001.
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011.
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101.
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0
f (MHz)
Fig.20 Transfer characteristics of the chrominance low-pass at CHBW = 1.
40
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.1.3.2
Luminance path
The frequency characteristic of the separated luminance
signal can be further modified by the succeeding
luminance filter block. It can be configured as peaking
(resolution enhancement) or low-pass block by
LUFI3 to LUFI0 (subaddress 09H, bits 3 to 0). The 16
resulting frequency characteristics can be seen in Fig.25.
The LUFI3 to LUFI0 settings can be used as a user
programmable sharpness control.
The rejection of the chrominance components within the
9-bit CVBS or Y input signal is done by subtracting the
re-modulated chrominance signal from the CVBS input.
The comb filtered CB-CR components are interpolated
(upsampled) by the low-pass 3 block. It’s characteristic is
controlled by LUBW (subaddress 09H, bit 4) to modify the
width of the chrominance ‘notch’ without influencing the
chrominance path. The programmable frequency
characteristics available, in conjunction with the
LCBW2 to LCBW0 settings, can be seen in Figs 21 to 24.
It should be noted that these frequency curves are only
valid for Y comb disabled filter mode (YCOMB = 0).
In comb filter mode the frequency response is flat. The
centre frequency of the notch is automatically adapted to
the chosen colour standard.
The luminance filter block also contains the adjustable
Y delay part; programmable by YDEL2 to YDEL0
(subaddress 11H, bits 2 to 0).
The interpolated CB-CR samples are multiplied by two
time-multiplexed subcarrier signals from the subcarrier
generation block 2. This second DTO is locked to the first
subcarrier generator by an increment delay circuit
matched to the processing delay, which is different for
PAL and NTSC standards according to the chosen comb
filter algorithm. The two modulated signals are finally
added to create the re-modulated chrominance signal.
2004 Jun 29
41
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB535
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000.
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010.
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100.
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001.
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011.
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101.
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
Fig.21 Transfer characteristics of the luminance notch filter in 3.58 MHz mode (Y-comb filter disabled) at
LUBW = 0.
2004 Jun 29
42
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB536
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
Fig.22 Transfer characteristics of the luminance notch filter in 3.58 MHz mode (Y-comb filter disabled) at
LUBW =1.
2004 Jun 29
43
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB537
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000.
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010.
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100.
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001.
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011.
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101.
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
Fig.23 Transfer characteristics of the luminance notch filter in 4.43 MHz mode (Y-comb filter disabled) at
LUBW = 0.
2004 Jun 29
44
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB538
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(1) LCBW[2:0] = 000.
(2) LCBW[2:0] = 010.
(3) LCBW[2:0] = 100.
(4) LCBW[2:0] = 110.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
3
0
V
(dB)
−3
−6
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
−45
−48
−51
−54
−57
−60
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(5) LCBW[2:0] = 001.
(6) LCBW[2:0] = 011.
(7) LCBW[2:0] = 101.
(8) LCBW[2:0] = 111.
0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8 5.0
f (MHz)
Fig.24 Transfer characteristics of the luminance notch filter in 4.43 MHz mode (Y-comb filter disabled) at
LUBW = 1.
2004 Jun 29
45
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB539
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
V
(dB)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(1) LUFI[3:0] = 0001.
(2) LUFI[3:0] = 0010.
(3) LUFI[3:0] = 0011.
(4) LUFI[3:0] = 0100.
(5) LUFI[3:0] = 0101.
(6) LUFI[3:0] = 0110.
(7) LUFI[3:0] = 0111.
(8) LUFI[3:0] = 0000.
−1
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
f (MHz)
3
V
(dB)
0
−3
−6
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
(9) LUFI[3:0] = 1000.
(10) LUFI[3:0] = 1001.
(11) LUFI[3:0] = 1010.
(12) LUFI[3:0] = 1011.
(13) LUFI[3:0] = 1100.
(14) LUFI[3:0] = 1101.
(15) LUFI[3:0] = 1110.
(16) LUFI[3:0] = 1111.
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
f (MHz)
Fig.25 Transfer characteristics of the luminance peaking/low-pass filter (sharpness).
46
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.1.3.3
Brightness Contrast Saturation (BCS) control and decoder output levels
The resulting Y (CVBS) and CB-CR signals are fed to the BCS block, which contains the following functions:
• Chrominance saturation control by DSAT7 to DSAT0
• Luminance contrast and brightness control by DCON7 to DCON0 and DBRI7 to DBRI0
• Raw data (CVBS) gain and offset adjustment by RAWG7 to RAWG0 and RAWO7 to RAWO0
• Limiting Y-CB-CR or CVBS to the values 1 (minimum) and 254 (maximum) to fulfil “ITU Recommendation 601/656”.
+255
+255
+240
+255
+240
blue 100%
blue 75%
red 100%
red 75%
white
+235
+212
+212
colourless
colourless
LUMINANCE 100%
+128
+128
+128
C
-COMPONENT
C -COMPONENT
R
B
yellow 75%
cyan 75%
+44
+16
0
+44
+16
0
yellow 100%
cyan 100%
black
+16
0
MHB730
a. Y output range.
b. CB output range.
c. CR output range.
“ITU Recommendation 601/656” digital levels with default BCS (decoder) settings DCON[7:0] = 44H, DBRI[7:0] = 80H and DSAT[7:0] = 40H.
Equations for modification to the Y-CB-CR levels via BCS control I2C-bus bytes DBRI, DCON and DSAT.
DCON
68
Luminance:
YOUT = Int
× (Y – 128) + DBRI
-----------------
DSAT
Chrominance:(CRCB)OUT = Int
× (C , CB – 128) + 128
R
---------------
64
It should be noted that the resulting levels are limited to 1 to 254 in accordance with “ITU Recommendation 601/656”.
Fig.26 Y-CB-CR range for scaler input and X port output.
2004 Jun 29
47
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
+255
+209
+255
+199
white
white
LUMINANCE
LUMINANCE
black
black shoulder
+71
+60
black shoulder = black
+60
SYNC
SYNC
1
1
sync bottom
sync bottom
MGD700
a. Sources containing 7.5 IRE black level offset (e.g. NTSC M).
b. Sources not containing black level offset.
CVBS levels with default settings RAWG[7:0] = 64 and RAWO[7:0] = 128.
Equation for modification of the raw data levels via bytes RAWG and RAWO:
RAWG
64
CVBSOUT = Int
× (CVBSnom – 128) + RAWO
------------------
It should be noted that the resulting levels are limited to 1 to 254 in accordance with “ITU Recommendation 601/656”.
Fig.27 CVBS (raw data) range for scaler input, data slicer and X port output.
2004 Jun 29
48
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.1.4
SYNCHRONIZATION
The internal signal LFCO is a digital-to-analog converted
signal provided by the horizontal PLL. It is a multiple of the
line frequency:
The prefiltered luminance signal is fed to the
synchronization stage. Its bandwidth is further reduced to
1 MHz by a low-pass filter. The sync pulses are sliced and
fed to the phase detectors where they are compared with
the sub-divided clock frequency. The resulting output
signal is applied to the loop filter to accumulate all phase
deviations. Internal signals (e.g. HCL and HSY) are
generated in accordance with analog front-end
requirements. The loop filter signal drives an oscillator to
generate the line frequency control signal (LFCO);
see Fig.28.
6.75 MHz = 429 × fH (50 Hz), or
6.75 MHz = 432 × fH (60 Hz).
The LFCO signal is multiplied internally by a factor of
2 and 4 in the PLL circuit (including phase detector, loop
filtering, VCO and frequency divider) to obtain the output
clock signals. The rectangular output clocks have a 50 %
duty cycle.
Table 16 Decoder clock frequencies
The detection of ‘pseudo syncs’ as part of the Macrovision
copy protection standard is also done within the
synchronization circuit.
CLOCK
FREQUENCY (MHz)
XTAL
LLC
24.576 or 32.110
27
The result is reported as flag COPRO within the decoder
status byte at subaddress 1FH.
LLC2
13.5
6.75
3.375
LLC4 (internal)
LLC8 (virtual)
9.1.5
CLOCK GENERATION CIRCUIT
The internal CGC generates all clock signals required for
the video input processor.
ZERO
CROSS
DETECTION
BAND PASS
FC = LLC/4
PHASE
DETECTION
LOOP
FILTER
LFCO
OSCILLATOR
LLC
DIVIDER
1/2
DIVIDER
1/2
LLC2
MHB330
Fig.28 Block diagram of the clock generation circuit.
9.1.6
POWER-ON RESET AND CE INPUT
A missing clock, insufficient digital or analog VDDAd supply voltages (below 2.7 V) will start the reset sequence; all outputs
are forced to 3-state (see Fig.29). The indicator output RESd is LOW for approximately 128 LLC after the internal reset
and can be applied to reset other circuits of the digital TV system.
It is possible to force a reset by pulling the Chip Enable (CE) to ground. After the rising edge of CE and sufficient power
supply voltage, the outputs LLC, LLC2 and SDAd return from 3-state to active, while the other signals have to be
activated via programming.
2004 Jun 29
49
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
POC V
POC V
DDA
DDD
ANALOG
DIGITAL
CLOCK
PLL
LLC
POC
LOGIC
POC
DELAY
RES
CE
RESINT
CLK0
CE
XTALO
LLCINT
RESINT
LLC
RES
(internal
reset)
20 to 200 µs
PLL-delay
896 LCC
digital delay
MHB331
some ms
128 LCC
<
1 ms
POC = Power-on Control.
CE = chip enable input.
XTALO = crystal oscillator output.
LLCINT = internal system clock.
RESINT = internal reset.
LLC = line-locked clock output.
RES = reset output.
Fig.29 Power-on control circuit.
50
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.2
Decoder output formatter
For each LCR value, from 2 to 23, the data type can be
programmed individually. LCR2 to LCR23 refer to line
numbers. The selection in LCR24 values is valid for the
rest of the corresponding field. The upper nibble contains
the value for field 1 (odd), the lower nibble for field 2
(even). The relationship between LCR values and line
numbers can be adjusted via VOFF8 to VOFF0, located in
subaddresses 5BH (bit 4) and 5AH (bits 7 to 0) and FOFF
subaddress 5BH (bit 7). The recommended values are
VOFF[8:0] = 03H for 50 Hz sources (with FOFF = 0) and
VOFF[8:0] = 06H for 60 Hz sources (with FOFF = 1), to
accommodate line number conventions as used for PAL,
SECAM and NTSC standards; see Tables 18 to 21.
The output interface block of the decoder part contains the
ITU 656 formatter for the expansion port data output
XPD7 to XPD0 (see Section 10.4.1) and the control circuit
for the signals needed for the internal paths to the scaler
and data slicer part. It also controls the selection of the
reference signals for the RT port (RTCO, RTS0 and
RTS1) and the expansion port (XRH, XRV and XDQ).
The generation of the decoder data type control signals
SET_RAW and SET VBI is also done within this block.
These signals are decoded from the requested data type
for the scaler input and/or the data slicer, selectable by the
control registers LCR2 to LCR24; see Section 18.2.4.2.
Table 17 Data formats at decoder output
DATA TYPE NUMBER
DATA TYPE
teletext EuroWST, CCST
European Closed Caption
DECODER OUTPUT DATA FORMAT
0
1
raw
raw
2
Video Programming Service (VPS)
Wide screen signalling bits
US teletext (WST)
raw
3
raw
4
raw
5
US Closed Caption (line 21)
video component signal, VBI region
CVBS data
raw
6
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2
7
raw
8
teletext
raw
9
VITC/EBU time codes (Europe)
VITC/SMPTE time codes (USA)
reserved
raw
10
11
12
13
14
15
raw
raw
US NABTS
raw
raw
MOJI (Japanese)
Japanese format switch (L20/22)
video component signal, active video region
raw
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2
2004 Jun 29
51
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Table 18 Relationship of LCR to line numbers in 525 lines/60 Hz systems (part 1)
Vertical line offset, VOFF[8:0] = 06H (subaddresses 5BH[4] and 5AH[7:0]); horizontal pixel offset, HOFF[10:0] = 347H (subaddresses 5BH[2:0] and
59H[7:0]); FOFF = 1 (subaddress 5BH[7])
Line number
(1st field)
521
522
523
active video
261
524
525
1
2
3
4
5
6
269
6
7
8
9
equalization pulses
serration pulses
equalization pulses
Line number
(2nd field)
259
260
262
263
264
265
equalization pulses
2
266
267
268
270
271
272
active video
serration pulses
equalization pulses
LCR
24
3
4
5
7
8
9
Table 19 Relationship of LCR to line numbers in 525 lines/60 Hz systems (part 2)
Vertical line offset, VOFF[8:0] = 06H (subaddresses 5BH[4] and 5AH[7:0]); horizontal pixel offset, HOFF[10:0] = 347H (subaddresses 5BH[2:0] and
59H[7:0]); FOFF = 1 (subaddress 5BH[7])
Line number
(1st field)
10
273
10
11
274
11
12
275
12
13
276
13
14
277
14
15
nominal VBI lines F1
278 279
nominal VBI lines F2
15 16
16
17
280
17
18
281
18
19
282
19
20
283
20
21
284
21
22
285
22
23
active video
286 287
24
25
Line number
(2nd field)
288
active video
23
LCR
24
Table 20 Relationship of LCR to line numbers in 625 lines/50 Hz systems (part 1)
Vertical line offset, VOFF[8:0] = 03H (subaddresses 5BH[4] and 5AH[7:0]); horizontal pixel offset, HOFF[10:0] = 347H (subaddresses 5BH[2:0] and
59H[7:0]); FOFF = 0 (subaddress 5BH[7])
Line number
(1st field)
621
622
active video
310
623
624
equalization pulses
312 313
625
1
2
serration pulses
315
3
4
5
equalization pulses
317 318
Line number
(2nd field)
309
311
314
316
active video
equalization pulses
24
serration pulses
equalization pulses
LCR
2
3
4
5
Table 21 Relationship of LCR to line numbers in 625 lines/50 Hz systems (part 2)
Vertical line offset, VOFF[8:0] = 03H (subaddresses 5BH[4] and 5AH[7:0]); horizontal pixel offset, HOFF[10:0] = 347H (subaddresses 5BH[2:0] and
59H[7:0]); FOFF = 0 (subaddress 5BH[7])
Linenumber
(1st field)
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
nominal VBI lines F1
active video
Linenumber 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338
(2nd field)
nominal VBI lines F2
13 14 15
active video
23 24
LCR
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
625
312
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7
22
22
23
23
624
311
622
309
623
310
...
...
ITU counting
single field counting
CVBS
HREF
F_ITU656
(1)
V123
[
]
VSTO 8:0 = 134H
VGATE
FID
[
]
VSTA 8:0 = 15H
(a) 1st field
312
312
313
313
314
1
315
2
316
3
317
4
318
5
319
6
335
22
336
23
ITU counting
single field counting
311
311
309
309
310
310
...
...
CVBS
HREF
F_ITU656
(1)
V123
[
]
VSTO 8:0 = 134H
VGATE
FID
(b) 2nd field
[
]
VSTA 8:0 = 15H
MHB540
(1) The inactive going edge of the V123 signal indicates whether the field is odd or even. If HREF is active during
the falling edge of V123, the field is ODD (field 1). If HREF is inactive during the falling edge of V123, the field
is EVEN. The specific position of the slope is dependent on the internal processing delay and may change a
few clock cycles from version to version.
The control signals listed above are available on pins RTS0, RTS1, XRH and XRV according to the following table:
NAME
HREF
RTS0 (PIN K13) RTS1 (PIN L10) XRH (PIN N2) XRV (PIN L5)
X
−
X
−
X
−
−
−
−
−
X
X
−
−
F_ITU656
V123
X
X
X
X
X
X
VGATE
FID
For further information see programming section, Tables 171, 172 and 173.
Fig.30 Vertical timing diagram for 50 Hz/625 line systems.
53
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7
8
8
9
9
10
10
21
21
22
22
2
2
525
262
1
1
...
...
ITU counting
single field counting
CVBS
HREF
F_ITU656
(1)
V123
[
]
VSTO 8:0 = 101H
VGATE
FID
[
]
VSTA 8:0 = 011H
(a) 1st field
265
2
266
3
267
4
268
5
269
6
270
7
271
8
272
9
284
21
285
22
ITU counting
single field counting
264
1
262
262
263
263
...
...
CVBS
HREF
F_ITU656
(1)
V123
[
]
VSTO 8:0 = 101H
VGATE
FID
(b) 2nd field
[
]
VSTA 8:0 = 011H
MHB541
(1) The inactive going edge of the V123 signal indicates whether the field is odd or even. If HREF is active during
the falling edge of V123, the field is ODD (field 1). If HREF is inactive during the falling edge of V123, the field
is EVEN. The specific position of the slope is dependent on the internal processing delay and may change a
few clock cycles from version to version.
The control signals listed above are available on pins RTS0, RTS1, XRH and XRV according to the following table:
NAME
HREF
RTS0 (PIN K13
RTS1 (PIN L10) XRH (PIN N2) XRV (PIN L5)
X
−
X
−
X
−
−
−
−
−
X
X
−
−
F_ITU656
V123
X
X
X
X
X
X
VGATE
FID
For further information see programming section, Tables 171, 172 and 173.
Fig.31 Vertical timing diagram for 60 Hz/525 line systems.
54
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
burst
CVBS input
processing delay ADC to expansion port:
140 × 1/LLC
expansion port
data output
sync clipped
HREF (50 Hz)
12 × 2/LLC
144 × 2/LLC
720 × 2/LLC
5 × 2/LLC
CREF
CREF2
2 × 2/LLC
HS (50 Hz)
programming range
(step size: 8/LLC)
−107
108
0
HREF (60 Hz)
16 × 2/LLC
138 × 2/LLC
720 × 2/LLC
1 × 2/LLC
CREF
CREF2
HS (60 Hz)
2 × 2/LLC
−106
programming range
(step size: 8/LLC)
107
0
MHB542
The signals HREF, HS, CREF2 and CREF are available on pins RTS0 and/or RTS1 (see Section 18.2.2.19 Tables 171 and 172);
their polarity can be inverted via RTP0 and/or RTP1.
The signals HREF and HS are available on pin XRH (see Section 18.2.2.20 Table 173).
Fig.32 Horizontal timing diagram (50/60 Hz).
2004 Jun 29
55
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.3
Scaler
The overall H and V zooming (HV_zoom) is restricted by
the input/output data rate relationships. With a safety
margin of 2 % for running in and running out, the
maximum HV_zoom is equal to:
The High Performance video Scaler (HPS) is based on the
system as implemented in the SAA7140, but enhanced in
some aspects. Vertical upsampling is supported and the
processing pipeline buffer capacity is enhanced, to allow
more flexible video stream timing at the image port,
discontinuous transfers and handshake. The internal data
flow from block to block is discontinuous dynamically, due
to the scaling process.
T_input_field – T_v_blanking
in_pixel × in_lines × out_cycle_per_pix × T_out_clk
0.98 ×
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example:
1. Input from decoder: 50 Hz, 720 pixel, 288 lines, 16-bit
data at 13.5 MHz data rate, 1 cycle per pixel; output:
8-bit data at 27 MHz, 2 cycles per pixel; the maximum
HV_zoom is equal to:
The flow is controlled by internal data valid and data
request flags (internal handshake signalling) between the
sub-blocks. Therefore the entire scaler acts as a pipeline
buffer. Depending on the actually programmed scaling
parameters the effective buffer can exceed to an entire
line. The access/bandwidth requirements to the VGA
frame buffer are reduced significantly.
20 ms – 24 × 64 µs
720 × 288 × 2 × 37 ns
0.98 ×
= 1.18
--------------------------------------------------------
2. Input from X port: 60 Hz, 720 pixel, 240 lines, 8-bit
data at 27 MHz data rate (ITU 656), 2 cycles per pixel;
output via I + H port: 16-bit data at 27 MHz clock,
1 cycle per pixel; the maximum HV_zoom is equal to:
The high performance video scaler in the SAA7108AE;
SAA7109AE has the following major blocks.
16.666 ms – 22 × 64 µs
720 × 240 × 1 × 37 ns
0.98 ×
= 2.34
--------------------------------------------------------------
• Acquisition control (horizontal and vertical timer) and
task handling (the region/field/frame based processing)
The video scaler receives its input signal from the video
decoder or from the expansion port (X port). It gets 16-bit
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 input data at a continuous rate of
13.5 MHz from the decoder. A discontinuous data stream
can be accepted from the expansion port, normally 8-bit
wide ITU 656 like Y-CB-CR data, accompanied by a pixel
qualifier on XDQ.
• Prescaler, for horizontal downscaling by an integer
factor, combined with appropriate band limiting filters,
especially anti-aliasing for CIF format
• Brightness, saturation and contrast control for scaled
output data
• Line buffer, with asynchronous read and write, to
support vertical upscaling (e.g. for videophone
application, converting 240 into 288 lines, Y-CB-CR
4 : 2 : 2)
The input data stream is sorted into two data paths, one for
luminance (or raw samples), and one for time multiplexed
chrominance CB and CR samples. A Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1
input format is converted to 4 : 2 : 2 for the horizontal
prescaling and vertical filter scaling operation.
• Vertical scaling, with phase accurate Linear Phase
Interpolation (LPI) for zoom and downscaling, or phase
accurate Accumulation Mode (ACM) for large
The scaler operation is defined by two programming pages
A and B, representing two different tasks that can be
applied field alternating or to define two regions in a field
(e.g. with different scaling range, factors, and signal
source during odd and even fields).
downscaling ratios and better anti-alias suppression
• Variable Phase Delay (VPD), operates as horizontal
phase accurate interpolation for arbitrary non-integer
scaling ratios, supporting conversion between square
and rectangular pixel sampling
Each programming page contains control for:
• Signal source selection and formats
• Output formatter for scaled Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2,
Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1 and Y only (format also for raw data)
• Task handling and trigger conditions
• FIFO, 32-bit wide, with 64 pixel capacity in Y-CB-CR
• Input and output acquisition window definition
• H prescaler, V scaler and H phase scaling.
formats
• Output interface, 8 or 16-bit (only if extended by H port)
data pins wide, synchronous or asynchronous
operation, with stream events on discrete pins, or coded
in the data stream.
Raw VBI data will be handled as specific input format and
need its own programming page (equals own task).
2004 Jun 29
56
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
In VBI pass through operation the processing of prescaler
and vertical scaling has to be disabled, however the
horizontal fine scaling VPD can be activated. Upscaling
(oversampling, zooming), free of frequency folding, up to
factor 3.5 can be achieved, as required by some software
data slicing algorithms.
9.3.1.1
Input field processing
The trigger event for the field sequence detection from
external signals (X port) are defined in subaddress 92H.
The state of the scalers horizontal reference signal at the
time of the vertical reference edge is taken from the X port
as field sequence identifier (FID). For example, if the falling
edge of the XRV input signal is the reference and the state
of XRH input is logic 0 at that time, the detected field ID is
logic 0.
These raw samples are transported through the image
port as valid data and can be output as Y only format. The
lines are framed by SAV and EAV codes.
The bits XFDV[92H[7]] and XFDH[92H[6]] define the
detection event and state of the flag from the X port. For
the default setting of XFDV and XFDH at ‘00’ is taken from
the state of the horizontal input at the falling edge of the
vertical input.
9.3.1
ACQUISITION CONTROL AND TASK HANDLING
(SUBADDRESSES 80H, 90H, 91H, 94H TO 9FH
AND C4H TO CFH)
The acquisition control receives horizontal and vertical
synchronization signals from the decoder section or from
the X port. The acquisition window is generated via pixel
and line counters at the appropriate places in the data
path. Only qualified pixels and lines (lines with qualified
pixel) are counted from the X port.
The scaler gets corresponding field ID information directly
from the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE decoder path.
The FID flag is used to determine whether the first or
second field of a frame is going to be processed within the
scaler, and it is also used as trigger conditions for the task
handling (see bits STRC[1:0] 90H[1:0]).
The acquisition window parameters are as follows:
• Signal source selection: input video stream and formats
from the decoder, or from the X port (programming bits
SCSRC[1:0] 91H[5:4] and FSC[2:0] 91H[2:0])
According to ITU 656, FID at logic 0 means first field of a
frame. To ease the application, the polarities of the
detection results on the X port signals and the internal
decoder ID can be changed via XFDH.
Remark: The input of raw VBI data from the internal
decoder should be controlled via the decoder output
formatter and the LCR registers (see Section 9.2)
As the V sync from the decoder path has a half line timing
(due to the interlaced video signal), but the scaler
processing only recognises full lines, during 1st fields from
the decoder the line count of the scaler can possibly shift
by one line, compared to the 2nd field. This can be
compensated for by switching the vertical trigger event, as
defined by XDV0, to the opposite V sync edge or by using
the vertical scalers phase offsets. The vertical timing of the
decoder can be seen in Figs 30 and 31.
• Vertical offset: defined in lines of the video source,
parameter YO[11:0] 99H[3:0] 98H[7:0]
• Vertical length: defined in lines of the video source,
parameter YS[11:0] 9BH[3:0] 9AH[7:0]
• Vertical length: defined in number of target lines, as a
result of vertical scaling, parameter YD[11:0] 9FH[3:0]
9EH[7:0]
• Horizontal offset: defined in number of pixels of the
video source, parameter XO[11:0] 95H[3:0] 94H[7:0]
As the horizontal and vertical reference events inside the
ITU 656 data stream (from X port) and the real-time
reference signals from the decoder path are processed
differently, the trigger events for the input acquisition also
have to be programmed differently.
• Horizontal length: defined in number of pixels of the
video source, parameter XS[11:0] 97H[3:0] 96H[7:0]
• Horizontal destination size: defined in target pixels after
fine scaling, parameter XD[11:0] 9DH[3:0] 9CH[7:0].
The source start offset XO(11:0) and YO(11:0) opens the
acquisition window, and the target size (XD11 to XD0,
YD11 to YD0) closes the window, however the window is
cut vertically if there are less output lines than required.
The trigger events for the pixel and line counts are the
horizontal and vertical reference edges as defined in
subaddress 92H.
The task handling is controlled by subaddress 90H;
see Section 9.3.1.2.
2004 Jun 29
57
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 22 Processing trigger and start
XDV1
92H[5]
XDV0
92H[4]
XDH
92H[2]
DESCRIPTION
Internal decoder: The processing triggers at the falling edge of the V123 pulse
(see Figs 30 (50 Hz) and 31 (60 Hz)), and starts earliest with the rising edge of the
decoder HREF at line number:
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
4/7 (50/60 Hz, 1st field), respectively 3/6 (50/60 Hz, 2nd field) (decoder count)
2/5 (50/60 Hz, 1st field), respectively 2/5 (50/60 Hz, 2nd field) (decoder count)
External ITU 656 stream: The processing starts earliest with SAV at line number 23
(50 Hz system), respectively line 20 (60 Hz system) (according ITU 656 count)
9.3.1.2
Task handling
Remarks:
• To activate a task, the start condition must be
fulfilled and the acquisition window offsets must be
reached. For example, in case of ‘start immediately’,
and two regions are defined for one field, the offset of
the lower region must be greater than (offset + length) of
the upper region, if not, the actual counted H and V
position at the end of the upper task is beyond the
programmed offsets and the processing will ‘wait for
next V’.
The task handler controls the switching between the two
programming register sets. It is controlled by
subaddresses 90H and C0H. A task is enabled via the
global control bits TEA[80H[4]] and TEB[80H[5]]. The
handler is then triggered by events which can be defined
for each register set.
In the event of a programming error the task handling and
the complete scaler can be reset to the initial states by the
software reset bit SWRST[88H[5]] being set to logic 0.
A software reset must be done after programming
especially if the programming registers, related acquisition
window and scaler are reprogrammed while a task is
active.
• Basically, the trigger conditions are checked when a
task is activated. It is important to know that they are
not checked while a task is inactive. So it is not possible
to trigger to the next logic 0 or logic 1 with overlapping
offset and active video ranges between the tasks (e.g.
task A STRC[2:0] = 2, YO[11:0] = 310 and task B
STRC[2:0] = 3, YO[11:0] = 310 results in an output field
rate of 50⁄3 Hz).
The difference in the disabling/enabling of a task, which is
evaluated at the end of a running task (when SWRST is set
to logic 0) is that it sets the internal state machines directly
to their idle states.
• After power-on or software reset
(via SWRST[88H[5]]) task B gets priority over
task A.
The start condition for the handler is defined by bits
STRC[1:0] 90H[1:0] and means: start immediately, wait for
next V sync, next FID at logic 0 or next FID at logic 1. The
FID is evaluated if the vertical and horizontal offsets are
reached.
With RPTSK[90H[2]] at logic 1 the actual running task is
repeated (under the defined trigger conditions) before
handing control over to the alternate task.
To support field rate reduction, the handler is also enabled
to skip fields (bits FSKP[2:0] 90H[5:3]) before executing
the task. A TOGGLE flag is generated (used for the correct
output field processing), which changes state at the
beginning of a task every time a task is activated;
examples are given in Section 9.3.1.3.
2004 Jun 29
58
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.3.1.3
Output field processing
When OFIDC = 0, the scalers input field ID is available as
output field ID on bit 6 of SAV and EAV, and respectively
on pin IGP0 (IGP1), if the FID output is selected.
As a reference for the output field processing, two signals
are available for the back-end hardware.
When OFIDC[90H[6]] = 1, the TOGGLE information is
available as output field ID on bit 6 of SAV and EAV, and
respectively on pin IGP0 (IGP1) if the FID output is
selected.
These signals are the input field ID from the scaler source
and a TOGGLE flag, which shows that an active task is
used an odd (1, 3, 5...) or even (2, 4, 6...) number of times.
Using a single or both tasks and reducing the field or frame
rate with the task handling functionality, the TOGGLE
information can be used to reconstruct an interlaced
scaled picture at a reduced frame rate. The TOGGLE flag
is not synchronized to the input field detection, as it is only
dependent on the interpretation of this information by the
external hardware i.e. whether the output of the scaler is
processed correctly; see Section 9.3.3.
Additionally bit 7 of SAV and EAV can be defined via
CONLH[90H[7]]. When CONLH[90H[7]] = 0 (default) it
sets bit 7 to logic 1; a logic 1 inverts the SAV/EAV bit 7.
So it is possible to mark the output of both tasks by
different SAV/EAV codes. This bit can also be seen as
‘task flag’ on pins IGP0 (IGP1), if the TASK output is
selected.
2004 Jun 29
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Table 23 Example for field processing
FIELD SEQUENCE FRAME/FIELD
SUBJECT
EXAMPLE 1(1)
EXAMPLE 2(2)(3)
EXAMPLE 3(2)(4)(5)
EXAMPLE 4(2)(4)(6)
1/1
A
1/2
A
2/1 1/1 1/2 2/1 2/2 1/1 1/2 2/1 2/2 3/1 3/2
1/1
B
1/2 2/1
2/2
B
3/1 3/2
Processed by task
A
0
B
0
A
1
B
0
A
1
B
0
B
1
A
0
B
1
B
0
A
1
B
1
A
0
B
0
A
1
State of detected
ITU 656 FID
0
1
0
1
TOGGLE flag
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0(7)
0(7)
1
1
1
1
1(7)
1(7)
0
0
0
0
Bit 6 of SAV/EAV byte
Required sequence
conversion at the vertical
scaler(8)
UP
↓
UP
LO
↓
LO
UP UP LO UP LO UP LO UP LO UP LO
UP
↓
UP
LO UP
LO
↓
LO
UP LO
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
↓
UP UP LO UP LO LO UP LO LO UP UP
LO LO
UP UP
Output(9)
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
NO
O
O
NO
O
O
Notes
1. Single task every field; OFIDC = 0; subaddress 90H at 40H; TEB[80H[5]] = 0.
2. Tasks are used to scale to different output windows, priority on task B after SWRST.
3. Both tasks at 1⁄2 frame rate; OFIDC = 0; subaddresses 90H at 43H and C0H at 42H.
4. In examples 3 and 4 the association between input FID and tasks can be flipped, dependent on which time the SWRST is de-asserted.
5. Task B at 2⁄3 frame rate constructed from neighbouring motion phases; task A at 1⁄3 frame rate of equidistant motion phases; OFIDC = 1;
subaddresses 90H at 41H and C0H at 45H.
6. Task A and B at 1⁄3 frame rate of equidistant motion phases; OFIDC = 1; subaddresses 90H at 41H and C0H at 49H.
7. State of prior field.
8. It is assumed that input/output FID = 0 (upper lines); UP = upper lines; LO = lower lines.
9. O = data output; NO = no output.
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.3.2
HORIZONTAL SCALING
• The bit XC2_1[A2H[3]], which defines the weighting of
the incoming pixels during the averaging process
The overall horizontal scaling factor has to be split into a
binary and a rational value according to the following
– XC2_1 = 0
– XC2_1 = 1
1 + 1...+ 1 + 1
1 + 2...+ 2 + 1.
output pixel
equation: H scale ratio =
------------------------------
input pixel
The prescaler creates a prescale dependent FIR low-pass,
with up to 64 + 7 filter taps. The parameter XACL[5:0] can
be used to vary the low-pass characteristic for a given
integer prescale of 1⁄XPSC[5:0]. The user can therewith
decide between signal bandwidth (sharpness impression)
and alias.
1
1024
H scale ratio =
×
--------------------------- ------------------------------
XPSC[5:0] XSCY[12:0]
where, the parameter of the prescaler XPSC[5:0] = 1 to 63
and the parameter of VPD phase interpolation
XSCY[12:0] = 300 to 8191 (0 to 299 are only theoretical
values). For example, 1⁄3.5 is split into 1⁄4 × 1.14286. The
binary factor is processed by the prescaler, the arbitrary
non-integer ratio is achieved via the variable phase delay
VPD circuitry, called horizontal fine scaling. The latter
calculates horizontally interpolated new samples with a
6-bit phase accuracy, which relates to less than 1 ns jitter
for regular sampling schemes. Together the prescaler and
fine scaler form the horizontal scaler of the SAA7108AE;
SAA7109AE.
The equation for the XPSC[5:0] calculation is:
Npix_in
XPSC[5:0] = lower integer of
-----------------------
Npix_out
Where:
the range is 1 to 63 (value 0 is not allowed);
Npix_in = number of input pixel, and
Npix_out = number of desired output pixel over the
complete horizontal scaler.
Using the accumulation length function of the prescaler
(XACL[5:0] A1H[5:0]), application and destination
dependent (e.g. scale for display or for a compression
machine), a compromise between visible bandwidth and
alias suppression can be found.
The use of the prescaler results in a XACL[5:0] and
XC2_1 dependent gain amplification. The amplification
can be calculated according to the equation:
DC gain = [(XACL[5:0] − XC2_1) + 1] × (XC2_1 + 1)
It is recommended to use sequence lengths and weights,
which results in a 2N DC gain amplification, as these
amplitudes can be renormalized by the XDCG[2:0]
9.3.2.1
Horizontal prescaler (subaddresses
A0H to A7H and D0H to D7H)
The prescaling function consists of an FIR anti-alias filter
stage and an integer prescaler, which together form an
adaptive prescale dependent low-pass filter to balance the
sharpness and aliasing effects.
1
controlled
shifter of the prescaler.
------
2N
The renormalization range of XDCG[2:0] is 1, 1⁄2... down
to 1⁄128
.
The FIR pre-filter stage implements different low-pass
characteristics to reduce the anti-alias for downscales in
the range of 1 to 1⁄2. A CIF optimized filter is built-in, which
reduces artefacts for CIF output formats (to be used in
combination with the prescaler set to 1⁄2 scale); see
Table 24.
Other amplifications have to be normalized by using the
following BCS control circuitry. In these cases the
prescaler has to be set to an overall gain ≤1, e.g. for an
accumulation sequence of ‘1 + 1 + 1’ (XACL[5:0] = 2 and
XC2_1 = 0), XDCG[2:0] must be set to ‘010’, which
equals 1⁄4 and the BCS has to amplify the signal to 4⁄3
(SATN[7:0] and CONT[7:0] value = lower integer of
4⁄3 × 64).
The function of the prescaler is defined by:
• An integer prescaling ratio XPSC[5:0] A0H[5:0] (equals
1 to 63), which covers the integer downscale range
1 to 1⁄63
The use of XACL[5:0] is XPSC[5:0] dependent.
XACL[5:0] must be <2 × XPSC[5:0].
• An averaging sequence length XACL[5:0] A1H[5:0]
(equals 0 to 63); range 1 to 64
XACL[5:0] can be used to find a compromise between
bandwidth (sharpness) and alias effects.
• A DC gain renormalization XDCG[2:0] A2H[2:0];
1 down to 1⁄128
)
2004 Jun 29
61
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Remark: Due to bandwidth considerations XPSC[5:0] and
XACL[5:0] can be chosen differently to the previously
mentioned equations or Table 25, as the horizontal phase
scaling is able to scale in the range from zooming up by
For example, if XACL[5:0] = 5, XC2_1 = 1, then
DC gain = 10 and the required XDCG[2:0] = 4.
The horizontal source acquisition timing and the
prescaling ratio is identical for both the luminance and
chrominance path, but the FIR filter settings can be
defined differently in the two channels.
factor 3 to downscaling by a factor of 1024
⁄
.
8191
Figs 35 and 36 show some frequency characteristics of
the prescaler.
Fade-in and fade-out of the filters is achieved by copying
an original source sample each as first and last pixel after
prescaling.
Table 25 shows the recommended prescaler
programming. Other programming, than given in Table 25,
may result in better alias suppression, but the resulting
DC gain amplification needs to be compensated by the
BCS control, according to the equation:
Figs 33 and 34 show the frequency characteristics of the
selectable FIR filters.
2XDCG[2:0]
DC gain × 64
CONT[7:0] = SATN[7:0] = lower integer of
----------------------------------
Where:
2XDCG[2:0] ≥ DC gain
DC gain = (XC2_1 + 1) × XACL[5:0] + (1 − XC2_1).
Table 24 FIR prefilter functions
PFUV[1:0] A2H[7:6]
PFY[1:0] A2H[5:4]
LUMINANCE FILTER
COEFFICIENTS
CHROMINANCE COEFFICIENTS
00
01
10
11
bypassed
1 2 1
bypassed
1 2 1
−1 1 1.75 4.5 1.75 1 −1
1 2 2 2 1
3 8 10 8 3
1 2 2 2 1
2004 Jun 29
62
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB543
6
3
V
(dB)
0
−3
−6
−9
(1)
(2)
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
(3)
(1) PFY[1:0] = 01.
(2) PFY[1:0] = 10.
(3) PFY[1:0] = 11.
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.3
0.35
0.4
0.45
f_sig/f_clock
0.5
Fig.33 Luminance prefilter characteristic.
MHB544
6
3
V
(dB)
0
−3
−6
−9
(1)
(2)
(3)
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
(1) PFUV[1:0] = 01.
(2) PFUV[1:0] = 10.
(3) PFUV[1:0] = 11.
0
0.025
0.05
0.075
0.1
0.125
0.15
0.175
0.2
0.225
f_sig/f_clock
0.25
Fig.34 Chrominance prefilter characteristic.
63
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MHB545
6
3
V
(dB)
0
−3
−6
−9
(5)
(4)
(3)
(2)
(1)
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
XC2_1 = 0; Zero’s at
1
f = n ×
------------------------
XACL + 1
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.3
0.35
0.4
0.45
f_sig/f_clock
0.5
with XACL = (1), (2), (3),
(4) or (5)
Fig.35 Examples for prescaler filter characteristics: effect of increasing XACL[5:0].
MHB546
6
V
3
(dB)
0
(1)
3 dB at 0.25
−3
(2)
6 dB at 0.33
−6
(6) (5)
(4)
(3)
−9
−12
−15
−18
−21
−24
−27
−30
−33
−36
−39
−42
(1) XC2_1 = 0 and
XACL[5:0] = 1.
(2) XC2_1 = 1 and
XACL[5:0] = 2.
(3) XC2_1 = 0 and
XACL[5:0] = 3.
(4) XC2_1 = 1 and
XACL[5:0] = 4.
(5) XC2_1 = 0 and
XACL[5:0] = 7.
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.3
0.35
0.4
0.45
f_sig/f_clock
0.5
(6) XC2_1 = 1 and
XACL[5:0] = 8.
Fig.36 Examples for prescaler filter characteristics: setting XC2_1 = 1.
64
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 25 Example of XACL[5:0] usage
RECOMMENDED VALUES
FOR LOWER BANDWIDTH FOR HIGHER BANDWIDTH
FIR
PREFILTER
PFY[1:0]/
PRESCALE XPSC
RATIO
[5:0]
REQUIREMENTS
REQUIREMENTS
PFUV[1:0]
XACL[5:0]
XC2_1
XDCG[2:0] XACL[5:0]
XC2_1
XDCG[2:0]
1
1
2
0
2
0
1
0
2
0
1
0
0
1
0 to 2
0 to 2
1
⁄
2
⁄
3
⁄
4
⁄
5
⁄
6
⁄
7
⁄
8
⁄
9
0
(1 1) × 1⁄2
0
(1)
(1)
(1 2 1) × 1⁄4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
4
4
7
1
3
3
4
4
4
4
3
4
7
7
7
8
2
3
3
3
3
4
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
(1)
(1)
(1 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄8
(1 1 1 1) × 1⁄4
0
1
(1)
(1)
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄8
(1 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄8
5
8
8
1
0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄8
6
1
0
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄8
7
8
1
0
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄8
8
15
0
1
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄16
15
(1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) × 1⁄16
16
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄32
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
9
0
4
8
1
4
(1)
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
1
⁄
10
1
5
8
1
4
(1)
10
(1)
(1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1) × 1⁄16
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
⁄
⁄
⁄
⁄
⁄
⁄
⁄
13
15
16
19
31
32
35
16
31
31
32
32
63
63
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
5
5
5
6
6
7
7
16
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
5
5
6
6
6
7
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
13
15
16
19
31
32
35
16
16
32
32
32
63
Note
1. Resulting FIR function.
2004 Jun 29
65
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.3.2.2
Horizontal fine scaling (variable phase delay
filter; subaddresses A8H to AFH and
D8H to DFH)
9.3.3.1
Line FIFO buffer (subaddresses 91H, B4H and
C1H, E4H)
The line FIFO buffer is a dual ported RAM structure for
768 pixels, with asynchronous write and read access. The
line buffer can be used for various functions, but not all
functions may be available simultaneously.
The horizontal fine scaling (VPD) should operate at scaling
ratios between 1⁄2 and 2 (0.8 and 1.6), but can also be
used for direct scaling in the range from 1⁄7.999 to
(theoretical) zoom 3.5 (restriction due to the internal data
path architecture), without prescaler.
The line buffer can buffer a complete unscaled active video
line or more than one shorter lines (only for non-mirror
mode), for selective repetition for vertical zoom-up.
In combination with the prescaler a compromise between
sharpness impression and alias can be found, which is
signal source and application dependent.
For zooming up from 240 lines to 288 lines e.g., every
fourth line is requested (read) twice from the vertical
scaling circuitry for calculation.
For the luminance channel a filter structure with 10 taps is
implemented, for the chrominance a filter with 4 taps.
For conversion of a 4 : 2 : 0 or 4 : 1 : 0 input sampling
scheme (MPEG, video phone, Indeo YUV-9) to ITU like
sampling scheme 4 : 2 : 2, the chrominance line buffer is
read twice or four times, before being refilled again by the
source. By means of the input acquisition window
definition it has to be preserved, that the processing starts
with a line containing luminance and chrominance
information for 4 : 2 : 0 and 4 : 1 : 0 input. The bits
FSC[2:1] 91H[2:1] define the distance between the Y/C
lines. In case of 4 : 2 : 2 and 4 : 1 : 1 FSC2 and FSC1
have to be set to ‘00’.
Luminance and chrominance scale increments
(XSCY[12:0] A9H[4:0] A8H[7:0] and XSCC[12:0] ADH[4:0]
ACH[7:0]) are defined independently, but must be set in a
2 : 1 relationship in the actual data path implementation.
The phase offsets XPHY[7:0] AAH[7:0] and XPHC[7:0]
AEH[7:0] can be used to shift the sample phases slightly.
XPHY[7:0] and XPHC[7:0] covers the phase offset range
7.999T to 1⁄32T. The phase offsets should also be
programmed in a 2 : 1 ratio.
The underlying phase controlling DTO has a 13-bit
resolution.
The line buffer can also be used for mirroring, i.e. for
flipping the image left to right, for the vanity picture in video
phone application (bit YMIR[B4H[4]]). In mirror mode only
one active prescaled line can be held in the FIFO at a time.
According to the equations
Npix_in
XPSC[5:0] Npix_out
1
XSCY[12:0] = 1024 ×
×
and
--------------------------- -----------------------
The line buffer can be utilized as excessive pipeline buffer
for discontinuous and variable rate transfer conditions at
the expansion port or image port.
XSCY[12:0]
XSCC[12:0] =
------------------------------
2
The VPD covers the scale range from 0.125 to zoom 3.5.
The VPD acts equivalent to a polyphase filter with 64
possible phases. In combination with the prescaler, it is
possible to get high accurate samples from a highly
anti-aliased integer downscaled input picture.
9.3.3.2
Vertical scaler (subaddresses B0H to BFH and
E0H to EFH)
Vertical scaling of any ratio from 64 (theoretical zoom)
to 1⁄63 (icon) can be applied.
The vertical scaling block consists of another line delay,
and the vertical filter structure, that can operate in two
different modes. These are the Linear Phase Interpolation
(LPI) and Accumulation (ACM) modes, controlled by
YMODE[B4H[0]].
9.3.3
VERTICAL SCALING
The vertical scaler of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
decoder part consists of a line FIFO buffer for line
repetition and the vertical scaler block, which implements
the vertical scaling on the input data stream in 2 different
operational modes from theoretical zoom by 64 down to
icon size 1⁄64. The vertical scaler is located between the
BCS and horizontal fine scaler, so that the BCS can be
used to compensate for the DC gain amplification of the
ACM mode (see Section 9.3.3.2) as the internal RAMs are
only 8-bit wide.
2004 Jun 29
66
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
• LPI mode: In the linear phase interpolation mode
(YMODE = 0) two neighbouring lines of the source video
stream are added together, but weighted by factors
corresponding to the vertical position (phase) of the
target output line relative to the source lines. This linear
interpolation has a 6-bit phase resolution, which equals
64 intra line phases. It interpolates between two
consecutive input lines only. The LPI mode should be
applied for scaling ratios around 1 (down to 1⁄2), it must
be applied for vertical zooming.
• BCS value to compensate DC gain in ACM mode
(contrast and saturation have to be set): CONT[7:0]
A5H[7:0] respectively SATN[7:0] A6H[7:0]
Nline_out
= lower integer of
= lower integer of
× 64 , or
------------------------
Nline_in
1024
× 64
------------------------------
YSCY[15:0]
9.3.3.3
Use of the vertical phase offsets
• ACM mode: The vertical Accumulation (ACM) mode
(YMODE = 1) represents a vertical averaging window
over multiple lines, sliding over the field. This mode also
generates phase correct output lines. The averaging
window length corresponds to the scaling ratio, resulting
in an adaptive vertical low-pass effect, to greatly reduce
aliasing artefacts. ACM can be applied for downscales
only from ratio 1 down to 1⁄64. ACM results in a scale
dependent DC gain amplification, which has to be
precorrected by the BCS control of the scaler part.
As shown in Section 9.3.1.3, the scaler processing may
run randomly over the interlaced input sequence.
Additionally the interpretation and timing between ITU 656
field ID and real-time detection by means of the state of
H sync at the falling edge of V sync may result in different
field ID interpretation.
A vertically scaled interlaced output also gets a larger
vertical sampling phase error, if the interlaced input fields
are processed, without regard to the actual scale at the
starting point of operation (see Fig.37).
The phase and scale controlling DTO calculates in 16-bit
resolution, controlled by parameters YSCY[15:0] B1H[7:0]
B0H[7:0] and YSCC[15:0] B3H[7:0] B2H[7:0], continuously
over the entire filed. A start offset can be applied to the
phase processing by means of the parameters
YPY3[7:0] to YPY0[7:0] in BFH[7:0] to BCH[7:0] and
YPC3[7:0] to YPC0[7:0] in BBH[7:0] to B8H[7:0]. The start
phase covers the range of 255 32 to 1⁄32 lines offset.
⁄
The four events to be considered are illustrated in Fig.38.
In Tables 26 and 27 PHO is a usable common phase
offset.
It should be noted that the equations in Fig.38 also
produce an interpolated output for the unscaled case, as
the geometrical reference position for all conversions is
the position of the first line of the lower field; see Table 26.
By programming appropriate, opposite, vertical start
phase values (subaddresses B8H to BFH and
E8H to EFH) depending on odd/even field ID of the source
video stream and A/B page cycle, frame ID conversion and
field rate conversion are supported (i.e. de-interlacing,
re-interlacing).
If there is no need for UP-LO and LO-UP conversion and
the input field ID is the reference for the back-end
operation, then it is UP-LO = UP-UP and LO-UP = LO-LO
and the 1⁄2 line phase shift (PHO + 16) that can be
skipped; this case is given in Table 27.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE supports 4 phase offset
registers per task and component (luminance and
chrominance). The value of 20H represents a phase shift
of one line.
Figs 37 and 38 and Tables 26 and 27 describe the use of
the offsets.
Remark: The vertical start phase, as well as the
scaling ratio are defined independently for luminance
and chrominance channels, but must be set to the
same values in the actual implementation for accurate
4 : 2 : 2 output processing.
The registers are assigned to the following events;
e.g. subaddresses B8H to BBH:
• B8H: 00 = input field ID 0, task status bit 0 (toggle
status, see Section 9.3.1.3)
The vertical processing communicates on its input side
with the line FIFO buffer. The scale related equations are:
• B9H: 01 = input field ID 0, task status bit 1
• BAH: 10 = input field ID 1, task status bit 0
• BBH: 11 = input field ID 1, task status bit 1.
• Scaling increment calculation for ACM and LPI mode,
downscale and zoom: YSCY[15:0] and YSCC[15:0]
Nline_in
Nline_out
= lower integer of 1024 ×
------------------------
2004 Jun 29
67
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Depending on the input signal (interlaced or non-interlaced) and the task processing (50 Hz or field reduced processing
with one or two tasks, see examples in Section 9.3.1.3), other combinations may also be possible, but the basic
equations are the same.
scaled output,
no phase offset
scaled output,
with phase offset
unscaled input
field 1
field 2
field 1
field 2
field 1
field 2
correct scale dependent position
scale dependent start offset
mismatched vertical line distances
MHB547
Fig.37 Basic problem of interlaced vertical scaling (example: downscale 3⁄5).
2004 Jun 29
68
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
field 1
upper
field 2
lower
field 1
field 2
field 1
field 2
case UP-UP
case LO-LO
case UP-LO
case LO-UP
B
A
C
D
MHB548
1024
32
1
2
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
Offset =
= 32 = 1 line shift
C = scale increment =
------------
--
D = no offset = 0
1
2
A = input line shift = 16
--
1
2
1
2
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
B = input line shift+ scale increment =
-- --
+ 16
Fig.38 Derivation of the phase related equations (example: interlace vertical scaling down to 3⁄5, with field
conversion).
Table 26 Examples for vertical phase offset usage: global equations
INPUT FIELD UNDER
PROCESSING
OUTPUT FIELD
INTERPRETED AS
USED
ABBREVIATION
EQUATION FOR PHASE OFFSET
CALCULATION (DECIMAL VALUES)
Upper input lines
Upper input lines
upper output lines
lower output lines
UP-UP
PHO + 16
UP-LO
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
PHO +
PHO
+ 16
Lower input lines
Lower input lines
upper output lines
lower output lines
LO-UP
LO-LO
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
PHO +
2004 Jun 29
69
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 27 Vertical phase offset usage; assignment of the phase offsets
DETECTED INPUT
FIELD ID
VERTICAL PHASE
OFFSET
TASK STATUS BIT
CASE
EQUATION TO BE USED
0 = upper lines
0 = upper lines
1 = lower lines
0
YPY0[7:0] and
YPC0[7:0]
case 1(1) UP-UP (PHO)
case 2(2) UP-UP
case 3(3) UP-LO
1
0
YPY1[7:0] and
YPC1[7:0]
case 1
case 2
case 3
case 1
UP-UP (PHO)
UP-LO
UP-UP
YPY2[7:0] and
YPC2[7:0]
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
LO-LO PHO +
– 16
– 16
case 2
case 3
case 1
LO-UP
LO-LO
1 = lower lines
1
YPY3[7:0] and
YPC3[7:0]
YSCY[15:0]
------------------------------
64
LO-LO PHO +
case 2
case 3
LO-LO
LO-UP
Notes
1. Case 1: OFIDC[90H[6]] = 0; scaler input field ID as output ID; back-end interprets output field ID at logic 0 as upper
output lines.
2. Case 2: OFIDC[90H[6]] = 1; task status bit as output ID; back-end interprets output field ID at logic 0 as upper output
lines.
3. Case 3: OFIDC[90H[6]] = 1; task status bit as output ID; back-end interprets output field ID at logic 1 as upper output
lines.
9.4
VBI data decoder and capture
(subaddresses 40H to 7FH)
For lines 2 to 24 of a field, per VBI line, 1 of 16 standards
can be selected (LCRxxx[41:57[7:0]]: 23 × 2 × 4-bit
programming bits). The definition for line 24 is valid for the
rest of the corresponding field, normally no text data (video
data) should be selected there (LCR24 = FFH) to stop the
activity of the VBI data slicer during active video.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE contains a versatile VBI
data decoder.
The implementation and programming model accords to
the VBI data slicer the built-in multimedia video data
acquisition circuit of the SAA5284.
To adjust the slicers processing to the input signal source,
there are offsets in the horizontal and vertical direction
available (parameters HOFF[5B,59[2:0,7:0]],
VOFF[5B,5A[4,7:0]] and FOFF[5B[7]]).
The circuitry recovers the actual clock phase during the
clock run-in period, slices the data bits with the selected
data rate, and groups them into bytes. The result is
buffered into a dedicated VBI data FIFO with a capacity of
2 × 56 bytes (2 × 14 Dwords). The clock frequency, signal
source, field frequency and accepted error count must be
defined in subaddress 40H.
In difference to the scalers counting, the slicers offsets
define the position of the horizontal and vertical trigger
events related to the processed video field. The trigger
events are the falling edge of HREF and the falling edge of
V123 from the decoder processing part.
The VBI data standards that are supported are given in
Table 28.
The relationship of these programming values to the input
signal and the recommended values can be seen in
Tables 18 to 21.
2004 Jun 29
70
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 28 Data types supported by the data slicer block
DATA TYPE
NUMBER
DATA RATE
(Mbits/s)
FC
WINDOW
HAM
CHECK
STANDARD TYPE
FRAMING CODE
27H
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
teletext EuroWST, CCST
European Closed Caption
VPS
6.9375
WST625
CC625
VPS
always
0.500
001
5
9951H
wide screen signalling bits
US teletext (WST)
US Closed Caption (line 21)
(video data selected)
(raw data selected)
teletext
5
1E3C1FH
27H
WSS
5.7272
0.503
5
WST525
CC525
disable
disable
always
001
none
5
none
6.9375
programmable
programmable
programmable
programmable
programmable
general text optional
VITC625
VITC/EBU time codes (Europe) 1.8125
VITC/SMPTE time codes (USA) 1.7898
5
VITC525
open
US NABTS
5.7272
NABTS
optional
MOJI (Japanese)
5.7272
programmable (A7H) Japtext
Japanese format switch (L20/22)
5
5
programmable
none
open
no sliced data transmitted
(video data selected)
disable
9.5
Image port output formatter
(subaddresses 84H to 87H)
The disconnected data stream at the scaler output is
accompanied by a data valid flag (or data qualifier), or is
transported via a gated clock. Clock cycles with invalid
data on the I port data bus (including the HPD pins in 16-bit
output mode) are marked with code 00H.
The output interface consists of a FIFO for video and for
sliced text data, an arbitration circuit, which controls the
mixed transfer of video and sliced text data over the I port,
and a decoding and multiplexing unit, which generates the
8 or 16-bit wide output data stream together with the
accompanying reference and help information.
The output interface also arbitrates the transfer between
scaled video data and sliced text data over the I port
output.
The clock for the output interface can be derived from an
internal clock, decoder, expansion port or an externally
provided clock which is appropriate, for example, for the
VGA and frame buffer. The clock can be up to 33 MHz.
The scaler provides the following video related timing
reference events (signals), which are available on pins as
defined by subaddresses 84H and 85H:
The bits VITX1 and VITX0 (subaddress 86H) are used to
control the arbitration.
The serialization of the internal 32-bit Dwords to 8-bit or
16-bit output (optional), as well as the insertion of the
extended ITU 656 codes (SAV/EAV for video data, ANC or
SAV/EAV codes for sliced text data) are also done here.
For handshaking with the VGA controller, or other memory
or bus interface circuitry, programmable FIFO flags are
provided; see Section 9.5.2.
• Output field ID
• Start and end of vertical active video range
• Start and end of active video line
• Data qualifier or gated clock
• Actually activated programming page (if CONLH is
used)
• Threshold controlled FIFO filling flags (empty, full, filled)
• Sliced data marker.
2004 Jun 29
71
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.5.1
SCALER OUTPUT FORMATTER
(SUBADDRESSES 93H AND C3H)
FSI[2:0] defines the horizontal packing of the data,
FOI[1:0] defines how many Y only lines are expected
before a Y/C line will be formatted. If FYSK is set to logic 0
preceding Y only lines will be skipped, and the output will
always start with a Y/C line.
The output formatter organizes the packing into the output
FIFO. The following formats are available:
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2, Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1, Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 0,
Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 0, Y only (e.g. for raw samples). The
formatting is controlled by FSI[2:0] 93H[2:0], FOI[1:0]
93H[4:3] and FYSK[93H[5]].
Additionally the output formatter limits the amplitude range
of the video data (controlled by ILLV[85H[5]]); see
Table 31.
The data formats are defined on Dwords, or multiples
thereof, and are similar to the video formats as
recommended for PCI multimedia applications (see
SAA7146A). Planar formats are not supported.
Table 29 Byte stream for different output formats
OUTPUT FORMAT
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2
Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1
Yonly
BYTE SEQUENCE FOR 8-BIT OUTPUT MODES
CB0
CB0
Y0
Y0 CR0
Y0 CR0
Y1 Y2
Y1 CB2
Y1 CB4
Y3 Y4
Y2 CR2
Y2 CR4
Y5 Y6
Y3 CB4
Y3 Y4
Y7 Y8
Y4 CR4
Y5 Y6
Y5
Y7
CB6
CB8
Y6
Y8
Y9 Y10
Y11 Y12
Y13
Table 30 Explanation to Table 29
NAME
EXPLANATION
CBn
Yn
CB (B − Y) colour difference component, pixel number n = 0, 2, 4 to 718
Y (luminance) component, pixel number n = 0, 1, 2, 3 to 719
CRn
CR (R − Y) colour difference component, pixel number n = 0, 2, 4 to 718
Table 31 Limiting range on I port
VALID RANGE
DECIMAL VALUE HEXADECIMAL VALUE
SUPPRESSED CODES (HEXADECIMAL VALUE)
LIMIT STEP
ILLV[85H[5]]
LOWER RANGE
00
UPPER RANGE
FF
0
1
1 to 254
8 to 247
01 to FE
08 to F7
00 to 07
F8 to FF
2004 Jun 29
72
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.5.2
VIDEO FIFO (SUBADDRESS 86H)
The decoded VBI data is collected in the dedicated VBI
data FIFO. Once the capture of a line is completed, the
FIFO can be streamed through the image port, preceded
by a header, giving the line number and standard.
The video FIFO at the scaler output contains 32 Dwords.
That corresponds to 64 pixels in 16-bit Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2
format. But as the entire scaler can act as a pipeline buffer,
the actually available buffer capacity for the image port is
much higher, and can exceed beyond a video line.
The VBI data period can be signalled via the sliced data
flag on pin IGP0 or IGP1. The decoded VBI data is lead by
the ITU ancillary data header (DID[5:0] 5DH[5:0] at value
<3EH) or by SAV/EAV codes selected by DID[5:0] at value
3EH or 3FH. IGP0 or IGP1 is set if the first byte of the ANC
header is valid on the I port bus; it is reset if an SAV
occurs. Therefore it may frame multiple lines of text data
output, in case the video processing starts with a distance
of several video lines to the region of text data. Valid sliced
data from the text FIFO is available on the I port as long as
the IGP0 or IGP1 flag is set and the data qualifier is active
on pin IDQ.
The image port and the video FIFO, can operate with the
video source clock (synchronous mode) or with an
externally provided clock (asynchronous, and burst mode),
as appropriate for the VGA controller or attached frame
buffer.
The video FIFO provides 4 internal flags, which report to
what extent the FIFO is actually filled. These are:
• The FIFO Almost Empty (FAE) flag
• The FIFO Combined (FC) flag or FIFO filled, which is set
at almost full level and reset, with hysteresis, only after
the level crosses below the almost empty mark
The decoded VBI data is presented in two different data
formats, controlled by bit RECODE.
RECODE = 1: values 00H and FFH will be recoded to
even parity values 03H and FCH
• The FIFO Almost Full (FAF) flag
• The FIFO Overflow (FOVL) flag.
RECODE = 0: values 00H and FFH may occur in the
data stream as detected.
The trigger levels for FAE and FAF are programmable by
FFL[1:0] 86H[3:2] (16, 24, 28, full) and FEL[1:0] 86H[1:0]
(16, 8, 4, empty).
9.5.4
VIDEO AND TEXT ARBITRATION (SUBADDRESS 86H)
The state of this flag can be seen on pins IGP0 or IGP1.
The pin mapping is defined by subaddresses 84H
and 85H; see Section 10.5.
Sliced text data and scaled video data are transferred over
the same bus, the I port. The mixed transfer is controlled
by an arbitration circuit. If the video data is transferred
without any interrupt and the video FIFO does not need to
buffer any output pixel, the text data is inserted after the
end of a scaled video line, normally during the video
blanking interval.
9.5.3
TEXT FIFO
The data of the terminal VBI data slicer is collected in the
text FIFO before transmission over the I port is requested
(normally before the video window starts) and partitioned
into two FIFO sections. A complete line is fed into the FIFO
before a data transfer is requested. So normally, one line
of text data is ready for transfer while the next text line is
collected. Thus sliced text data is delivered as a block of
qualified data, without any qualification gaps in the byte
stream of the I port.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.5.5
DATA STREAM CODING AND REFERENCE SIGNAL
GENERATION (SUBADDRESSES 84H, 85H AND 93H)
If ITU 656 like codes are not required, they can be
suppressed in the output stream.
As horizontal and vertical reference signals are logic 1,
active gate signals are generated, which frame the transfer
of the valid output data. Alternatively, the horizontal and
vertical trigger pulses can be generated on the rising
edges of the gates.
As a further option, it is possible to provide the scaler with
an external gating signal on pin ITRDY. It is therefore
possible to hold the data output for a certain time and to
get valid output data in bursts of a guaranteed length.
The sketched reference signals and events can be
mapped to the I port output pins IDQ, IGPH, IGPV, IGP0
and IGP1. The polarities of all the outputs can be modified
to enable flexible use. The default polarity for the qualifier
and reference signals is logic 1 (active).
Due to the dynamic FIFO behaviour of the complete scaler
path, the output signal timing has no fixed timing
relationship to the real-time input video stream. Thus fixed
propagation delays, in terms of clock cycles, related to the
analog input can not be defined.
Table 32 shows the relevant and supported SAV and EAV
coding.
The data stream is accompanied by a data qualifier.
Additionally invalid data cycles are marked with code 00H.
Table 32 SAV/EAV codes on the I port
SAV/EAV CODES ON I PORT(1) (HEX)
MSB(2) OF SAV/EAV BYTE = 0 MSB(2) OF SAV/EAV BYTE = 1
EVENT DESCRIPTION
COMMENT
FIELD ID = 0
FIELD ID = 1
FIELD ID = 0
FIELD ID = 1
Next pixel is FIRST pixel of any
active line
0E
49
80
C7
HREF = active;
VREF = active
Previous pixel was LAST pixel
of any active line, but not the
last
13
54
9D
DA
HREF = inactive;
VREF = active
Next pixel is FIRST pixel of any
V-blanking line
25
38
62
7F
AB
B6
EC
F1
HREF = active;
VREF = inactive
Previous pixel was LAST pixel
of the last active line or of any
V-blanking line
HREF = inactive;
VREF = inactive
No valid data, do not capture
and do not increment pointer
00
IDQ pin inactive
Notes
1. The leading byte sequence is: FFH-00H-00H.
2. The MSB of the SAV/EAV code byte is controlled by:
a) Scaler output data: task A MSB = CONLH[90H[7]]; task B
b) VBI data slicer output data: DID[5:0] 5DH[5:0] = 3EH
MSB = CONLH[C0H[7]].
MSB = 1; DID[5:0] 5DH[5:0] = 3FH
MSB = 0.
2004 Jun 29
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invalid data
or
timing reference code
internal header
sliced data
and filling data
DDC_3 DDC_4 CS BC
timing reference code
invalid data
00
end of raw VBI line
00 00
00 EAV
...
...
FF 00 00 SAV SDID DC IDI1 IDI2
D
1_3
D
1_4
D
2_1
...
FF 00 00 EAV 00
MHB549
D
1_1
D
1_2
...
FF
00
ANC data output is only filled up
to the Dword boundary
ANC header
00 FF
internal header
FF DID SDID DC IDI1 IDI2
sliced data
...
D
1_3
D
1_4
... DDC_3 DDC_4 CS BC
00
00
ANC header active for DID (subaddress 5DH) <3EH
Fig.39 Sliced data formats on the I port in 8-bit mode.
Table 33 Explanation to Fig.39
NAME
EXPLANATION
SAV
start of active data; see Table 34
SDID sliced data identification: NEP(1), EP(2), SDID5 to SDID0, freely programmable via I2C-bus subaddress 5EH, bits 5 to 0, e. g. to be used as
source identifier
DC
Dword count: NEP(1), EP(2), DC5 to DC0. DC describes the number of succeeding 32-bit words:
• For SAV/EAV mode DC is fixed to 11 Dwords (byte value 4BH)
• For ANC mode it is: DC = 1⁄4(C + n), where C = 2 (the two data identification bytes IDI1 and IDI2) and n = number of decoded bytes
according to the chosen text standard.
Note that the number of valid bytes inside the stream can be seen in the BC byte.
IDI1
IDI2
Dn_m
internal data identification 1: OP(3), FID (field 1 = 0, field 2 = 1), LineNumber8 to LineNumber3 = Dword 1 byte 1; see Table 34
internal data identification 2: OP(3), LineNumber2 to LineNumber0, DataType3 to DataType0 = Dword 1 byte 2; see Table 34
Dword number n, byte number m
DDC_4 last Dword byte 4, note: for SAV/EAV framing DC is fixed to 0BH, missing data bytes are filled up; the fill value is A0H
CS
the check sum byte, the check sum is accumulated from the SAV (respectively DID) byte to the DDC_4 byte
number of valid sliced bytes counted from the IDI1 byte
BC
EAV
end of active data; see Table 34
Notes
1. Inverted EP (bit 7); for EP see note 2.
2. Even parity (bit 6) of bits 5 to 0.
3. Odd parity (bit 7) of bits 6 to 0.
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 34 Bytes stream of the data slicer
NICK
NAME
COMMENT
subaddress
BIT 7
BIT 6
BIT 5
BIT 4
BIT 3
BIT 2
BIT 1
BIT 0
DID,
SAV,
EAV
NEP(1)
NEP
1
EP(2)
0
1
0
FID(3)
I1(4)
I0(4)
5DH = 00H
subaddress 5DH;
bit 5 = 1
EP
FID(3)
FID(3)
EP
0
D4[5DH] D3[5DH] D2[5DH] D1[5DH] D0[5DH]
subaddress 5DH
bit 5 = 3EH; note 5
V(6)
V(6)
H(7)
H(7)
P3
P3
P2
P2
P1
P1
P0
P0
subaddress 5DH
bit 5 = 3FH; note 5
0
SDID
programmable via
subaddress 5EH
NEP
D5[5EH] D4[5EH] D3[5EH] D2[5EH] D1[5EH] D0[5EH]
DC(8)
IDI1
IDI2
CS
NEP
OP(9)
OP
EP(2)
FID(3)
LN2(10) LN1(10)
DC5
LN8(10)
DC4
LN7(10)
LN0(10)
CS4
DC3
LN6(10)
DT3(11)
CS3
DC2
LN5(10)
DT2(11)
CS2
DC1
LN4(10)
DT1(11)
CS1
DC0
LN3(10)
DT0(11)
CS0
check sum byte
valid byte count
CS6
OP
CS6
0
CS5
BC
CNT5
CNT4
CNT3
CNT2
CNT1
CNT0
Notes
1. NEP = inverted EP (see note 2).
2. EP = Even Parity of bits 5 to 0.
3. FID = 0: field 1; FID = 1: field 2.
4. I1 = 0 and I0 = 0: before line 1; I1 = 0 and I0 = 1: lines 1 to 23; I1 = 1 and I0 = 0: after line 23; I1 = 1 and I0 = 1:
line 24 to end of field.
5. Subaddress 5DH at 3EH and 3FH are used for ITU 656 like SAV/EAV header generation; recommended value.
6. V = 0: active video; V = 1: blanking.
7. H = 0: start of line; H = 1: end of line.
8. DC = Data Count in Dwords according to the data type.
9. OP = Odd Parity of bits 6 to 0.
10. LN = Line Number.
11. DT = Data Type according to table.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.6
Audio clock generation
(subaddresses 30H to 3FH)
• Audio master Clocks Per Field, ACPF[17:0] 32H[1:0]
31H[7:0] 30H[7:0] according to the equation:
audio frequency
field frequency
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE incorporates the
generation of a field-locked audio clock, as an auxiliary
function for video capture. An audio sample clock, that is
locked to the field frequency, ensures that there is always
the same predefined number of audio samples associated
with a field, or a set of fields. This ensures synchronous
playback of audio and video after digital recording (e.g.
capture to hard disk), MPEG or other compression or
non-linear editing.
ACPF[17:0] = round
------------------------------------------
• Audio master Clocks Nominal Increment, ACNI[21:0]
36H[5:0] 35H[7:0] 34H[7:0] according to the equation:
audio frequency
ACNI[21:0] = round
× 223
--------------------------------------------
crystal frequency
See Table 35 for examples.
Remark: For standard applications the synthesized audio
clock AMCLK can be used directly as master clock and as
input clock for port AMXCLK (short cut) to generate
ASCLK and ALRCLK. For high-end applications it is
recommended to use an external analog PLL circuit to
enhance the performance of the generated audio clock.
9.6.1
MASTER AUDIO CLOCK
The audio clock is synthesized from the same crystal
frequency as the line-locked video clock is generated. The
master audio clock is defined by the parameters:
Table 35 Programming examples for audio master clock generation
CRYSTAL
FREQUENCY
(MHz)
ACPF
ACNI
FIELD
(Hz)
DECIMAL
HEX
DECIMAL
HEX
AMCLK = 256 × 48 kHz (12.288 MHz)
50
245760
3C000
3210190
30FBCE
32.11
59.94
205005
320CD
3210190
30FBCE
50
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
24.576
59.94
AMCLK = 256 × 44.1 kHz (11.2896 MHz)
50
225792
188348
225792
188348
37200
2DFBC
37200
2949362
2949362
3853517
3853517
2D00F2
2D00F2
3ACCCD
3ACCCD
32.11
59.94
50
24.576
59.94
2DFBC
AMCLK = 256 × 32 kHz (8.192 MHz)
50
163840
136670
163840
136670
28000
215DE
28000
215DE
2140127
2140127
2796203
2796203
20A7DF
20A7DF
2AAAAB
2AAAAB
32.11
59.94
50
24.576
59.94
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
9.6.2
SIGNALS ASCLK AND ALRCLK
Two binary divided signals ASCLK and ALRCLK are provided for slower serial digital audio signal transmission and for
channel-select. The frequencies of these signals are defined by the parameters:
fAMXCLK
f
• SDIV[5:0] 38H[5:0] according to the equation: fASCLK
=
SDIV[5:0] = AMXCLK – 1
-------------------------------------
-------------------
(SDIV + 1) × 2
2fASCLK
fASCLK
fASCLK
----------------------
2fALRCLK
• LRDIV[5:0] 39H[5:0] according to the equation: fALRCLK
=
LRDIV[5:0] =
--------------------------
LRDIV × 2
See Table 36 for examples.
Table 36 Programming examples for ASCLK/ALRCLK clock generation
SDIV
LRDIV
AMXCLK
(MHz)
ASCLK
(kHz)
ALRCLK
(kHz)
DECIMAL
HEX
DECIMAL
HEX
1536
768
3
7
3
1
3
1
03
07
03
01
03
01
16
8
10
08
10
10
10
10
12.288
11.2896
8.192
48
1411.2
2822.4
1024
16
32
16
32
44.1
32
2048
9.6.3
OTHER CONTROL SIGNALS
Further control signals are available to define reference clock edges and vertical references; see Table 37.
Table 37 Control signals
CONTROL
DESCRIPTION
SIGNAL
APLL[3AH[3]] Audio PLL mode:
0: PLL closed
1: PLL open
AMVR[3AH[2]] Audio Master clock Vertical Reference:
0: internal vertical reference
1: external vertical reference
LRPH[3AH[1]] ALRCLK Phase:
0: invert ASCLK, ALRCLK edges triggered by falling edge of ASCLK
1: do not invert ASCLK, ALRCLK edges triggered by rising edge of ASCLK
SCPH[3AH[0]] ASCLK Phase:
0: invert AMXCLK, ASCLK edges triggered by falling edge of AMXCLK
1: do not invert AMXCLK, ASCLK edges triggered by rising edge of AMXCLK
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10 INPUT/OUTPUT INTERFACES AND PORTS OF
DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
10.1 Analog terminals
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE has 6 analog inputs
AI21 to AI24, AI11 and AI12 (see Table 38) for composite
video CVBS or S-video Y/C signal pairs. Additionally, there
are two differential reference inputs, which must be
connected to ground via a capacitor equivalent to the
decoupling capacitors at the 6 inputs. There are no
peripheral components required other than the decoupling
capacitors and 18 Ω/56 Ω termination resistors, one set
per connected input signal (see also application example
in Fig.53). Two anti-alias filters are integrated, and self
adjusting via the clock frequency.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE has 5 different I/O
interfaces. These are:
• Analog video input interface, for analog CVBS and/or
Y and C input signals
• Audio clock port
• Digital real-time signal port (RT port)
• Digital video expansion port (X port), for unscaled digital
video input and output
• Digital image port (I port) for scaled video data output
and programming
Clamp and gain control for the two ADCs are also
integrated. An analog video output pin (AOUT) is provided
for testing purposes.
• Digital host port (H port) for extension of the image port
or expansion port from 8 to 16-bit.
Table 38 Analog pin description
SYMBOL
PIN
I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
AI24 to AI21
P6, P7, P9
and P10
I
analog video signal inputs, e.g. 2 CVBS signals and MODE3 to MODE0
two Y/C pairs can be connected simultaneously
AI12 and AI11 P11 and P13
AOUT M10
O
I
analog video output, for test purposes
AOSL1 and AOSL0
AI1D and AI2D P12 and P8
analog reference pins for differential ADC operation
−
10.2 Audio clock signals
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE also synchronizes the audio clock and sampling rate to the video frame rate, via a very
slow PLL. This ensures that the multimedia capture and compression processes always gather the same predefined
number of samples per video frame.
An audio master clock AMCLK and two divided clocks, ASCLK and ALRCLK, are generated; see Table 39.
•
ASCLK: can be used as audio serial clock
• ALRCLK: audio left/right channel clock.
The ratios are programmable; see Section 9.6.
Table 39 Audio clock pin description
SYMBOL PIN I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
AMCLK
K12
O
I
audio master clock output
ACPF[17:0] 32H[1:0] 31H[7:0] 30H[7:0]
and ACNI[21:0] 36H[5:0] 35H[7:0]
34H[7:0]
AMXCLK J12
external audio master clock input for the clock
division circuit, can be directly connected to
output AMCLK for standard applications
−
ASCLK
K14
O
O
serial audio clock output, can be synchronized to SDIV[5:0] 38H[5:0] and SCPH[3AH[0]]
rising or falling edge of AMXCLK
ALRCLK J13
audio channel (left/right) clock output, can be
synchronized to rising or falling edge of ASCLK
LRDIV[5:0] 39H[5:0] and LRPH[3AH[1]]
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10.3 Clock and real-time synchronization signals
The Line-Locked Clock (LLC) is the double pixel clock at a
nominal 27 MHz. It is locked to the selected video input,
generating baseband video pixels according to “ITU
recommendation 601”. In order to support interfacing
circuits, a direct pixel clock LLC2 is also provided.
A crystal accurate frequency reference is required for the
generation of the line-locked video (pixel) clock LLC, and
the frame-locked audio serial bit clock. An oscillator is
built-in, for fundamental or 3rd-harmonic crystals. The
supported crystal frequencies are 32.11 or 24.576 MHz
(defined during reset by strapping pin ALRCLK).
The pins for line and field timing reference signals are
RTCO, RTS1 and RTS0. Various real-time status
information can be selected for the RTS pins. The signals
are always available (output) and reflect the
synchronization operation of the decoder part in the
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE. The function of the RTS1 and
RTS0 pins can be defined by bits RTSE1[3:0] 12H[7:4] and
RTSE0[3:0] 12H[3:0]; see Table 40.
Alternatively pins XTALId and XTALIe can be driven from
an external single-ended oscillator.
The crystal oscillation can be propagated as clock to other
ICs in the system via pin XTOUTd.
Table 40 Clock and real-time synchronization signals
SYMBOL PIN
I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
Crystal oscillator
XTALId
P2
P3
P4
I
input for crystal oscillator, or reference clock
output of crystal oscillator
−
−
XTALOd
XTOUTd
O
O
reference (crystal) clock output drive (optional)
XTOUTE[14H[3]]
Real-time signals (RT port)
LLC
M14
O
line-locked clock; nominal 27 MHz, double pixel clock locked to the
selected video input signal
−
LLC2
L14
L13
O
O
line-locked pixel clock; nominal 13.5 MHz
−
−
RTCO
real-time control output; transfers real-time status information
supporting RTC level 3.1 (see external document “RTC Functional
Description”, available on request)
RTS0
RTS1
K13
L10
O
O
real-time status information line 0; can be programmed to carry
various real-time informations; see Table 171
RTSE0[3:0] 12H[3:0]
RTSE1[3:0] 12H[7:4]
real-time status information line 1; can be programmed to carry
various real-time informations; see Table 172
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10.4 Video expansion port (X port)
As output, these are direct copies of the decoder signals.
The expansion port is intended for transporting video
streams of image data from other digital video circuits such
as MPEG encoder/decoder and video phone codec, to the
image port (I port); see Table 41.
The data transfers through the expansion port represent a
single D1 port, with half duplex mode. The SAV and EAV
codes may be inserted optionally for data input (controlled
by bit XCODE[92H[3]]). The input/output direction is
switched for complete fields only.
The expansion port consists of two groups of signals/pins:
• 8-bit data, I/O, regular video components Y-CB-CR
4 : 2 : 2, i.e. CB-Y-CR-Y, byte serial, exceptionally raw
video samples (e.g. ADC test). In input mode the data
bus can be extended to 16-bit by pins HPD7 to HPD0.
• Clock, synchronization and auxiliary signals,
accompanying the data stream, I/O.
Table 41 Signals dedicated to the expansion port
SYMBOL
PIN
I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
XPD7 to
XPD0
K2, K3,
L1 to L3,
M1, M2
and N1
I/O
X port data: in output mode controlled by decoder OFTS[2:0] 13H[2:0], 91H[7:0]
section, for data format see Table 42; in input
mode Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 serial input data or
luminance part of a 16-bit Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 input
and C1H[7:0]
XCLK
M3
I/O
clock at expansion port: if output, then copy of
LLC; as input normally a double pixel clock of up
to 32 MHz or a gated clock (clock gated with a
qualifier)
XCKS[92H[0]]
XDQ
M4
N3
I/O
O
data valid flag of the expansion port input
(qualifier): if output, then decoder (HREF and
VGATE) gate (see Fig.32)
−
XRDY
data request flag = ready to receive, to work with XRQT[83H[2]]
optional buffer in external device, to prevent
internal buffer overflow;
second function: input related task flag A/B
XRH
XRV
XTRI
N2
L5
K1
I/O
I/O
I
horizontal reference signal for the X port: as
output: HREF or HS from the decoder (see
Fig.32); as input: a reference edge for horizontal
input timing and a polarity for input field ID
detection can be defined
XRHS[13H[6]], XFDH[92H[6]]
and XDH[92H[2]]
vertical reference signal for the X port: as output: XRVS[1:0] 13H[5:4],
V123 or field ID from the decoder,
see Figs 30 and 31; as input: a reference edge for 92H[5:4]
vertical input timing and for input field ID detection
can be defined
XFDV[92H[7]] and XDV[1:0]
port control: switches X port input to 3-state
XPE[1:0] 83H[1:0]
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10.4.1 X PORT CONFIGURED AS OUTPUT
• Raw samples (data types 0 to 5 and 7 to 14): CB-CR
samples are similar to data type 6, but CVBS samples
are transferred instead of processed luminance samples
within the Y time slots.
If the data output is enabled at the expansion port, then the
data stream from the decoder is present. The data format
of the 8-bit data bus is dependent on the chosen data type
which is selectable by the line control registers LCR2
to LCR24; see Table 17. In contrast to the image port, the
sliced data format is not available on the expansion port.
Instead, raw CVBS samples are always transferred if any
sliced data type is selected.
The amplitude and offset of the CVBS signal is
programmable via RAWG7 to RAWG0 and
RAWO7 to RAWO0, see Chapter 18,
Tables 178 and 179. For nominal levels see Fig.27.
The relationship of LCR programming to line numbers is
described in Section 9.2; see Tables 18 to 21.
Details of some of the data types on the expansion port are
as follows:
The data type selections by LCR are overruled by setting
OFTS2 = 1 (subaddress 13H bit 2). This setting is mainly
intended for device production testing. The VPO-bus
carries the upper or lower 8 bits of the two ADCs
depending on the OFTS[1:0] 13H[1:0] settings; see
Table 173. The output configuration is done via
MODE[3:0] 02H[3:0] settings; see Table 155. If a Y/C
mode is selected, the expansion port carries the
multiplexed output signals of both ADCs, in CVBS mode
the output of only one ADC. No timing reference codes are
generated in this mode.
• Active video: (data type 15) contains components
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 signal, 720 active pixels per line. The
amplitude and offsets are programmable via
DBRI7 to DBRI0, DCON7 to DCON0,
DSAT7 to DSAT0, OFFU1, OFFU0, OFFV1 and
OFFV0. For nominal levels see Fig.26.
• Test line: (data type 6) is similar to the active video
format, with some constraints within the data
processing:
– adaptive chrominance comb filter, vertical filter
(chrominance comb filter for NTSC standards, PAL
phase error correction) within the chrominance
processing are disabled
Remark: The LSBs (bit 0) of the ADCs are also available
on pin RTS0; see Table 171.
The SAV/EAV timing reference codes define the start and
end of valid data regions. The ITU-blanking code
sequence ‘- 80 - 10 - 80 - 10 -...’ is transmitted during the
horizontal blanking period, between EAV and SAV.
– adaptive luminance comb filter, peaking and
chrominance trap are bypassed within the luminance
processing.
This data type is defined for future enhancements. It can
be activated for lines containing standard test signals
within the vertical blanking period. Currently most
sources do not contain test lines. For nominal levels
see Fig.26.
The position of the F bit is constant according to ITU 656;
see Tables 44 and 45.
The V bit can be generated in two different ways (see
Tables 44 and 45) controlled via OFTS1 and OFTS0; see
Table 173.
F and V bits change synchronously with the EAV code.
Table 42 Data format on the expansion port
TIMING
REFERENCE
CODE (HEX)(1)
TIMING
BLANKING
REFERENCE
PERIOD
BLANKING
PERIOD
720 PIXELS Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 DATA(2)
CODE (HEX)(1)
... 80 10 FF 00 00 SAV CB0 Y0 CR0 Y1 CB2 Y2 ... CR718 Y719 FF 00 00 EAV 80 10 ...
Notes
1. The generation of the timing reference codes can be suppressed by setting OFTS[2:0] to ‘010’; see Table 173. In
this event the code sequence is replaced by the standard ‘- 80 - 10 -’ blanking values.
2. If raw samples or sliced data are selected by the line control registers (LCR2 to LCR24), the Y samples are replaced
by CVBS samples.
2004 Jun 29
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 43 SAV/EAV format on expansion port XPD7 to XPD0
BIT 6
(F)
BIT 5
(V)
BIT 4
(H)
BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0
(P3) (P2) (P1) (P0)
BIT 7
1
field bit
vertical blanking bit
VBI: V = 1
format
reserved; evaluation not
recommended (protection
bits according to ITU 656)
1st field: F = 0
2nd field: F = 1
H = 0 in SAV format
H = 1 in EAV format
active video: V = 0
for vertical timing see Tables 44 and 45
Table 44 525 lines/60 Hz vertical timing
V
LINE NUMBER
F (ITU 656)
OFTS[2:0] = 000 (ITU 656)
OFTS[2:0] = 001
1 to 3
4 to 19
20
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
according to selected VGATE position type via
VSTA and VSTO (subaddresses 15H to 17H);
see Tables 175 to 177
21
22 to 261
262
263
264 and 265
266 to 282
283
284
285 to 524
525
Table 45 625 lines/50 Hz vertical timing
V
LINE NUMBER
F (ITU 656)
OFTS[2:0] = 000 (ITU 656)
OFTS[1:0] = 10
1 to 22
23
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
according to selected VGATE position type via
VSTA and VSTO (subaddresses 15H to 17H);
see Tables 175 to 177
24 to 309
310
311 and 312
313 to 335
336
337 to 622
623
624 and 625
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10.4.2 X PORT CONFIGURED AS INPUT
The data formats at the image port are defined in Dwords
of 32 bits (4 bytes), such as the related FIFO structures.
However, the physical data stream at the image port is
only 16-bit or 8-bit wide; in 16-bit mode data pins HPD7
to HPD0 are used for chrominance data. The four bytes of
the Dwords are serialized in words or bytes.
If data input mode is selected at the expansion port, then
the scaler can choose its input data stream from the
on-chip video decoder, or from the expansion port
(controlled by bit SCSRC[1:0] 91H[5:4]). Byte serial
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2, or subsets for other sampling schemes,
or raw samples from an external ADC may be input (see
also bits FSC[2:0] 91H[2:0]). The input data stream must
be accompanied by an external clock XCLK, qualifier XDQ
and reference signals XRH and XRV. Instead of the
reference signal, embedded SAV and EAV codes,
according to ITU 656, can also be accepted. The
protection bits are not evaluated.
The available formats are as follows:
• Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2
• Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1
• Raw samples
• Decoded VBI data.
For handshaking with the receiving VGA controller, or
other memory or bus interface circuitry, F, H and V
reference signals and programmable FIFO flags are
provided. The information is provided on pins IGP0, IGP1,
IGPH and IGPV. The function on these pins is controlled
via subaddresses 84H and 85H.
XRH and XRV carry the horizontal and vertical
synchronization signals for the digital video stream
through the expansion port. The field ID of the input video
stream is carried in the phase (edge) of XRV and state of
XRH, or directly as FS (frame sync, odd/even signal) on
the XRV pin (controlled by XFDV[92H[7]], XFDH[92H[6]]
and XDV[1:0] 92H[5:4]).
VBI data is collected over an entire line in its own FIFO and
transferred as an uninterrupted block of bytes. Decoded
VBI data can be signed by the VBI flag on pins IGP0 and
IGP1.
The trigger events on XRH (rising/falling edge) and XRV
(rising/falling both edges) for the scalers acquisition
window are defined by XDV[1:0] 92H[5:4] and
Because scaled video data and decoded VBI data may
come from different and asynchronous sources, an
arbitration scheme is needed. Normally the VBI data slicer
has priority.
XDH[92H[2]]. The signal polarity of the qualifier can also
be defined by bit XDQ[92H[1]]. As an alternative to the
qualifier, the input clock can be applied to a gated clock
(clock gated with a data qualifier, controlled by bit
XCKS[92H[0]]). In this event, all input data will be qualified.
The image port consists of the pins and/or signals, as
given in Table 46.
10.5 Image port (I port)
For pin constrained applications, or interfaces, the relevant
timing and data reference signals can also be encoded into
the data stream. Therefore the corresponding pins do not
need to be connected. The minimum image port
configuration requires 9 pins only, i.e. 8 pins for data
including codes, and 1 pin for clock or gated clock. The
inserted codes are defined in close relationship to the
ITU-R BT.656 (D1) recommendation, where possible.
The image port transfers data from the scaler as well as
from the VBI data slicer, if selected (maximum 33 MHz).
The reference clock is available at the ICLK pin as an
output or as an input (maximum 33 MHz). As an output,
the ICLK is derived from the line-locked decoder or
expansion port input clock. The data stream from the
scaler output is normally discontinuous. Therefore valid
data during a clock cycle is accompanied by a data
qualifying (data valid) flag on pin IDQ. For pin constrained
applications the IDQ pin can be programmed to function as
a gated clock output (bit ICKS2[80H[2]]).
2004 Jun 29
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
The following deviations from “ITU 656 recommendation”
are implemented at the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AEs image
port interface:
• VBI raw sample streams are enveloped with SAV and
EAV, like normal video
• Decoded VBI data is transported as Ancillary (ANC)
• SAV and EAV codes are only present in those lines,
where data is to be transferred, i.e. active video lines, or
VBI raw samples, no codes for empty lines
data, two modes:
– direct decoded VBI data bytes (8-bit) are directly
placed in the ANC data field, 00H and FFH codes
may appear in the data block (violation to
ITU-R BT.656)
• There may be more or less than 720 pixels between
SAV and EAV
• The data content and number of clock cycles during
horizontal and vertical blanking is undefined, and may
be not constant
– recoded VBI data bytes (8-bit) directly placed in ANC
data field, 00H and FFH codes will be recoded to
even parity codes 03H and FCH to suppress invalid
ITU-R BT.656 codes.
• The data stream may be interleaved with not-valid data
codes, 00H, but SAV and EAV 4-byte codes are not
interleaved with not-valid data codes
There are no empty cycles in the ancillary code or its data
field. The data codes 00H and FFH are suppressed
(changed to 01H or FEH respectively) in the active video
stream, as well as in the VBI raw sample stream (VBI
pass-through). As an option the number range can be
limited further.
• There may be an irregular pattern of not-valid data, or
IDQ, and as a result, ‘CB - Y - CR - Y -’ is not in a fixed
phase to a regular clock divider
Table 46 Signals dedicated to the image port
SYMBOL
PIN
I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
IPD7 to
IPD0
E14, D14,
C14, B14,
I/O I port data
ICODE[93H[7]], ISWP[1:0] 85H[7:6]
and IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
E13, D13,
C13 and B13
ICLK
IDQ
H12
H14
G12
I/O continuous reference clock at image port,
can be input or output, as output decoder
LLC or XCLK from X port
ICKS[1:0] 80H[1:0] and IPE[1:0]
87H[1:0]
O
data valid flag at image port, qualifier, with ICKS2[80H[2]], IDQP[85H[0]] and
programmable polarity;
secondary function: gated clock
IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
IGPH
O
horizontal reference output signal, copy of IDH[1:0] 84H[1:0], IRHP[85H[1]] and
the horizontal gate signal of the scaler, with IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
programmable polarity;
alternative function: HRESET pulse
IGPV
F13
O
vertical reference output signal, copy of the IDV[1:0] 84H[3:2], IRVP[85H[2]] and
vertical gate signal of the scaler, with
programmable polarity;
IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
alternative function: VRESET pulse
IGP1
IGP0
G13
F14
O
O
general purpose output signal for I port
IDG12[86H[4]], IDG1[1:0] 84H[5:4],
IG1P[85H[3]] and IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
general purpose output signal for I port
IDG02[86H[5]], IDG0[1:0] 84H[7:6],
IG0P[85H[4]] and IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
ITRDY
ITRI
J14
I
I
target ready input signals
−
G14
port control, switches I port into 3-state
IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0]
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10.6 Host port for 16-bit extension of video data I/O (H port)
The H port, pins HPD, can be used to extend the data I/O paths to 16-bit.
The I port has functional priority. If I8_16[93H[6]] is set to logic 1 the output drivers of the H port are enabled and are
dependent on the I port enable control. When I8_16 = 0, the HPD output is disabled.
Table 47 Signals dedicated to the host port
SYMBOL
PIN
A13, D12, C12, B12, I/O 16-bit extension for digital I/O
A12, C11, B11 and A11 (chrominance component)
I/O
DESCRIPTION
BIT
HPD7 to
HPD0
IPE[1:0] 87H[1:0], ITRI[8FH[6]] and
I8_16[93H[6]]
10.7 Basic input and output timing diagrams for the
I and X ports
10.7.2 X PORT INPUT TIMING
The input timing requirements at the X port are the same
as those for the I port output. However, the following
differences should be noted:
10.7.1 I PORT OUTPUT TIMING
The following diagrams (Figs 40 to 46) illustrate the output
timing via the I port. IGPH and IGPV are indicated as
logic 1 active gate signals. If reference pulses are
programmed, these pulses are generated on the rising
edge of the logic 1 active gates. Valid data is accompanied
by the output data qualifier on pin IDQ. In addition, invalid
cycles are marked with output code 00H.
• It is not necessary to mark invalid cycles with a 00H
code
• No constraints on the input qualifier (can be a random
pattern)
• XCLK may by a gated clock (XCLK AND external XDQ).
Remark: All timings illustrated are given for an
uninterrupted output stream (no handshake with the
external hardware).
The IDQ output pin may be defined to be a gated clock
output signal (ICLK AND internal IDQ).
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
C
C
C
C
R
IPD 7:0
00
FF
00
00
SAV
00
Y
Y
00
Y
Y
00
B
R
B
IGPH
MHB550
Fig.40 Output timing at the I port for serial 8-bit data at start of a line (ICODE = 1).
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
C
C
C
C
R
IPD 7:0
00
Y
Y
00
Y
Y
00
B
R
B
IGPH
MHB551
Fig.41 Output timing at the I port for serial 8-bit data at start of a line (ICODE = 0).
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
C
B
C
R
C
B
C
R
IPD 7:0
00
Y
Y
00
Y
Y
00
FF
00
00
EAV
00
IGPH
MHB552
Fig.42 Output timing at the I port for serial 8-bit data at end of a line (ICODE = 1).
87
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
C
C
C
C
R
IPD 7:0
00
Y
Y
00
Y
Y
00
B
R
B
IGPH
MHB553
Fig.43 Output timing at the I port for serial 8-bit data at end of a line (ICODE = 0).
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
]
Y
IPD 7:0
Y
C
00
00
FF
00
00
00
00
Y0
Y1
C
00
00
Y2
Y3
00
00
FF
00
00
00
00
n−1
n
[
HPD 7:0
C
B
C
B
C
R
C
B
SAV
EAV
R
R
IGPH
MHB554
Fig.44 Output timing for 16-bit data output via the I and H port with codes (ICODE = 1), timing is like 8-bit output,
but packages of 2 bytes per valid cycle.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
IDQ
IGPH
IGPV
MHB555
Fig.45 Horizontal and vertical gate output timing.
ICLK
IDQ
[
]
]
IPD 7:0
BC
BC
00
00
00
FF
FF
00
FF
00
DID
SDID
XX
YY
ZZ
CS
00
FF
00
00
00
00
[
HPD 7:0
SAV
EAV
sliced data
flag on IGP0
or IGP1
MHB733
Fig.46 Output timing for sliced VBI data in 8-bit serial output mode (dotted graphs for SAV/EAV mode).
2004 Jun 29
89
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
11 BOUNDARY SCAN TEST
The Boundary Scan Test (BST) functions BYPASS,
EXTEST, INTEST, SAMPLE, CLAMP and IDCODE are all
supported; see Table 48. Details about the JTAG
BST-TEST can be found in the specification “IEEE Std.
1149.1”. Two files containing the detailed Boundary Scan
Description Language (BSDL) of the SAA7108AE;
SAA7109AE are available on request.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE has built-in logic and
2 times 5 dedicated pins to support boundary scan testing,
separately for the encoder and decoder part, which allows
board testing without special hardware (nails). The
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE follows the “IEEE Std. 1149.1 -
Standard Test Access Port and Boundary-Scan
Architecture” set by the Joint Test Action Group (JTAG)
chaired by Philips.
The 10 special pins are Test Mode Select (TMSe and
TMSd), Test Clock (TCKe and TCKd), Test Reset
(TRSTe and TRSTd), Test Data Input (TDIe and TDId)
and Test Data Output (TDOe and TDOd), where extension
‘e’ refers to the encoder part and extension ‘d’ refers to the
decoder part.
Table 48 BST instructions supported by the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
INSTRUCTION
DESCRIPTION
BYPASS
This mandatory instruction provides a minimum length serial path (1 bit) between TDIe (or TDId)
and TDOe (or TDOd) when no test operation of the component is required.
EXTEST
SAMPLE
This mandatory instruction allows testing of off-chip circuitry and board level interconnections.
This mandatory instruction can be used to take a sample of the inputs during normal operation of
the component. It can also be used to preload data values into the latched outputs of the boundary
scan register.
CLAMP
This optional instruction is useful for testing when not all ICs have BST. This instruction addresses
the bypass register while the boundary scan register is in external test mode.
IDCODE
This optional instruction will provide information on the components manufacturer, part number and
version number.
INTEST
USER1
This optional instruction allows testing of the internal logic (no support for customers available).
This private instruction allows testing by the manufacturer (no support for customers available).
11.1 Initialization of boundary scan circuit
is the possibility to check for the correct ICs mounted after
production and to determine the version number of the ICs
during field service.
The Test Access Port (TAP) controller of an IC should be
in the reset state (TEST_LOGIC_RESET) when the IC is
in functional mode. This reset state also forces the
instruction register into a functional instruction such as
IDCODE or BYPASS.
When the IDCODE instruction is loaded into the BST
instruction register, the identification register will be
connected between TDIe (or TDId) and TDOe (or TDOd)
of the IC. The identification register will load a component
specific code during the CAPTURE_DATA_REGISTER
state of the TAP controller, this code can subsequently be
shifted out. At board level this code can be used to verify
component manufacturer, type and version number. The
device identification register contains 32 bits, numbered
31 to 0, where bit 31 is the most significant bit (nearest to
TDIe or TDId) and bit 0 is the least significant bit (nearest
to TDOe or TDOd); see Fig.47.
To solve the power-up reset, the standard specifies that
the TAP controller will be forced asynchronously to the
TEST_LOGIC_RESET state by setting the TRSTe or
TRSTd pin LOW.
11.2 Device identification codes
A device identification register is specified in “IEEE Std.
1149.1b-1994”. It is a 32-bit register which contains fields
for the specification of the IC manufacturer, the IC part
number and the IC version number. Its biggest advantage
2004 Jun 29
90
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
MSB
31
LSB
28 27
12 11
1
0
0111000100000100
(0111000100010100)
TDIe
(or TDId)
TDOe
(or TDOd)
nnnn
1
00000010101
4-bit
version
code
16-bit part number
11-bit manufacturer
identification
MBL786
a. SAA7108AE.
MSB
LSB
31
28 27
12 11
1
0
0111000100000101
(0111000100010100)
TDIe
(or TDId)
TDOe
(or TDOd)
nnnn
1
00000010101
4-bit
version
code
16-bit part number
11-bit manufacturer
identification
MBL787
b. SAA7109AE.
Fig.47 32 bits of identification code.
12 LIMITING VALUES
In accordance with the Absolute Maximum Rating System (IEC 60134); all ground pins connected together and
grounded (0 V); all supply pins connected together.
SYMBOL
VDDD
VDDA
Vi(A)
PARAMETER
digital supply voltage
CONDITIONS
MIN.
−0.5
MAX.
+4.6
UNIT
V
V
V
V
V
V
analog supply voltage
−0.5
−0.5
−0.5
−0.5
−0.5
+4.6
input voltage at analog inputs
+4.6
Vi(n)
input voltage at pins XTALI, SDA and SCL
input voltage at digital inputs or I/O pins
VDDD + 0.5
+4.6
Vi(D)
outputs in 3-state
outputs in 3-state;
note 1
+5.5
∆VSS
Tstg
voltage difference between VSSA(n) and VSSD(n)
storage temperature
−
100
mV
°C
°C
V
−65
0
+150
70
Tamb
Vesd
ambient temperature
electrostatic discharge voltage
human body model;
note 2
−
±2000
machine model;
note 3
−
±150
V
Notes
1. Condition for maximum voltage at digital inputs or I/O pins: 3.0 V < VDDD < 3.6 V.
2. Class 2 according to EIA/JESD22-114-B.
3. Class A according to EIA/JESD22-115-A.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
13 THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
thermal resistance from junction to ambient
CONDITIONS
in free air
VALUE
UNIT
Rth(j-a)
32(1)
K/W
Note
1. The overall Rth(j-a) value can vary depending on the board layout. To minimize the effective Rth(j-a) all power and
ground pins must be connected to the power and ground layers directly. An ample copper area direct under the
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE with a number of through-hole plating, which connect to the ground layer (four-layer
board: second layer), can also reduce the effective Rth(j-a). Please do not use any solder-stop varnish under the chip.
In addition the usage of soldering glue with a high thermal conductance after curing is recommended.
14 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIGITAL VIDEO ENCODER PART
Tamb = 0 to 70 °C (typical values measured at Tamb = 25 °C); unless otherwise specified.
SYMBOL
Supplies
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
VDDA
analog supply voltage
digital supply voltage
3.15
3.15
3.3
3.45
3.45
V
VDDIe
3.3
1.1
1.5
1.8
2.5
3.3
110
175
V
VDD(DVO)
digital supply voltage
(DVO)
1.045
1.425
1.71
2.375
3.135
1
1.155
1.575
1.89
V
V
V
2.625
3.465
115
V
V
IDDA
IDDD
analog supply current
digital supply current
note 1
note 2
mA
mA
1
200
Inputs
VIL
LOW-level input voltage
VDD(DVO) = 1.1 V, 1.5 V,
1.8 V or 2.5 V; note 3
−0.1
−
+0.2
V
V
DD(DVO) = 3.3 V; note 3
−0.5
−0.5
−
−
+0.8
+0.8
V
V
pins RESe, TMSe, TCKe,
TRSTe and TDIe
VIH
HIGH-level input voltage VDD(DVO) = 1.1 V, 1.5 V,
1.8 V or 2.5 V; note 3
VDD(DVO) − 0.2
−
VDD(DVO) + 0.1 V
VDD(DVO) = 3.3 V; note 3
2
2
−
−
VDD(DVO) + 0.3 V
pins RESe, TMSe, TCKe,
TRSTe and TDIe
VDDIe + 0.3
V
ILI
Ci
input leakage current
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
10
10
10
10
µA
pF
pF
pF
input capacitance
clocks
data
I/Os at high-impedance
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
Outputs
VOL
LOW-level output voltage VDD(DVO) = 1.1 V, 1.5 V,
1.8 V or 2.5 V; note 3
0
−
0.1
V
VDD(DVO) = 3.3 V; note 3
0
0
−
−
0.4
0.4
V
V
pins TDOe,
TTXRQ_XCLKO2, VSM
and HSM_CSYNC
VOH
HIGH-level output voltage VDD(DVO) = 1.1 V, 1.5 V,
1.8 V or 2.5 V; note 3
VDD(DVO) − 0.1
−
VDD(DVO)
V
VDD(DVO) = 3.3 V; note 3
2.4
2.4
−
−
VDD(DVO)
VDDIe
V
V
pins TDOe,
TTXRQ_XCLKO2, VSM
and HSM_CSYNC
I2C-bus; pins SDAe and SCLe
VIL
VIH
Ii
LOW-level input voltage
HIGH-level input voltage
input current
−0.5
0.7VDDIe
−10
−
−
−
−
0.3VDDIe
VDDIe + 0.3
+10
V
V
Vi = LOW or HIGH
µA
V
VOL
LOW-level output voltage IOL = 3 mA
(pin SDAe)
−
0.4
Io
output current
during acknowledge
3
−
−
mA
Clock timing; pins PIXCLKI and PIXCLKO
TPIXCLK
td(CLKD)
cycle time
note 4
note 5
12
−
−
−
−
ns
ns
delay from PIXCLKO to
PIXCLKI
−
δ
duty factor tHIGH/TPIXCLK note 4
40
40
−
50
50
−
60
%
%
ns
ns
duty factor tHIGH/TCLKO2
rise time
output
note 4
note 4
60
tr
tf
1.5
1.5
fall time
−
−
Input timing
tSU;DAT
tHD;DAT
tSU;DAT
input data set-up time
input data hold time
input data set-up time
pins PD11 to PD0
pins PD11 to PD0
2
−
−
−
−
−
−
ns
ns
ns
0.9
2
pins HSVGC, VSVGC
and FSVGC; note 6
tHD;DAT
input data hold time
pins HSVGC, VSVGC
and FSVGC; note 6
1.5
−
−
ns
Crystal oscillator
fnom
nominal frequency
−
27
−
MHz
10−6
∆f/fnom
permissible deviation of
nominal frequency
note 7
−50
−
+50
2004 Jun 29
93
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
CRYSTAL SPECIFICATION
Tamb
CL
ambient temperature
0
−
70
−
°C
pF
Ω
load capacitance
series resistance
8
−
RS
−
−
80
1.8
C1
motional capacitance
(typical)
1.2
1.5
fF
C0
parallel capacitance
(typical)
2.8
3.5
4.2
pF
Data and reference signal output timing
CL
output load capacitance
8
−
−
40
pF
ns
to(h)(gfx)
output hold time to
graphics controller
pins HSVGC, VSVGC,
FSVGC and CBO
1.5
−
to(d)(gfx)
to(h)
output delay time to
graphics controller
pins HSVGC, VSVGC,
FSVGC and CBO
−
−
−
10
ns
ns
output hold time
pins TDOe,
3
−
TTXRQ_XCLKO2, VSM
and HSM_CSYNC
to(d)
output delay time
pins TDOe,
−
−
25
ns
TTXRQ_XCLKO2, VSM
and HSM_CSYNC
CVBS and RGB outputs
Vo(CVBS)(p-p) output voltage CVBS
(peak-to-peak value)
see Table 49
see Table 49
−
−
1.23
1
−
−
V
V
Vo(VBS)(p-p) output voltage VBS
(S-video)
(peak-to-peak value)
Vo(C)(p-p)
output voltage C
(S-video)
(peak-to-peak value)
see Table 49
see Table 49
−
0.89
−
V
Vo(RGB)(p-p) output voltage R, G, B
(peak-to-peak value)
−
−
0.7
2
−
−
V
∆Vo
inequality of output signal
voltages
%
RL
output load resistance
−
−
37.5
170
−
−
Ω
BDAC
output signal bandwidth
of DACs
−3 dB; note 8
MHz
ILElf(DAC)
low frequency integral
linearity error of DACs
−
−
−
−
±3
±1
LSB
LSB
DLElf(DAC)
low frequency differential
linearity error of DACs
2004 Jun 29
94
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Notes
1. Minimum value for I2C-bus bit DOWNA = 1.
2. Minimum value for I2C-bus bit DOWND = 1.
3. Levels refer to pins PD11 to PD0, FSVGC, PIXCLKI, VSVGC, PIXCLKO, CBO, TVD, and HSVGC, being inputs or
outputs directly connected to a graphics controller.
Input sensitivity is 1/2VDD(DVO) + 100 mV for HIGH and 1/2VDD(DVO) − 100 mV for LOW.
The reference voltage 1/2VDD(DVO) is generated on chip.
4. The data is for both input and output direction.
5. This parameter is arbitrary, if PIXCLKI is looped through the VGC.
6. Tested with programming IFBP = 1.
7. If an internal oscillator is used, crystal deviation of nominal frequency is directly proportional to the deviation of
subcarrier frequency and line/field frequency.
1
8. B–3 dB
=
with Cext = 20 pF (typical).
----------------------------------------------------------
2π(Ro(L)(Cext + 5 pF))
15 CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
DDD = 3.0 to 3.6 V; VDDA = 3.1 to 3.5 V; Tamb = 0 to 70 °C (typical values measured at Tamb = 25 °C); timings and levels
refer to drawings and conditions illustrated in Fig.52; unless otherwise specified.
V
SYMBOL
Supplies
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
VDDD
IDDD
PD
digital supply voltage
digital supply current
3.15
3.3
3.45
V
X port 3-state; 8-bit I port
−
−
90
−
−
mA
power dissipation digital
part
300
mW
VDDA
IDDA
analog supply voltage
analog supply current
3.15
3.3
3.45
V
AOSL1 and AOSL0 = 0
CVBS mode
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
47
−
−
−
−
−
−
−
mA
Y/C mode
72
mA
PA
power dissipation analog
part
CVBS mode
150
240
450
540
5
mW
mW
mW
mW
mW
Y/C mode
Ptot(A+D)
total power dissipation
analog and digital part
CVBS mode
Y/C mode
Ptot(A+D)(pd)
total power dissipation
analog and digital part in
Power-down mode
CE pulled down to ground
Ptot(A+D)(ps)
total power dissipation
analog and digital part in
power-save mode
I2C-bus controlled via
address 88H = 0FH
−
−
75
−
−
mW
Analog part
Iclamp
clamping current
VI = 0.9 V DC
±8
µA
2004 Jun 29
95
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
Vi(p-p)
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
0.7
MAX.
UNIT
input voltage
(peak-to-peak value)
for normal video levels
1 V (p-p), −3 dB
−
−
V
termination 27/47 Ω and
AC coupling required;
coupling capacitor = 22 nF
Zi
Ci
αcs
input impedance
input capacitance
channel crosstalk
clamping current off
200
−
−
−
−
−
kΩ
pF
dB
10
fi < 5 MHz
−
−50
9-bit analog-to-digital converters
B
analog bandwidth
at −3 dB
−
−
7
2
−
−
MHz
deg
φdiff
differential phase
(amplifier plus anti-alias
filter bypassed)
Gdiff
differential gain (amplifier
plus anti-alias filter
bypassed)
−
2
−
%
fclk(ADC)
ADC clock frequency
12.8
−
14.3
MHz
LSB
DLEdc(d)
DC differential linearity
error
−
0.7
−
ILEdc(i)
DC integral linearity error
−
1
−
LSB
Digital inputs
VIL(SDAd,SCLd) LOW-level input voltage
pins SDAd and SCLd
−0.5
0.7VDDD
−0.3
2.0
−
−
−
−
−
−
+0.3VDDD
VDDD + 0.5
+0.8
V
V
V
V
V
V
VIH(SDAd,SCLd) HIGH-level input voltage
pins SDAd and SCLd
VIL(XTALId)
VIH(XTALId)
VIL(n)
LOW-level CMOS input
voltage pin XTALId
HIGH-level CMOS input
voltage pin XTALId
VDDD + 0.3
+0.8
LOW-level input voltage all
other inputs
−0.3
2.0
VIH(n)
HIGH-level input voltage
all other inputs
5.5
ILI
input leakage current
I/O leakage current
input capacitance
−
−
−
−
−
−
1
µA
µA
pF
ILI/O
Ci
10
8
I/O at high-impedance
Digital outputs; note 1
VOL(SDAd) LOW-level output voltage
SDAd at 3 mA sink current
−
−
−
−
0.4
V
V
V
pin SDAd
VOL(clk)
LOW-level output voltage
for clocks
−0.5
2.4
+0.6
VOH(clk)
HIGH-level output voltage
for clocks
VDDD + 0.5
2004 Jun 29
96
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
VOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
0.4
UNIT
LOW-level output voltage
all other digital outputs
0
−
−
V
VOH
HIGH-level output voltage
all other digital outputs
2.4
VDDD + 0.5
V
Clock output timing (LLC and LLC2); note 2
CL(LLC)
Tcy
output load capacitance
cycle time
15
35
70
40
−
−
−
−
50
39
78
60
pF
ns
ns
%
pin LLC
pin LLC2
δ
duty factors for tLLCH/tLLC
and tLLC2H/tLLC2
CL = 40 pF
tr
rise time LLC and LLC2
fall time LLC and LLC2
0.2 V to VDDD − 0.2 V
−
−
−
−
5
ns
ns
ns
tf
VDDD − 0.2 V to 0.2 V
−
5
td(LLC-LLC2)
delay time between LLC
and LLC2 output
measured at 1.5 V;
CL = 25 pF
−4
+8
Horizontal PLL
fH(nom)
nominal line frequency
50 Hz field
60 Hz field
−
−
−
15625
15734
−
−
Hz
Hz
%
−
∆fH/fH(nom)
permissible static deviation
5.7
Subcarrier PLL
fsc(nom)
nominal subcarrier
frequency
PAL BGHI
NTSC M
PAL M
−
4433619
3579545
3575612
3582056
−
−
−
−
−
−
Hz
Hz
Hz
Hz
Hz
−
−
PAL N
−
∆fsc
lock-in range
±400
Crystal oscillator for 32.11 MHz; note 3
fxtal(nom)
nominal frequency
3rd-harmonic
−
−
32.11
−
MHz
∆fxtal(nom)
permissible nominal
frequency deviation
−
±70 × 10−6
∆fxtal(nom)(T)
permissible nominal
frequency deviation with
temperature
−
−
±30 × 10−6
CRYSTAL SPECIFICATION (X1)
Tamb(X1)
CL
ambient temperature
0
8
−
−
−
−
70
−
°C
pF
Ω
load capacitance
−
Rs
series resonance resistor
motional capacitance
parallel capacitance
40
80
C1
1.5 ±20 % −
4.3 ±20 % −
fF
C0
pF
Crystal oscillator for 24.576 MHz; note 3
fxtal(nom)
nominal frequency
3rd-harmonic
−
−
24.576
−
MHz
∆fxtal(nom)
permissible nominal
frequency deviation
−
±50 × 10−6
2004 Jun 29
97
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
∆fxtal(nom)(T)
permissible nominal
frequency deviation with
temperature
−
−
±20 × 10−6
CRYSTAL SPECIFICATION (X1)
Tamb(X1)
CL
ambient temperature
0
8
−
−
−
−
70
−
°C
load capacitance
−
pF
Ω
Rs
series resonance resistor
motional capacitance
parallel capacitance
40
80
C1
1.5 ±20 % −
3.5 ±20 % −
fF
C0
pF
Clock input timing (XCLK)
Tcy
δ
cycle time
31
40
−
−
45
ns
%
duty factors for tLLCH/tLLC
rise time
50
−
60
5
tr
ns
ns
tf
fall time
−
−
5
Data and control signal input timing X port, related to XCLK input
tSU;DAT
tHD;DAT
input data set-up time
input data hold time
−
−
10
3
−
−
ns
ns
Clock output timing
CL
Tcy
δ
output load capacitance
15
35
35
−
−
−
50
39
65
pF
ns
%
cycle time
duty factors for
tXCLKH/tXCLKL
tr
tf
rise time
fall time
0.6 to 2.6 V
2.6 to 0.6 V
−
−
−
−
5
5
ns
ns
Data and control signal output timing X port, related to XCLK output (for XPCK[1:0] 83H[5:4] = 00 is default);
note 2
CL
output load capacitance
output hold time
15
−
−
50
−
pF
ns
ns
tOHD;DAT
tPD
CL = 15 pF
CL = 15 pF
14
24
propagation delay from
positive edge of XCLK
output
−
−
Control signal output timing RT port, related to LLC output
CL
output load capacitance
output hold time
15
−
−
50
−
pF
ns
ns
tOHD;DAT
tPD
CL = 15 pF
CL = 15 pF
14
24
propagation delay from
positive edge of LLC
output
−
−
ICLK output timing
CL
Tcy
δ
output load capacitance
15
31
35
−
−
−
50
45
65
pF
ns
%
cycle time
duty factors for tICLKH/tICLKL
2004 Jun 29
98
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
0.6 to 2.6 V
2.6 to 0.6 V
MIN.
TYP.
MAX.
UNIT
ns
ns
tr
tf
rise time
fall time
−
−
−
−
5
5
Data and control signal output timing I port, related to ICLK output (for IPCK[1:0] 87H[5:4] = 00 is default)
CL
output load capacitance at
all outputs
15
−
50
pF
tOHD;DAT
to(d)
output data hold time
output delay time
CL = 15 pF
CL = 15 pF
−
−
12
22
−
−
ns
ns
ICLK input timing
Tcy
cycle time
31
−
100
ns
Notes
1. The levels must be measured with load circuits; 1.2 kΩ at 3 V (TTL load); CL = 50 pF.
2. The effects of rise and fall times are included in the calculation of tOHD;DAT and tPD. Timings and levels refer to
drawings and conditions illustrated in Fig.52.
3. The crystal oscillator drive level is 0.28 mW (typ.).
16 TIMING
16.1 Digital video encoder part
T
PIXCLK
t
HIGH
V
OH
PIXCLKO
PIXCLKI
0.5V
DD(DVO)
V
OL
t
t
r
t
f
d(CLKD)
V
IH
0.5V
DD(DVO)
V
IL
t
t
HD;DAT
HD;DAT
t
t
SU;DAT
SU;DAT
V
IH
PDn
V
IL
t
o(d)
t
o(h)
V
OH
OL
any output
V
MBL789
Fig.48 Input/output timing specification.
2004 Jun 29
99
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
HSVGC
CBO
PD
XOFS
IDEL
XPIX
HLEN
MHB905
Fig.49 Horizontal input timing.
HSVGC
VSVGC
CBO
YOFS
YPIX
MHB906
Fig.50 Vertical input timing.
100
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
16.1.1 TELETEXT TIMING
Time ti(TTXW) is the internally used insertion window for
TTX data; it has a constant length that allows insertion of
360 teletext bits at a text data rate of 6.9375 Mbits/s (PAL),
296 teletext bits at a text data rate of 5.7272 Mbits/s (world
standard TTX) or 288 teletext bits at a text data rate of
5.7272 Mbits/s (NABTS). The insertion window is not
opened if the control bit TTXEN is zero.
Time tFD is the time needed to interpolate input data TTX
and insert it into the CVBS and VBS output signal, such
that it appears at tTTX = 9.78 µs (PAL) or tTTX = 10.5 µs
(NTSC) after the leading edge of the horizontal
synchronization pulse.
Time tPD is the pipeline delay time introduced by the
source that is gated by TTXRQ_XCLKO2 in order to
deliver TTX data. This delay is programmable by register
TTXHD. For every active HIGH state at output pin
TTXRQ_XCLKO2, a new teletext bit must be provided by
the source.
Using appropriate programming, all suitable lines of the
odd field (TTXOVS and TTXOVE) plus all suitable lines of
the even field (TTXEVS and TTXEVE) can be used for
teletext insertion.
It is essential to note that the two pins used for teletext
insertion must be configured for this purpose by the
correct I2C-bus register settings.
Since the beginning of the pulses representing the TTXRQ
signal and the delay between the rising edge of TTXRQ
and valid teletext input data are fully programmable
(TTXHS and TTXHD), the TTX data is always inserted at
the correct position after the leading edge of the outgoing
horizontal synchronization pulse.
CVBS/Y
t
t
TTX
i(TTXW)
text bit #:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
TTX_SRES
t
t
FD
PD
TTXRQ_XCLKO2
MHB891
Fig.51 Teletext timing.
2004 Jun 29
101
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
16.2 Digital video decoder part
T
cy
t
XCLKH
2.4 V
1.5 V
0.6 V
clock input
XCLK
t
t
t
SU;DAT
f
r
t
HD;DAT
2.0 V
0.8 V
data and
control inputs
(X port)
not valid
SU;DAT
t
t
HD;DAT
2.0 V
0.8 V
input
XDQ
t
o(d)
t
OHD;DAT
−2.4 V
−0.6 V
data and
control outputs
X port, I port
t
t
X(I)CLKL
X(I)CLKH
−2.6 V
−1.5 V
−0.6 V
clock outputs
LLC, LLC2, XCLK, ICLK
and ICLK input
t
t
MHB735
f
r
Fig.52 Data input/output timing diagram (X port, RT port and I port).
102
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
17 APPLICATION INFORMATION
V
V
V
V
V
V
(ID11)
(IF11)
(IJ4)
V
V
(EL9)
(EL7)
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
V
(EG11)
(ED10)
DD
(IJ11)
(IL4)
V
DD
V
(AM8)
DD
(IL11)
V
(AM9)
DD
V
(XL8)
V
(AN11)
DD
DD
R27 0 Ω
R28 0 Ω
SDA
SCL
L12
SDAd
SCLd
M11
[
]
XPD 0:7
K2
K3
L1
XPD7
XPD6
XPD5
XPD4
XPD3
XPD2
XPD1
XPD0
32.11 MHz
DDP
24.576 MHz
DGND
XPD7
XPD6
XPD5
XPD4
XPD3
XPD2
XPD1
XPD0
V
JP43 fXTAL
’strapping’
R12
L2
AUDIO2
L3
4.7 kΩ
M1
M2
N1
I2C-BUS_Adr:40H/42H
[
]
XPCON 0:5
K1
L5
XPCON5
XPCON4
XPCON3
XPCON2
XPCON1
XPCON0
V
DGND
XTRI
XRV
DDP
JP44
R13
N2
M3
M4
N3
RCON0
XRH
4.7 kΩ
XCLK
XDQ
’strapping’
XRDY
[
]
HPD 0:7
A13 HPD7
D12 HPD6
C12 HPD5
B12 HPD4
A12 HPD3
C11 HPD2
B11 HPD1
A11 HPD0
HPD7
HPD6
HPD5
HPD4
HPD3
HPD2
HPD1
HPD0
C100
R19
18 Ω
R17
18 Ω
R16
18 Ω
R18
18 Ω
P6
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
47 nF
C97
P7
[
]
IPD 0:7
E14 IPD7
D14 IPD6
C14 IPD5
B14 IPD4
E13 IPD3
D13 IPD2
C13 IPD1
B13 IPD0
IPD7
IPD6
IPD5
IPD4
IPD3
IPD2
IPD1
IPD0
47 nF
C98
P9
47 nF
C99
P10
P8
47 nF
C109
[
]
IPCON 0:7
AI2D
AI12
AI11
AI1D
G14 IPCON7
F13 IPCON6
G12 IPCON5
G13 IPCON4
F14 IPCON3
H12 IPCON2
H14 IPCON1
J14 IPCON0
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
47 nF
C101
ITRI
IGPV
IGPH
IGP1
IGP0
ICLK
IDQ
R15
18 Ω
R20
P11
P13
P12
AI12
AI11
47 nF
C102
18 Ω
47 nF
C110
R21
56 Ω
R22
56 Ω
R23
56 Ω
R24
56 Ω
R25
56 Ω
R26
56 Ω
ITRDY
[
]
AUDIO 0:3
J12 AUDIO3
J13 AUDIO2
K14 AUDIO1
K12 AUDIO0
47 nF
AMXCLK
ALRCLK
ASCLK
AGND
AMCLK
R29
M10
[
]
RCON 0:2
AOUT
AOUT
L10 RCON2
K13 RCON1
L13 RCON0
0 Ω
RTS1
RTS0
RTCO
R37 33 Ω
R38 33 Ω
L14
LLC2
LLC
LLC2
LLC
M14
M12
N14
RESd
CE
RES
R47
V
DDP
open
M5
M6
N4
N6
N5
BSC0
BSC1
BSC2
TMSd
TCLKd
TRSTd
TDId
JP45
CE_Dec.
V
V
V
(AM8)
DD
DD
DD
[
]
BSC 0:2
(AM9)
TDI_D
TDO_D
DGND
(AN11)
TDOd
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
(EL9)
(EL7)
(EG11)
(ED10)
(ID11)
(IF11)
(IJ4)
J2
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
DD
TEST5
TEST4
TEST3
TEST2
TEST1
TEST0
TEST5
TEST4
TEST3
TEST2
TEST1
TEST0
J1
J3
C10
B10
H13
P4
P3
P2
(IJ11)
(IL4)
XTOUTd
XTALOd
XTALId
XTOUT
(IL11)
(XL8)
Y1
24.576
MHz
L34
10 µH
C55 C53 C54
C52 C48 C51 C49 C50 C60 C56 C59 C57 C58 C61
100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
C107
1 nF
C103
10 pF
C104
10 pF
100 100 100
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
nF
L36
ferrite
R49
AGND
DGND
DXGND
open
AGND
DGND
DXGND
open
3PAD
0 Ω
AGND
DGND
DGND
AGND
MBL790
Fig.53 Application circuit (decoder part).
103
2004 Jun 29
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+3.3 V digital
+3.3 V analog
0.1 µF
AGND
1 nF
10 pF
AGND
use one capacitor
for each V and V
10 pF
0.1 µF
0.1 µF
0.1 µH
DGND
DGND
27 MHz
DDAe
DDXe
V
and V
V
V
XTALIe
A5
XTALOe
A6
DDAe
DDXe
D7 VSM
D8 HSM_CSYNC
DD(DVO)
DDIEe
A10, B6,
B9, C9,
D9 and D6
F4
D4
GREEN_VBS_CVBS
C7
C8
FLTR0
75 Ω
75 Ω
U
U
U
Y
AGND
AGND AGND
FLTR1
digital
inputs
and
RED_CR_C_CVBS
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
outputs
75 Ω
75 Ω
C
AGND
AGND AGND
FLTR2
BLUE_CB_CVBS
C6
B7
75 Ω
75 Ω
C5, D5, E4
A8
B8
V
A9
A7
CVBS
V
V
RSET
DUMP
DUMP
SSIe
SSXe
SSAe
AGND
AGND AGND
1 kΩ
12 Ω
MBL784
DGND
AGND
AGND
AGND
AGND
Fig.54 Application circuit (encoder part).
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
C16
handbook, halfpage
120 pF
L2
L3
2.7 µH
2.7 µH
C10
C13
390 pF
560 pF
AGND
JP11
JP12
FIN
FOUT
FILTER 1
= byp.
ll act.
MHB912
Fig.55 FLTR0, FLTR1 and FLTR2 as shown in Fig.54.
2004 Jun 29
105
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
P2
P3
XTALOd
P2
P3
P2
P3
XTALOd
XTALId
XTALId
XTALOd
XTALId
32.11 MHz
32.11 MHz
32.11 MHz
4.7 µH
1 nF
15
pF
15
pF
33
pF
33
pF
10
pF
10
pF
MBL796
(1a) With 3rd-harmonic quartz.
Crystal load = 8 pF.
(1b) With fundamental quartz.
Crystal load = 20 pF.
(1c) With fundamental quartz.
Crystal load = 8 pF
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
P2
P3
XTALOd
P2
P3
XTALOd
P2
P3
XTALId
XTALId
XTALId
XTALOd
24.576 MHz
24.576 MHz
24.576 MHz
4.7 µH
1 nF
18
pF
18
pF
39
pF
39
pF
15
pF
15
pF
MBL795
(2a) With 3rd-harmonic quartz.
Crystal load = 8 pF.
(2b) With fundamental quartz.
Crystal load = 20 pF.
(2c) With fundamental quartz.
Crystal load = 8 pF.
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
P2
P3
XTALOd
P2
P3
XTALOd
XTALId
XTALId
R
s
32.11 MHz or
24.576 MHz
n.c.
clock
MBL794
(3a) With direct clock.
(3b) With fundamental quartz and restricted drive level. When Pdrive of the internal oscillator
is too high, a resistance Rs can be placed in series with the oscillator output XTALOd.
Note: The decreased crystal amplitude results in a lower drive level but on the other hand
the jitter performance will decrease.
Fig.56 Oscillator application for decoder part.
106
2004 Jun 29
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
A5
A6
XTALOe
A5
A6
XTALOe
XTALIe
XTALIe
27.00 MHz
27.00 MHz
4.7 µH
1 nF
18
pF
18
pF
39
pF
39
pF
MBL792
(1a) With 3rd-harmonic quartz.
Crystal load = 8 pF.
(1b) With fundamental quartz.
Crystal load = 20 pF.
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
SAA7108AE
SAA7109AE
A5
A6
XTALOe
A5
A6
XTALIe
XTALIe
XTALOe
R
s
27.00 MHz
n.c.
clock
MBL793
(2a) With direct clock.
(2b) With fundamental quartz and restricted drive level. When Pdrive of the internal oscillator
is too high, a resistance Rs can be placed in series with the oscillator output XTALOe.
Note: The decreased crystal amplitude results in a lower drive level but on the other hand
the jitter performance will decrease.
Fig.57 Oscillator application for encoder part.
2004 Jun 29
107
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
17.1 Reconstruction filter
By setting the reference currents of the DACs as shown in
Table 49, standard compliant amplitudes can be achieved
for all signal combinations; it is assumed that in
subaddress 16H, parameter DACF = 0000b, that means
the fine adjustment for all DACs in common is set to 0 %.
Figure 55 shows a possible reconstruction filter for the
digital-to-analog converters. Due to its cut-off frequency of
6 MHz, it is not suitable for HDTV applications.
17.2 Analog output voltages
If S-video output is desired, the adjustment for the C
(chrominance subcarrier) output should be identical to the
one for VBS (luminance plus sync) output.
The analog output voltages are dependent on the total
load (typical value 37.5 Ω), the digital gain parameters and
the I2C-bus settings of the DAC reference currents (analog
settings).
The digital output signals in front of the DACs under
nominal (nominal here stands for the settings given in
Tables 75 to 82 for example a standard PAL or NTSC
signal) conditions occupy different conversion ranges, as
indicated in Table 49 for a 100
⁄100 colour bar signal.
Table 49 Digital output signals conversion range
SET/OUT
CVBS, SYNC TIP-TO-WHITE VBS, SYNC TIP-TO-WHITE
RGB, BLACK-TO-WHITE
Digital settings
Digital output
Analog settings
Analog output
see Tables 75 to 82
1014
see Tables 75 to 82
881
see Table 70
876
e.g. B DAC = 1FH
1.23 V (p-p)
e.g. G DAC = 1BH
1.00 V (p-p)
e.g. R DAC = G DAC = B DAC = 0BH
0.70 V (p-p)
17.3 Suggestions for a board layout
Use serial resistors in clock, sync and data lines, to avoid
clock or data reflection effects and to soften data energy.
Use separate ground planes for analog and digital ground.
Connect these planes only at one point directly under the
device, by using a 0 Ω resistor directly at the supply stage.
Use separate supply lines for the analog and digital supply.
Place the supply decoupling capacitors close to the supply
pins.
The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE crystal temperature
depends on the PCB it is soldered on. For normal airflow
conditions at a maximum ambient temperature of 70 °C it
will be sufficient to provide:
• PCB dimensions at least 2000 mm2
Use Lbead (ferrite coil) in each digital supply line close to
the decoupling capacitors to minimize radiation energy
(EMC).
• PCB at least 4 layers
• At least 50 vias (connecting PCB layers) close to the
chip
Place the analog coupling (clamp) capacitors close to the
analog input pins. Place the analog termination resistors
close to the coupling capacitors.
• Metal coverage at least 60 % on at least 2 PCB layers
near the chip.
Be careful of hidden layout capacitors around the crystal
application.
2004 Jun 29
108
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18 I2C-BUS DESCRIPTION
18.1 Digital video encoder part
Table 50 Slave receiver bit allocation map (slave address 88H)
SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
(1)
(1)
Status byte (read only)
Null
00
01 to 15
16
VER2
(1)
VER1
(1)
VER0
(1)
CCRDO
CCRDE
FSEQ
(1)
O_E
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Common DAC adjust fine
R DAC adjust coarse
G DAC adjust coarse
B DAC adjust coarse
MSM threshold
DACF3
RDACC3
GDACC3
BDACC3
DACF2
RDACC2
GDACC2
BDACC2
MSMT2
RCOMP
CID2
DACF1
RDACC1
GDACC1
BDACC1
MSMT1
GCOMP
CID1
DACF0
RDACC0
GDACC0
BDACC0
MSMT0
BCOMP
CID0
17
RDACC4
GDACC4
BDACC4
18
19
1A
MSMT7
MSM
MSMT6
MSA
MSMT5
MSOE
CID5
MSMT4
MSMT3
(1)
(1)
Monitor sense mode
Chip ID (02B or 03B, read only)
Wide screen signal
Wide screen signal
Real-time control, burst start
Sync reset enable, burst end
Copy generation 0
Copy generation 1
CG enable, copy generation 2
Output port control
Null
1B
1C
26
CID7
CID6
CID4
WSS4
WSS12
BS4
CID3
WSS3
WSS11
BS3
WSS7
WSS6
(1)
WSS5
WSS13
BS5
WSS2
WSS10
BS2
WSS1
WSS9
BS1
WSS0
WSS8
BS0
27
WSSON
(1)
(1)
(1)
28
29
SRES
CG07
CG15
CGEN
BE5
BE4
BE3
BE2
BE1
BE0
2A
CG06
CG05
CG04
CG03
CG11
CG19
CG02
CG01
CG00
2B
CG14
(1)
CG13
(1)
CG12
(1)
CG10
CG09
CG08
2C
2D
2E to 36
37
CG18
CG17
CG16
(1)
VBSEN
CVBSEN1 CVBSEN0
CEN
(1)
ENCOFF
CLK2EN
CVBSEN2
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Input path control
YUPSC
YFIL1
(1)
YFIL0
GY4
CZOOM
GY2
IGAIN
GY1
XINT
GY0
(1)
Gain luminance for RGB
Gain colour difference for RGB
Input port control 1
VPS enable, input control 2
VPS byte 5
38
GY3
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
39
GCD4
GCD3
GCD2
GCD1
Y2C
GCD0
3A
CBENB
VPSEN
VPS57
SYNTV
GPVAL
VPS55
SYMP
DEMOFF
CSYNC
UV2C
(1)
(1)
54
GPEN
EDGE
VPS51
VPS111
VPS121
VPS131
VPS141
SLOT
55
VPS56
VPS116
VPS126
VPS136
VPS146
VPS54
VPS114
VPS124
VPS134
VPS144
VPS53
VPS113
VPS123
VPS133
VPS143
VPS52
VPS112
VPS122
VPS132
VPS142
VPS50
VPS110
VPS120
VPS130
VPS140
VPS byte 11
56
VPS117
VPS127
VPS137
VPS147
VPS115
VPS125
VPS135
VPS145
VPS byte 12
57
VPS byte 13
58
VPS byte 14
59
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Chrominance phase
Gain U
5A
5B
5C
5D
5E
5F
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
6A
6B
6C
6D
6E
6F
70
CHPS7
GAINU7
GAINV7
GAINU8
GAINV8
CHPS6
CHPS5
GAINU5
GAINV5
BLCKL5
BLNNL5
CHPS4
GAINU4
GAINV4
BLCKL4
BLNNL4
CHPS3
GAINU3
GAINV3
BLCKL3
BLNNL3
CHPS2
GAINU2
GAINV2
BLCKL2
BLNNL2
CHPS1
GAINU1
GAINV1
BLCKL1
BLNNL1
CHPS0
GAINU0
GAINV0
BLCKL0
BLNNL0
GAINU6
Gain V
GAINV6
(1)
Gain U MSB, black level
Gain V MSB, blanking level
CCR, blanking level VBI
Null
(1)
CCRS1
CCRS0
BLNVB5
BLNVB4
BLNVB3
BLNVB2
BLNVB1
BLNVB0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Standard control
Burst amplitude
Subcarrier 0
DOWND
RTCE
DOWNA
BSTA6
FSC06
FSC14
FSC22
FSC30
L21O06
L21O16
L21E06
INPI
YGS
SCBW
BSTA2
FSC02
FSC10
FSC18
FSC26
L21O02
L21O12
L21E02
PAL
FISE
BSTA5
FSC05
FSC13
FSC21
FSC29
L21O05
L21O15
L21E05
BSTA4
FSC04
FSC12
FSC20
FSC28
L21O04
L21O14
L21E04
BSTA3
FSC03
FSC11
FSC19
FSC27
L21O03
L21O13
L21E03
BSTA1
FSC01
FSC09
FSC17
FSC25
L21O01
L21O11
L21E01
BSTA0
FSC00
FSC08
FSC16
FSC24
L21O00
L21O10
L21E00
FSC07
FSC15
FSC23
FSC31
L21O07
L21O17
L21E07
Subcarrier 1
Subcarrier 2
Subcarrier 3
Line 21 odd 0
Line 21 odd 1
Line 21 even 0
Line 21 even 1
Null
L21E17
L21E16
L21E15
L21E14
L21E13
L21E12
L21E11
L21E10
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Trigger control
Trigger control
Multi control
HTRIG7
HTRIG10
NVTRIG
CCEN1
HTRIG6
HTRIG9
BLCKON
CCEN0
HTRIG5
HTRIG8
PHRES1
TTXEN
HTRIG4
VTRIG4
PHRES0
SCCLN4
HTRIG3
VTRIG3
LDEL1
HTRIG2
VTRIG2
LDEL0
HTRIG1
VTRIG1
FLC1
HTRIG0
VTRIG0
FLC0
Closed Caption, teletext enable
SCCLN3
ADWHS3
SCCLN2
ADWHS2
SCCLN1
SCCLN0
Active display window horizontal
start
ADWHS7
ADWHS6 ADWHS5 ADWHS4
ADWHE6 ADWHE5 ADWHE4
ADWHE10 ADWHE9 ADWHE8
ADWHS1 ADWHS0
Active display window horizontal
end
71
ADWHE7
ADWHE3
ADWHE2
ADWHE1 ADWHE0
(1)
(1)
MSBs ADWH
72
73
74
75
76
77
ADWHS10 ADWHS9 ADWHS8
TTX request horizontal start
TTX request horizontal delay
CSYNC advance
TTXHS7
TTXHS6
TTXHS5
TTXHS4
TTXHS3
TTXHD3
TTXHS2
TTXHS1
TTXHS0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
TTXHD2
TTXHD1
TTXHD0
(1)
(1)
(1)
CSYNCA4 CSYNCA3 CSYNCA2 CSYNCA1 CSYNCA0
TTX odd request vertical start
TTX odd request vertical end
TTXOVS7 TTXOVS6 TTXOVS5 TTXOVS4 TTXOVS3 TTXOVS2 TTXOVS1 TTXOVS0
TTXOVE7 TTXOVE6 TTXOVE5 TTXOVE4 TTXOVE3 TTXOVE2 TTXOVE1 TTXOVE0
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
TTX even request vertical start
TTX even request vertical end
First active line
78
79
TTXEVS7 TTXEVS6 TTXEVS5 TTXEVS4 TTXEVS3 TTXEVS2 TTXEVS1 TTXEVS0
TTXEVE7 TTXEVE6 TTXEVE5 TTXEVE4 TTXEVE3 TTXEVE2 TTXEVE1 TTXEVE0
7A
7B
7C
7D
7E
7F
FAL7
LAL7
FAL6
LAL6
FAL5
LAL5
FAL4
LAL4
FAL3
LAL3
FAL2
LAL2
FAL1
LAL1
FAL0
LAL0
Last active line
TTX mode, MSB vertical
Null
TTX60
LAL8
TTXO
FAL8
TTXEVE8 TTXOVE8 TTXEVS8 TTXOVS8
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Disable TTX line
Disable TTX line
FIFO status (read only)
Pixel clock 0
LINE12
LINE11
LINE10
LINE9
LINE8
LINE16
IFERR
PCL03
PCL11
PCL19
PCLE1
LINE7
LINE15
BFERR
PCL02
PCL10
PCL18
PCLE0
LINE6
LINE14
OVFL
LINE5
LINE13
UDFL
LINE20
LINE19
LINE18
LINE17
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
80
81
PCL07
PCL15
PCL23
DCLK
PCL06
PCL14
PCL22
PCL05
PCL13
PCL21
PCL04
PCL12
PCL20
PCL01
PCL09
PCL17
PCLI1
PCL00
PCL08
PCL16
PCLI0
Pixel clock 1
82
Pixel clock 2
83
Pixel clock control
FIFO control
84
PCLSY
IFRA
IFBP
(1)
(1)
(1)
85
EIDIV
FILI3
FILI2
FILI1
FILI0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Null
86 to 8F
90
Horizontal offset
Pixel number
XOFS7
XPIX7
YOFSO7
YOFSE7
YOFSE9
YPIX7
EFS
XOFS6
XPIX6
XOFS5
XPIX5
XOFS4
XPIX4
YOFSO4
YOFSE4
YOFSO8
YPIX4
ILC
XOFS3
XPIX3
YOFSO3
YOFSE3
XPIX9
YPIX3
YFIL
XOFS2
XPIX2
XOFS1
XPIX1
XOFS0
XPIX0
91
Vertical offset odd
Vertical offset even
MSBs
92
YOFSO6
YOFSE6
YOFSE8
YPIX6
YOFSO5
YOFSE5
YOFSO9
YPIX5
YOFSO2
YOFSE2
XPIX8
YOFSO1
YOFSE1
XOFS9
YPIX1
YOFSO0
YOFSE0
XOFS8
YPIX0
93
94
Line number
95
YPIX2
(1)
Scaler CTRL, MCB YPIX
Sync control
96
PCBN
SLAVE
OFS
YPIX9
YPIX8
97
HFS
VFS
PFS
OVS
PVS
OHS
PHS
Line length
98
HLEN7
IDEL3
HLEN6
IDEL2
HLEN5
IDEL1
HLEN4
IDEL0
XINC4
YINC4
YINC8
HLEN3
HLEN11
XINC3
YINC3
XINC11
HLEN2
HLEN10
XINC2
YINC2
XINC10
HLEN1
HLEN9
XINC1
YINC1
XINC9
HLEN0
HLEN8
XINC0
YINC0
XINC8
Input delay, MSB line length
Horizontal increment
Vertical increment
99
9A
9B
9C
XINC7
YINC7
YINC11
XINC6
YINC6
YINC10
XINC5
YINC5
YINC9
MSBs vertical and horizontal
increment
Weighting factor odd
Weighting factor even
Weighting factor MSB
9D
9E
9F
YIWGTO7 YIWGTO6 YIWGTO5 YIWGTO4 YIWGTO3 YIWGTO2 YIWGTO1 YIWGTO0
YIWGTE7 YIWGTE6 YIWGTE5 YIWGTE4 YIWGTE3 YIWGTE2 YIWGTE1 YIWGTE0
YIWGTE11 YIWGTE10 YIWGTE9 YIWGTE8 YIWGTO11 YIWGTO10 YIWGTO9 YIWGTO8
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
Vertical line skip
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
A0
A1
YSKIP7
BLEN
YSKIP6
YSKIP5
YSKIP4
YSKIP3
YSKIP2
YSKIP1
YSKIP9
YSKIP0
YSKIP8
(1)
(1)
(1)
Blank enable for NI-bypass,
vertical line skip MSB
YSKIP11
YSKIP10
Border colour Y
A2
A3
A4
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
DA
DB
DC
F0
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6
F7
F8
F9
FA
FB
FC
BCY7
BCU7
BCV7
BCY6
BCU6
BCV6
BCY5
BCU5
BCV5
BCY4
BCU4
BCV4
BCY3
BCU3
BCV3
BCY2
BCU2
BCV2
BCY1
BCU1
BCV1
BCY0
BCU0
BCV0
Border colour U
Border colour V
HD sync line count array
HD sync line type array
HD sync line pattern array
HD sync value array
HD sync trigger state 1
HD sync trigger state 2
HD sync trigger state 3
HD sync trigger state 4
HD sync trigger phase x
RAM address (see Table 123)
RAM address (see Table 125)
RAM address (see Table 127)
RAM address (see Table 129)
HLCT7
HLCT6
HLCPT2
HDCT6
HEPT2
HLCT5
HLCPT1
HDCT5
HEPT1
HLCT4
HLCPT0
HDCT4
HEPT0
HLCT3
HLCT2
HLCT1
HLCT9
HDCT1
HDCT9
HTX1
HLCT0
HLCT8
HDCT0
HDCT8
HTX0
HLCPT3
HLPPT1
HLPPT0
HDCT7
HDCT3
HDCT2
(1)
(1)
(1)
HTX7
(1)
HTX6
(1)
HTX5
(1)
HTX4
(1)
HTX3
HTX2
HTX11
HTX10
HTX9
HTX8
HD sync trigger phase y
HTY7
(1)
HTY6
(1)
HTY5
(1)
HTY4
(1)
HTY3
(1)
HTY2
(1)
HTY1
HTY0
HTY9
HTY8
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
HD output control
HDSYE
CC1R3
CC1G3
CC1B3
CC2R3
CC2G3
CC2B3
AUXR3
AUXG3
AUXB3
XCP3
HDTC
CC1R2
CC1G2
CC1B2
CC2R2
CC2G2
CC2B2
AUXR2
AUXG2
AUXB2
XCP2
HDGY
CC1R1
CC1G1
CC1B1
CC2R1
CC2G1
CC2B1
AUXR1
AUXG1
AUXB1
XCP1
HDIP
Cursor colour 1 R
CC1R7
CC1G7
CC1B7
CC2R7
CC2G7
CC2B7
AUXR7
AUXG7
AUXB7
XCP7
CC1R6
CC1G6
CC1B6
CC2R6
CC2G6
CC2B6
AUXR6
AUXG6
AUXB6
XCP6
CC1R5
CC1G5
CC1B5
CC2R5
CC2G5
CC2B5
AUXR5
AUXG5
AUXB5
XCP5
CC1R4
CC1G4
CC1B4
CC2R4
CC2G4
CC2B4
AUXR4
AUXG4
AUXB4
XCP4
CC1R0
CC1G0
CC1B0
CC2R0
CC2G0
CC2B0
AUXR0
AUXG0
AUXB0
XCP0
Cursor colour 1 G
Cursor colour 1 B
Cursor colour 2 R
Cursor colour 2 G
Cursor colour 2 B
Auxiliary cursor colour R
Auxiliary cursor colour G
Auxiliary cursor colour B
Horizontal cursor position
Horizontal hot spot, MSB XCP
Vertical cursor position
Vertical hot spot, MSB YCP
XHS4
XHS3
XHS2
XHS1
XHS0
XCP10
XCP9
XCP8
YCP7
YCP6
YCP5
YCP4
YCP3
YCP2
(1)
YCP1
YCP0
YHS4
YHS3
YHS2
YHS1
YHS0
YCP9
YCP8
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
Input path control
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
FD
FE
FF
LUTOFF
CMODE
LUTL
IF2
IF1
IF0
MATOFF
DFOFF
Cursor bit map
RAM address (see Table 144)
RAM address (see Table 145)
Colour look-up table
Note
1. All unused control bits must be programmed with logic 0 to ensure compatibility to future enhancements.
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.1.1 I2C-BUS FORMAT
Table 51 I2C-bus write access to control registers; see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A
SUBADDRESS
A
DATA 0
A
--------
DATA n
DATA n
DATA n
A
A
A
P
P
P
P
Table 52 I2C-bus write access to the HD line count array (subaddress D0H); see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A D0H A RAM ADDRESS A DATA 00
A
DATA 01
A
--------
Table 53 I2C-bus write access to cursor bit map (subaddress FEH); see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A FEH A RAM ADDRESS A DATA 0
A
--------
Table 54 I2C-bus write access to colour look-up table (subaddress FFH); see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A FFH A RAM ADDRESS A DATA 0R
A
DATA 0G
A
DATA 0B
A
--------
Table 55 I2C-bus read access to control registers; see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A
SUBADDRESS
A Sr 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 A DATA 0 Am -------- DATA n Am P
Table 56 I2C-bus read access to cursor bit map or colour LUT; see Table 57
S 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 A FEH A RAM ADDRESS A Sr 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 A DATA 0 Am -------- DATA n Am P
or
FFH
Table 57 Explanations of Tables 51 to 56
CODE
DESCRIPTION
S
START condition
Sr
repeated START condition
slave address
1 0 0 0 1 0 0 X; note 1
A
acknowledge generated by the slave
acknowledge generated by the master
subaddress byte
Am
SUBADDRESS; note 2
DATA
data byte
--------
continued data bytes and acknowledges
STOP condition
P
RAM ADDRESS
start address for RAM access
Notes
1. X is the read/write control bit; X = logic 0 is order to write; X = logic 1 is order to read.
2. If more than 1 byte of DATA is transmitted, then auto-increment of the subaddress is performed.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.1.2 SLAVE RECEIVER
Table 58 Subaddress 16H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
DACF
output level adjustment fine in 1 % steps for all DACs; default after reset is 00H; see Table 59
Table 59 Fine adjustment of DAC output voltage
BINARY
GAIN (%)
0111
0110
0101
0100
0011
0010
0001
0000
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0
−1
−2
−3
−4
−5
−6
−7
Table 60 Subaddresses 17H to 19H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
RDACC
GDACC
BDACC
output level coarse adjustment for RED DAC; default after reset is 1BH for output of C signal
00000b ≡ 0.585 V to 11111b ≡ 1.240 V at 37.5 Ω nominal for full-scale conversion
output level coarse adjustment for GREEN DAC; default after reset is 1BH for output of VBS signal
00000b ≡ 0.585 V to 11111b ≡ 1.240 V at 37.5 Ω nominal for full-scale conversion
output level coarse adjustment for BLUE DAC; default after reset is 1FH for output of CVBS signal
00000b ≡ 0.585 V to 11111b ≡ 1.240 V at 37.5 Ω nominal for full-scale conversion
Table 61 Subaddress 1AH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
monitor sense mode threshold for DAC output voltage, should be set to 70
MSMT
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 62 Subaddress 1BH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
MSM
MSA
0
1
0
monitor sense mode off; RCOMP, GCOMP and BCOMP bits are not valid; default after reset
monitor sense mode on
automatic monitor sense mode off; RCOMP, GCOMP and BCOMP bits are not valid; default
after reset
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
automatic monitor sense mode on if MSM = 0
MSOE
pin TVD is active
pin TVD is 3-state; default after reset
RCOMP
(read only)
check comparator at DAC on pin RED_CR_C_CVBS is active, output is loaded
check comparator at DAC on pin RED_CR_C_CVBS is inactive, output is not loaded
check comparator at DAC on pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS is active, output is loaded
check comparator at DAC on pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS is inactive, output is not loaded
check comparator at DAC on pin BLUE_CB_CVBS is active, output is loaded
check comparator at DAC on pin BLUE_CB_CVBS is inactive, output is not loaded
GCOMP
(read only)
BCOMP
(read only)
Table 63 Subaddresses 26H and 27H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
WSS
−
wide screen signalling bits
3 to 0 = aspect ratio
7 to 4 = enhanced services
10 to 8 = subtitles
13 to 11 = reserved
WSSON
0
1
wide screen signalling output is disabled; default after reset
wide screen signalling output is enabled
Table 64 Subaddress 28H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
LEVEL
BS
−
starting point of burst in clock cycles
PAL: BS = 33 (21H); default after reset if
strapping pin FSVGC tied to HIGH
NTSC: BS = 25 (19H); default after reset if
strapping pin FSVGC tied to LOW
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 65 Subaddress 29H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
LEVEL
SRES
BE
0
1
−
pin TTX_SRES accepts a teletext bit
stream (TTX)
default after reset
pin TTX_SRES accepts a sync reset input a HIGH impulse resets synchronization of the
(SRES)
encoder (first field, first line)
ending point of burst in clock cycles
PAL: BE = 29 (1DH); default after reset if
strapping pin FSVGC tied to HIGH
NTSC: BE = 29 (1DH); default after reset if
strapping pin FSVGC tied to LOW
Table 66 Subaddresses 2AH to 2CH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
CG
−
LSB of the respective bytes are encoded immediately after run-in, the MSBs of the
respective bytes have to carry the CRCC bits, in accordance with the definition of copy
generation management system encoding format.
CGEN
0
1
copy generation data output is disabled; default after reset
copy generation data output is enabled
Table 67 Subaddress 2DH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
VBSEN
0
pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS provides a component GREEN signal (CVBSEN1 = 0) or CVBS
signal (CVBSEN1 = 1)
1
0
pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS provides a luminance (VBS) signal; default after reset
CVBSEN1
pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS provides a component GREEN (G) or luminance (VBS) signal;
default after reset
1
0
1
0
1
pin GREEN_VBS_CVBS provides a CVBS signal
CVBSEN0
CEN
pin BLUE_CB_CVBS provides a component BLUE (B) or colour difference BLUE (CB) signal
pin BLUE_CB_CVBS provides a CVBS signal; default after reset
pin RED_CR_C_CVBS provides a component RED (R) or colour difference RED (CR) signal
pin RED_CR_C_CVBS provides a chrominance signal (C) as modulated subcarrier for
S-video; default after reset
ENCOFF
CLK2EN
0
1
0
1
encoder is active; default after reset
encoder bypass, DACs are provided with RGB signal after cursor insertion block
pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2 provides a teletext request signal (TTXRQ)
pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2 provides the buffered crystal clock divided by two (13.5 MHz); default
after reset
CVBSEN2
0
1
pin RED_CR_C_CVBS provides a signal according to CEN; default after reset
pin RED_CR_C_CVBS provides a CVBS signal
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 68 Subaddress 37H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
YUPSC
0
1
−
normal operation of the vertical scaler; default after reset
vertical upscaling is enabled
YFIL
controls the vertical interpolation filter, see Table 69; the filter is not available if
YUPSC = 1
CZOOM
0
1
0
1
0
1
normal operation of the cursor generator; default after reset
the cursor will be zoomed by a factor of 2 in both directions
expected input level swing is 16 to 235 (8-bit RGB); default after reset
expected input level swing is 0 to 255 (8-bit RGB)
IGAIN
XINT
no horizontal interpolation filter; default after reset
interpolation filter for horizontal upscaling is active
Table 69 Logic levels and function of YFIL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YFIL1
YFIL0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
no filter active; default after reset
filter is inserted before vertical scaling
filter is inserted after vertical scaling; YSKIP should be logic 0
reserved
Table 70 Subaddresses 38H and 39H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
GY4 to GY0
Gain luminance of RGB (CR, Yand CB) output, ranging from (1 − 16⁄32) to (1 + 15⁄32).
Suggested nominal value = 0, depending on external application.
GCD4 to GCD0
Gain colour difference of RGB (CR, Yand CB) output, ranging from
(1 − 16⁄32) to (1 + 15⁄32). Suggested nominal value = 0, depending on external
application.
Table 71 Subaddress 3AH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
CBENB
SYNTV
0
1
0
data from input ports is encoded
colour bar with fixed colours is encoded
in slave mode, the encoder is only synchronized at the beginning of an odd field;
default after reset
1
0
in slave mode, the encoder receives a vertical sync signal
SYMP
horizontal and vertical trigger is taken from FSVGC or both VSVGC and HSVGC;
default after reset
1
horizontal and vertical trigger is decoded out of “ITU-R BT.656” compatible data at PD
port
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
LOGIC
LEVEL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
DEMOFF
0
1
0
Y-CB-CR to RGB dematrix is active; default after reset
Y-CB-CR to RGB dematrix is bypassed
CSYNC
pin HSM_CSYNC provides a horizontal sync for non-interlaced VGA components
output (at PIXCLK)
1
pin HSM_CSYNC provides a composite sync for interlaced components output (at
XTAL clock)
Y2C
0
1
0
1
input luminance data is twos complement from PD input port
input luminance data is straight binary from PD input port; default after reset
input colour difference data is twos complement from PD input port
input colour difference data is straight binary from PD input port; default after reset
UV2C
Table 72 Subaddress 54H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
VPSEN
GPVAL
GPEN
EDGE
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
video programming system data insertion is disabled; default after reset
video programming system data insertion in line 16 is enabled
pin VSM provides a LOW level if GPEN = 1
pin VSM provides a HIGH level if GPEN = 1
pin VSM provides a vertical sync for a monitor; default after reset
pin VSM provides a constant signal according to GPVAL
input data is sampled with inverse clock edges
input data is sampled with the clock edges specified in Tables 9 to 14; default after
reset
SLOT
0
1
normal assignment of the input data to the clock edge; default after reset
correct time misalignment due to inverted assignment of input data to the clock edge
Table 73 Subaddresses 55H to 59H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
VPS5
fifth byte of video programming system data
eleventh byte of video programming system data
twelfth byte of video programming system data
thirteenth byte of video programming system data
fourteenth byte of video programming system data
in line 16; LSB first; all other bytes are not
relevant for VPS
VPS11
VPS12
VPS13
VPS14
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 74 Subaddress 5AH; note 1
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
VALUE
6BH
RESULT
CHPS
phase of encoded colour subcarrier
(including burst) relative to horizontal
sync; can be adjusted in steps of
360/256 degrees
PAL B/G and data from input ports in master mode
PAL B/G and data from look-up table
16H
25H
NTSC M and data from input ports in master mode
NTSC M and data from look-up table
46H
Note
1. The default value after reset is 00H.
Table 75 Subaddresses 5BH and 5DH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
GAINU
variable gain for
CB signal; input
representation in
accordance with
“ITU-R BT.601”
white-to-black = 92.5 IRE GAINU = −2.17 × nominal to +2.16 × nominal
GAINU = 0
output subcarrier of U contribution = 0
GAINU = 118 (76H)
output subcarrier of U contribution = nominal
white-to-black = 100 IRE GAINU = −2.05 × nominal to +2.04 × nominal
GAINU = 0
output subcarrier of U contribution = 0
GAINU = 125 (7DH)
output subcarrier of U contribution = nominal
Table 76 Subaddresses 5CH and 5EH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
GAINV
variable gain for
CR signal; input
representation in
accordance with
“ITU-R BT.601”
white-to-black = 92.5 IRE GAINV = −1.55 × nominal to +1.55 × nominal
GAINV = 0
output subcarrier of V contribution = 0
GAINV = 165 (A5H)
output subcarrier of V contribution = nominal
white-to-black = 100 IRE GAINV = −1.46 × nominal to +1.46 × nominal
GAINV = 0
output subcarrier of V contribution = 0
GAINV = 175 (AFH)
output subcarrier of V contribution = nominal
Table 77 Subaddress 5DH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
variable black level;
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
BLCKL
white-to-sync = 140 IRE; recommended value: BLCKL = 58 (3AH)
input representation note 1
in accordance with
BLCKL = 0; note 1
output black level = 29 IRE
“ITU-R BT.601”
BLCKL = 63 (3FH); note 1 output black level = 49 IRE
white-to-sync = 143 IRE; recommended value: BLCKL = 51 (33H)
note 2
BLCKL = 0; note 2
output black level = 27 IRE
BLCKL = 63 (3FH); note 2 output black level = 47 IRE
Notes
1. Output black level/IRE = BLCKL × 2/6.29 + 28.9.
2. Output black level/IRE = BLCKL × 2/6.18 + 26.5.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 78 Subaddress 5EH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
variable blanking level
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
BLNNL
white-to-sync = 140 IRE;
note 1
recommended value: BLNNL = 46 (2EH)
BLNNL = 0; note 1
output blanking level = 25 IRE
BLNNL = 63 (3FH); note 1 output blanking level = 45 IRE
white-to-sync = 143 IRE;
note 2
recommended value: BLNNL = 53 (35H)
BLNNL = 0; note 2
output blanking level = 26 IRE
BLNNL = 63 (3FH); note 2 output blanking level = 46 IRE
Notes
1. Output black level/IRE = BLNNL × 2/6.29 + 25.4.
2. Output black level/IRE = BLNNL × 2/6.18 + 25.9; default after reset: 35H.
Table 79 Subaddress 5FH
DATA BYTE
CCRS
DESCRIPTION
select cross-colour reduction filter in luminance; see Table 80
BLNVB
variable blanking level during vertical blanking interval is typically identical to value of BLNNL
Table 80 Logic levels and function of CCRS
CCRS1
CCRS0
DESCRIPTION
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
no cross-colour reduction; for overall transfer characteristic of luminance see Fig.7
cross-colour reduction #1 active; for overall transfer characteristic see Fig.7
cross-colour reduction #2 active; for overall transfer characteristic see Fig.7
cross-colour reduction #3 active; for overall transfer characteristic see Fig.7
Table 81 Subaddress 61H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
DOWND
DOWNA
INPI
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
digital core in normal operational mode; default after reset
digital core in sleep mode and is reactivated with an I2C-bus address
DACs in normal operational mode; default after reset
DACs in Power-down mode
PAL switch phase is nominal; default after reset
PAL switch is inverted compared to nominal if RTCE = 1
luminance gain for white − black 100 IRE
YGS
luminance gain for white − black 92.5 IRE including 7.5 IRE set-up of black
SCBW
enlarged bandwidth for chrominance encoding (for overall transfer characteristic of
chrominance in baseband representation see Figs 5 and 6)
1
standard bandwidth for chrominance encoding (for overall transfer characteristic of
chrominance in baseband representation see Figs 5 and 6); default after reset
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
LOGIC
LEVEL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
NTSC encoding (non-alternating V component)
PAL
0
1
0
1
PAL encoding (alternating V component)
864 total pixel clocks per line
FISE
858 total pixel clocks per line
Table 82 Subaddress 62H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
LEVEL
RTCE
BSTA
0
1
no real-time control of generated subcarrier frequency; default after reset
real-time control of generated subcarrier frequency through a Philips video decoder; for a
specification of the RTC protocol see document “RTC Functional Description”, available
on request
−
amplitude of colour burst; input white-to-black = 92.5 IRE;
recommended value:
representation in accordance burst = 40 IRE; NTSC encoding BSTA = 63 (3FH)
with “ITU-R BT.601”
BSTA = 0 to 2.02 × nominal
white-to-black = 92.5 IRE;
burst = 40 IRE; PAL encoding
recommended value:
BSTA = 45 (2DH)
BSTA = 0 to 2.82 × nominal
white-to-black = 100 IRE;
recommended value:
burst = 43 IRE; NTSC encoding BSTA = 67 (43H)
BSTA = 0 to 1.90 × nominal
white-to-black = 100 IRE;
burst = 43 IRE; PAL encoding
recommended value:
BSTA = 47 (2FH);
default after reset
BSTA = 0 to 3.02 × nominal
Table 83 Subaddresses 63H to 66H (four bytes to program subcarrier frequency)
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CONDITIONS
REMARKS
FSC0 to
FSC3
f
fsc = subcarrier frequency (in multiples of
FSC3 = most significant byte;
FSC0 = least significant byte
f
FSC = round fsc × 232
;
-------
line frequency); fllc = clock frequency (in
multiples of line frequency)
fllc
note 1
Note
1. Examples:
a) NTSC M: ffsc = 227.5, fllc = 1716 → FSC = 569408543 (21F07C1FH).
b) PAL B/G: ffsc = 283.7516, fllc = 1728 → FSC = 705268427 (2A098ACBH).
Table 84 Subaddresses 67H to 6AH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
L21O0
L21O1
L21E0
L21E1
first byte of captioning data, odd field
second byte of captioning data, odd field
first byte of extended data, even field
second byte of extended data, even field
LSBs of the respective bytes are encoded immediately after
run-in and framing code, the MSBs of the respective bytes
have to carry the parity bit, in accordance with the definition
of line 21 encoding format.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 85 Subaddresses 6CH and 6DH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HTRIG
sets the horizontal trigger phase related to chip-internal horizontal input
values above 1715 (FISE = 1) or 1727 (FISE = 0) are not allowed; increasing HTRIG decreases
delays of all internally generated timing signals; the default value is 0
Table 86 Subaddress 6DH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
VTRIG
sets the vertical trigger phase related to chip-internal vertical input
increasing VTRIG decreases delays of all internally generated timing signals, measured in half
lines; variation range of VTRIG = 0 to 31 (1FH); the default value is 0
Table 87 Subaddress 6EH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
values of the VTRIG register are positive
LEVEL
NVTRIG
BLCKON
0
1
0
1
−
−
values of the VTRIG register are negative
encoder in normal operation mode; default after reset
output signal is forced to blanking level
PHRES
LDEL
selects the phase reset mode of the colour subcarrier generator; see Table 88
selects the delay on luminance path with reference to chrominance path;
see Table 89
FLC
−
field length control; see Table 90
Table 88 Logic levels and function of PHRES
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
PHRES1
PHRES0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
no subcarrier reset
subcarrier reset every two lines
subcarrier reset every eight fields
subcarrier reset every four fields
Table 89 Logic levels and function of LDEL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
no luminance delay; default after reset
LDEL1
LDEL0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
1 LLC luminance delay
2 LLC luminance delay
3 LLC luminance delay
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 90 Logic levels and function of FLC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
FLC1
FLC0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
interlaced 312.5 lines/field at 50 Hz, 262.5 lines/field at 60 Hz; default after reset
non-interlaced 312 lines/field at 50 Hz, 262 lines/field at 60 Hz
non-interlaced 313 lines/field at 50 Hz, 263 lines/field at 60 Hz
non-interlaced 313 lines/field at 50 Hz, 263 lines/field at 60 Hz
Table 91 Subaddress 6FH
DATA
BYTE
LOGIC
LEVEL
DESCRIPTION
CCEN
−
0
1
−
enables individual line 21 encoding; see Table 92
disables teletext insertion; default after reset
enables teletext insertion
TTXEN
SCCLN
selects the actual line, where Closed Caption or extended data are encoded;
line = (SCCLN + 4) for M-systems; line = (SCCLN + 1) for other systems
Table 92 Logic levels and function of CCEN
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CCEN1
CCEN0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
line 21 encoding off; default after reset
enables encoding in field 1 (odd)
enables encoding in field 2 (even)
enables encoding in both fields
Table 93 Subaddresses 70H to 72H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
ADWHS
active display window horizontal start; defines the start of the active TV display portion after
the border colour
values above 1715 (FISE = 1) or 1727 (FISE = 0) are not allowed
ADWHE
active display window horizontal end; defines the end of the active TV display portion before
the border colour
values above 1715 (FISE = 1) or 1727 (FISE = 0) are not allowed
Table 94 Subaddress 73H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
TTXHS
start of signal TTXRQ on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2
(CLK2EN = 0); see Fig.51
TTXHS = 42H; is default after
reset if strapped to PAL
TTXHS = 54H; is default after
reset if strapped to NTSC
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 95 Subaddress 74H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
indicates the delay in clock cycles between rising edge of TTXRQ
REMARKS
TTXHD
minimum value: TTXHD = 2;
output signal on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2 (CLK2EN = 0) and valid data at is default after reset
pin TTX_SRES
Table 96 Subaddress 75H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
advanced composite sync against RGB output from 0 XTAL clocks to 31 XTAL clocks
CSYNCA
Table 97 Subaddresses 76H, 77H and 7CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
TTXOVS
TTXOVE
first line of occurrence of signal TTXRQ on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2
(CLK2EN = 0) in odd field
TTXOVS = 05H; is default
after reset if strapped to PAL
TTXOVS = 06H; is default
after reset if strapped to
NTSC
line = (TTXOVS + 4) for M-systems
line = (TTXOVS + 1) for other systems
last line of occurrence of signal TTXRQ on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2
(CLK2EN = 0) in odd field
TTXOVE = 16H; is default
after reset if strapped to PAL
TTXOVE = 10H; is default
after reset if strapped to
NTSC
line = (TTXOVE + 3) for M-systems
line = TTXOVE for other systems
Table 98 Subaddresses 78H, 79H and 7CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
REMARKS
TTXEVS
first line of occurrence of signal TTXRQ on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2
(CLK2EN = 0) in even field
TTXEVS = 04H; is default
after reset if strapped to PAL
TTXEVS = 05H; is default
after reset if strapped to
NTSC
line = (TTXEVS + 4) for M-systems
line = (TTXEVS + 1) for other systems
TTXEVE
last line of occurrence of signal TTXRQ on pin TTXRQ_XCLKO2
(CLK2EN = 0) in even field
TTXEVE = 16H; is default
after reset if strapped to PAL
TTXEVE = 10H; is default
after reset if strapped to
NTSC
line = (TTXEVE + 3) for M-systems
line = TTXEVE for other systems
Table 99 Subaddresses 7AH to 7CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
FAL
first active line = FAL + 4 for M-systems and FAL + 1 for other systems, measured in lines
FAL = 0 coincides with the first field synchronization pulse
LAL
last active line = LAL + 3 for M-systems and LAL for other system, measured in lines
LAL = 0 coincides with the first field synchronization pulse
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 100 Subaddress 7CH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
TTX60
TTXO
0
1
0
enables NABTS (FISE = 1) or European TTX (FISE = 0); default after reset
enables world standard teletext 60 Hz (FISE = 1)
new teletext protocol selected; at each rising edge of TTXRQ a single teletext bit is
requested (see Fig.51); default after reset
1
old teletext protocol selected; the encoder provides a window of TTXRQ going HIGH;
the length of the window depends on the chosen teletext standard (see Fig.51)
Table 101 Subaddresses 7EH and 7FH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LINE
individual lines in both fields (PAL counting) can be disabled for insertion of teletext by the respective
bits, disabled line = LINExx (50 Hz field rate)
this bit mask is effective only if the lines are enabled by TTXOVS/TTXOVE and TTXEVS/TTXEVE
Table 102 Subaddresses 81H to 83H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
PCL
defines the frequency of the synthesized pixel clock PIXCLKO;
PCL
fPIXCLK
=
× f
× 8 ; fXTAL = 27 MHz nominal, e.g. 640 × 480 to NTSC M: PCL = 20F63BH;
XTAL
-----------
224
640 × 480 to PAL B/G: PCL = 1B5A73H (as by strapping pins)
Table 103 Subaddress 84H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
DCLK
0
pixel clock input is differential, pin PIXCLKI receives the inverted clock; default after
reset
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
−
−
pixel clock input is single ended, pin PIXCLKI has no function
pixel clock generator runs free; default after reset
pixel clock generator gets synchronized with the vertical sync
input FIFO gets reset explicitly at falling edge
PCLSY
IFRA
input FIFO gets reset every field; default after reset
input FIFO is active
IFBP
input FIFO is bypassed; default after reset
PCLE
PCLI
controls the divider for the external pixel clock; see Table 104
controls the divider for the internal pixel clock; see Table 105
2004 Jun 29
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 104 Logic levels and function of PCLE
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
PCLE1
PCLE0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
divider ratio for PIXCLK output is 1
divider ratio for PIXCLK output is 2; default after reset
divider ratio for PIXCLK output is 4
divider ratio for PIXCLK output is 8
Table 105 Logic levels and function of PCLI
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
divider ratio for internal PIXCLK is 1
PCLI1
PCLI0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
divider ratio for internal PIXCLK is 2; default after reset
divider ratio for internal PIXCLK is 4
not allowed
Table 106 Subaddress 85H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
EIDIV
FILI
0
1
−
input dividers are off; inputs are high-impedance; default after reset
input dividers are on; inputs have lower impedance
threshold for FIFO internal transfers; nominal value is 8; default after reset
Table 107 Subaddresses 90H and 94H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
XOFS
horizontal offset; defines the number of PIXCLKs from horizontal sync (HSVGC) output to composite
blanking (CBO) output
Table 108 Subaddresses 91H and 94H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
XPIX
pixel in X direction; defines half the number of active pixels per input line (identical to the length of
CBO pulses)
Table 109 Subaddresses 92H and 94H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YOFSO
vertical offset in odd field; defines (in the odd field) the number of lines from VSVGC to first line with
active CBO; if no LUT data is requested, the first active CBO will be output at YOFSO + 2; usually,
YOFSO = YOFSE with the exception of extreme vertical downscaling and interlacing
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 110 Subaddresses 93H and 94H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YOFSE
vertical offset in even field; defines (in the even field) the number of lines from VSVGC to first line with
active CBO; if no LUT data is requested, the first active CBO will be output at YOFSE + 2; usually,
YOFSE = YOFSO with the exception of extreme vertical downscaling and interlacing
Table 111 Subaddresses 95H and 96H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YPIX
defines the number of requested input lines from the feeding device;
number of requested lines = YPIX + YOFSE − YOFSO
Table 112 Subaddress 96H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
EFS
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
frame sync signal at pin FSVGC ignored in slave mode
frame sync signal at pin FSVGC accepted in slave mode
normal polarity of CBO signal (HIGH during active video)
inverted polarity of CBO signal (LOW during active video)
the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is timing master to the graphics controller
the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is timing slave to the graphics controller
if hardware cursor insertion is active, set LOW for non-interlaced input signals
if hardware cursor insertion is active, set HIGH for interlaced input signals
luminance sharpness booster disabled
PCBN
SLAVE
ILC
YFIL
luminance sharpness booster enabled
Table 113 Subaddress 97H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
HFS
0
1
horizontal sync is directly derived from input signal (slave mode) at pin HSVGC
horizontal sync is derived from a frame sync signal (slave mode) at pin FSVGC (only if
EFS is set HIGH)
VFS
0
1
vertical sync (field sync) is directly derived from input signal (slave mode) at
pin VSVGC
vertical sync (field sync) is derived from a frame sync signal (slave mode) at
pin FSVGC (only if EFS is set HIGH)
OFS
PFS
0
1
0
pin FSVGC is switched to input
pin FSVGC is switched to active output
polarity of signal at pin FSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active HIGH; rising
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
1
polarity of signal at pin FSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active LOW; falling
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
OVS
0
1
pin VSVGC is switched to input
pin VSVGC is switched to active output
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
LOGIC
LEVEL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
PVS
0
polarity of signal at pin VSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active HIGH; rising
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
1
polarity of signal at pin VSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active LOW; falling
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
OHS
PHS
0
1
0
pin HSVGC is switched to input
pin HSVGC is switched to active output
polarity of signal at pin HSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active HIGH; rising
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
1
polarity of signal at pin HSVGC in output mode (master mode) is active LOW; falling
edge of the input signal is used in slave mode
Table 114 Subaddresses 98H and 99H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
number of PIXCLKs
HLEN
horizontal length; HLEN =
– 1
----------------------------------------------------
line
Table 115 Subaddress 99H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
IDEL
input delay; defines the distance in PIXCLKs between the active edge of CBO and the first received
valid pixel
Table 116 Subaddresses 9AH and 9CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
XINC
number of output pixels
--------------------------------------------------------------
line
incremental fraction of the horizontal scaling engine; XINC =
× 4096
--------------------------------------------------------------
number of input pixels
----------------------------------------------------------
line
Table 117 Subaddresses 9BH and 9CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YINC
number of active output lines
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
number of active input lines
incremental fraction of the vertical scaling engine; YINC =
× 4096
Table 118 Subaddresses 9DH and 9FH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YIWGTO
YINC
2
weighting factor for the first line of the odd field; YIWGTO =
+ 2048
-------------
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 119 Subaddresses 9EH and 9FH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
weighting factor for the first line of the even field; YIWGTE =
YIWGTE
YINC – YSKIP
-------------------------------------
2
Table 120 Subaddresses A0H and A1H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
YSKIP
vertical line skip; defines the effectiveness of the anti-flicker filter; YSKIP = 0: most effective;
YSKIP = 4095: anti-flicker filter switched off
Table 121 Subaddress A1H
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
BLEN
0
1
no internal blanking for non-interlaced graphics in bypass mode; default after reset
forced internal blanking for non-interlaced graphics in bypass mode
Table 122 Subaddresses A2H to A4H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
luminance and colour difference portion of border colour in underscan area
BCY, BCU
and BCV
Table 123 Subaddress D0H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HLCA
RAM start address for the HD sync line count array; the byte following subaddress D0 points to the
first cell to be loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing
until stop condition. Each line count array entry consists of 2 bytes; see Table 124. The array has
15 entries.
HLC
HLT
HD line counter. The system will repeat the pattern described in ‘HLT’ HLC times and then start with
the next entry in line count array.
HD line type pointer. If not 0, the value points into the line type array, index HLT − 1 with the
description of the current line. 0 means the entry is not used.
Table 124 Layout of the data bytes in the line count array
BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HLC4 HLC3
HLT0
0
1
HLC7
HLT3
HLC6
HLT2
HLC5
HLT1
HLC2
0
HLC1
HLC9
HLC0
HLC8
0
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 125 Subaddress D1H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HLTA
RAM start address for the HD sync line type array; the byte following subaddress D1 points to the first
cell to be loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing
until stop condition. Each line type array entry consists of 4 bytes; see Table 126. The array has
15 entries.
HLP
HD line type; if not 0, the value points into the line pattern array. The index used is HLP − 1. It consists
of value-duration pairs. Each entry consists of 8 pointers, used from index 0 to 7. The value 0 means
that the entry is not used.
Table 126 Layout of the data bytes in the line type array
BYTE
DESCRIPTION
0
1
2
3
0
0
0
0
HLP12
HLP32
HLP52
HLP72
HLP11
HLP31
HLP51
HLP71
HLP10
0
0
0
0
HLP02
HLP22
HLP42
HLP62
HLP01
HLP21
HLP41
HLP61
HLP00
HLP20
HLP40
HLP60
HLP30
HLP50
HLP70
Table 127 Subaddress D2H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HLPA
RAM start address for the HD sync line pattern array; the byte following subaddress D2 points to the
first cell to be loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing
until stop condition. Each line pattern array entry consists of 4 value-duration pairs occupying 2 bytes;
see Table 128. The array has 7 entries.
HPD
HPV
HD pattern duration. The value defines the time in pixel clocks (HPD + 1) the corresponding value
HPV is added to the HD output signal. If 0, this entry will be skipped.
HD pattern value pointer. This gives the index in the HD value array containing the level to be inserted
into the HD output path. If the MSB of HPV is logic 1, the value will only be inserted into the y/green
channel of the HD data path, the other channels remain unchanged.
Table 128 Layout of the data bytes in the line pattern array
BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HPD04 HPD03
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
HPD07
HPV03
HPD17
HPV13
HPD27
HPV23
HPD37
HPV33
HPD06
HPV02
HPD16
HPV12
HPD26
HPV22
HPD36
HPV32
HPD05
HPV01
HPD14
HPV11
HPD25
HPV21
HPD35
HPV31
HPD02
HPD01
HPD09
HPD11
HPD19
HPD21
HPD29
HPD31
HPD39
HPD00
HPD08
HPD10
HPD18
HPD20
HPD28
HPD30
HPD38
HPV00
HPD14
HPV10
HPD24
HPV20
HPD34
HPV30
0
0
HPD13
HPD12
0
HPD23
0
0
HPD22
0
HPD33
0
HPD32
0
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 129 Subaddress D3H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HPVA
HPVE
RAM start address for the HD sync value array; the byte following subaddress D3 points to the first
cell to be loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing
until stop condition. Each line pattern array entry consists of 2 bytes. The array has 8 entries.
HD pattern value entry. The HD path will insert a level of (HPV + 52) × 0.66 IRE into the data path.
The value is signed 8-bits wide; see Table 130.
HHS
HVS
HD horizontal sync. If the HD engine is active, this value will be provided at pin HSM; see Table 130.
HD vertical sync. If the HD engine is active, this value will be provided at pin VSM; see Table 130.
Table 130 Layout of the data bytes in the value array
BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HPVE4 HPVE3
0
1
HPVE7
0
HPVE6
0
HPVE5
0
HPVE2
0
HPVE1
HVS
HPVE0
HHS
0
0
Table 131 Subaddresses D4H and D5H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HLCT
state of the HD line counter after trigger, note that it counts backwards
state of the HD line type pointer after trigger
HLCPT
HLPPT
state of the HD pattern pointer after trigger
Table 132 Subaddresses D6H and D7H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HDCT
HEPT
state of the HD duration counter after trigger, note that it counts backwards
state of the HD event type pointer in the line type array after trigger
Table 133 Subaddresses D8H and D9H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
horizontal trigger phase for the HD sync engine in pixel clocks
HTX
Table 134 Subaddresses DAH and DBH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
vertical trigger phase for the HD sync engine in input lines
HTY
Table 135 Subaddress DCH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
the HD sync engine is off; default after reset
LEVEL
HDSYE
HDTC
0
1
0
1
the HD sync engine is active
HD output path processes RGB; default after reset
HD output path processes YUV
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
LOGIC
LEVEL
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
HDGY
0
gain in the HD output path is reduced, insertion of sync pulses is possible; default after
reset
1
0
full level swing at the input causes full level swing at the DACs in HD mode
HDIP
interpolator for the colour difference signal in the HD output path is active; default after
reset
1
interpolator for the colour difference signals in the HD output path is off
Table 136 Subaddresses F0H to F2H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CC1R, CC1G RED, GREEN and BLUE portion of first cursor colour
and CC1B
Table 137 Subaddresses F3H to F5H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CC2R, CC2G RED, GREEN and BLUE portion of second cursor colour
and CC2B
Table 138 Subaddresses F6H to F8H
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
AUXR, AUXG RED, GREEN and BLUE portion of auxiliary cursor colour
and AUXB
Table 139 Subaddresses F9H and FAH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTION
XCP
horizontal cursor position
Table 140 Subaddress FAH
DATA BYTE
XHS
horizontal hot spot of cursor
Table 141 Subaddresses FBH and FCH
DATA BYTE
YCP
vertical cursor position
Table 142 Subaddress FCH
DATA BYTE
YHS
vertical hot spot of cursor
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133
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 143 Subaddress FDH
LOGIC
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
LEVEL
LUTOFF
CMODE
LUTL
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
2
3
4
colour look-up table is active
colour look-up table is bypassed
cursor mode; input colour will be inverted
auxiliary cursor colour will be inserted
LUT loading via input data stream is inactive
colour and cursor LUTs are loaded via input data stream
input format is 8 + 8 + 8-bit 4 : 4 : 4 non-interlaced RGB or CB-Y-CR
input format is 5 + 5 + 5-bit 4 : 4 : 4 non-interlaced RGB
input format is 5 + 6 + 5-bit 4 : 4 : 4 non-interlaced RGB
input format is 8 + 8 + 8-bit 4 : 2 : 2 non-interlaced CB-Y-CR
IF
input format is 8 + 8 + 8-bit 4 : 2 : 2 interlaced CB-Y-CR (ITU-R BT.656, 27 MHz clock)
(in subaddresses 91H and 94H set XPIX = number of active pixels/line)
5
6
0
1
0
1
input format is 8-bit non-interlaced index colour
input format is 8 + 8 + 8-bit 4 : 4 : 4 non-interlaced RGB or CB-Y-CR (special bit ordering)
RGB to CR-Y-CB matrix is active
MATOFF
DFOFF
RGB to CR-Y-CB matrix is bypassed
down formatter (4 : 4 : 4 to 4 : 2 : 2) in input path is active
down formatter is bypassed
Table 144 Subaddress FEH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CURSA
RAM start address for cursor bit map; the byte following subaddress FEH points to the first cell to be
loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing until stop
condition
Table 145 Subaddress FFH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
COLSA
RAM start address for colour LUT; the byte following subaddress FFH points to the first cell to be
loaded with the next transmitted byte; succeeding cells are loaded by auto-incrementing until stop
condition
In subaddresses 5BH, 5CH, 5DH, 5EH, 62H and D3H all IRE values are rounded up.
2004 Jun 29
134
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.1.3 SLAVE TRANSMITTER
Table 146 Slave transmitter (slave address 89H)
DATA BYTE
D4 D3
VER0 CCRDO CCRDE
REGISTER
FUNCTION
SUBADDRESS
D7
D6
D5
D2
D1
D0
Status byte
Chip ID
00H
1CH
80H
VER2
CID7
0
VER1
CID6
0
0
CID2
0
FSEQ
CID1
O_E
CID0
UDFL
CID5
0
CID4
0
CID3
0
FIFO status
OVFL
Table 147 Subaddress 00H
DATA BYTE
LOGIC LEVEL
DESCRIPTION
VER
−
version identification of the device: it will be changed with all versions of the IC that
have different programming models; current version is 101 binary
CCRDO
CCRDE
1
0
Closed Caption bytes of the odd field have been encoded
the bit is reset after information has been written to the
subaddresses 67H and 68H; it is set immediately after the data has been encoded
1
0
Closed Caption bytes of the even field have been encoded
the bit is reset after information has been written to the
subaddresses 69H and 6AH; it is set immediately after the data has been encoded
FSEQ
O_E
1
0
1
0
during first field of a sequence (repetition rate: NTSC = 4 fields, PAL = 8 fields)
not first field of a sequence
during even field
during odd field
Table 148 Subaddress 1CH
DATA BYTE
DESCRIPTION
CID
chip ID of SAA7108AE = 04H; chip ID of SAA7109AE = 05H
Table 149 Subaddress 80H
DATA BYTE
LOGIC LEVEL
DESCRIPTION
normal FIFO state
IFERR
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
input FIFO overflow/underflow has occurred
normal FIFO state
BFERR
OVFL
buffer FIFO overflow, only if YUPSC = 1
no FIFO overflow
FIFO overflow has occurred; this bit is reset after this subaddress has been read
no FIFO underflow
UDFL
FIFO underflow has occurred; this bit is reset after this subaddress has been read
2004 Jun 29
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2 Digital video decoder part
18.2.1 I2C-BUS FORMAT
S
ACK-s
ACK-s
ACK-s
P
SLAVE ADDRESS W
SUBADDRESS
DATA
data transferred
(n bytes + acknowledge)
MHB339
a. Write procedure.
S
SLAVE ADDRESS W
SLAVE ADDRESS R
ACK-s
ACK-s
SUBADDRESS
ACK-s
Sr
DATA
ACK-m
P
data transferred
(n bytes + acknowledge)
MHB340
b. Read procedure (combined).
Fig.58 I2C-bus format.
Table 150 Description of I2C-bus format; note 1
CODE
DESCRIPTION
S
START condition
Sr
repeated START condition
SLAVE ADDRESS W ‘0100 0010’ (42H, default) or ‘0100 0000’ (40H; note 2)
SLAVE ADDRESS R ‘0100 0011’ (43H, default) or ‘0100 0001’ (41H; note 2)
ACK-s
acknowledge generated by the slave
acknowledge generated by the master
subaddress byte; see Tables 151 and 152
ACK-m
SUBADDRESS
DATA
data byte; see Table 152; if more than one byte DATA is transmitted the subaddress pointer is
automatically incremented
P
X
STOP condition
read/write control bit (LSB slave address); X = 0, order to write (the circuit is slave receiver);
X = 1, order to read (the circuit is slave transmitter)
Notes
1. The SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE supports the ‘fast mode’ I2C-bus specification extension (data rate up to 400 kbits/s).
2. If pin RTCO is strapped to VDDD via a 3.3 kΩ resistor.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 151 Subaddress description and access
SUBADDRESS
DESCRIPTION
ACCESS (READ/WRITE)
00H
chip version
reserved
read only
F0H to FFH
−
Video decoder: 01H to 2FH
01H to 05H
06H to 19H
1AH to 1EH
1FH
front-end part
read and write
decoder part
reserved
read and write
−
read only
−
video decoder status byte
reserved
20H to 2FH
Audio clock generation: 30H to 3FH
30H to 3AH
3BH to 3FH
audio clock generator
reserved
read and write
−
General purpose VBI data slicer: 40H to 7FH
40H to 5EH
5FH
VBI data slicer
reserved
read and write
−
read only
−
60H to 62H
63H to 7FH
VBI data slicer status
reserved
X port, I port and the scaler: 80H to EFH
80H to 8FH
90H to BFH
C0H to EFH
task independent global settings
read and write
read and write
read and write
task A definition
task B definition
2004 Jun 29
137
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Table 152 I2C-bus receiver/transmitter overview
SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Chip version: register 00H
Chip version (read only)
00
ID7
ID6
ID5
ID4
−
−
−
−
Video decoder: registers 01H to 2FH
FRONT-END PART: REGISTERS 01H TO 05H
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Increment delay
01
02
03
04
05
IDEL3
MODE3
HOLDG
GAI13
IDEL2
MODE2
GAFIX
GAI12
GAI22
IDEL1
MODE1
GAI28
GAI11
GAI21
IDEL0
MODE0
GAI18
GAI10
GAI20
Analog input control 1
Analog input control 2
Analog input control 3
Analog input control 4
FUSE1
FUSE0
HLNRS
GAI16
GAI26
GUDL1
VBSL
GUDL0
WPOFF
GAI14
(1)
GAI17
GAI27
GAI15
GAI25
GAI24
GAI23
DECODER PART: REGISTERS 06H TO 2FH
Horizontal sync start
Horizontal sync stop
06
07
08
09
0A
0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12
13
14
HSB7
HSS7
HSB6
HSS6
HSB5
HSS5
HSB4
HSS4
HSB3
HSS3
HSB2
HSS2
HSB1
HSS1
HSB0
HSS0
Sync control
AUFD
FSEL
FOET
HTC1
HTC0
HPLL
VNOI1
LUFI1
DBRI1
DCON1
DSAT1
VNOI0
LUFI0
Luminance control
BYPS
YCOMB
DBRI6
DCON6
DSAT6
HUEC6
CSTD2
CGAIN6
OFFU0
RTP1
LDEL
LUBW
LUFI3
LUFI2
Luminance brightness control
Luminance contrast control
Chrominance saturation control
Chrominance hue control
Chrominance control 1
Chrominance gain control
Chrominance control 2
Mode/delay control
DBRI7
DCON7
DSAT7
HUEC7
CDTO
ACGC
OFFU1
COLO
RTSE13
RTCE
DBRI5
DCON5
DSAT5
HUEC5
CSTD1
CGAIN5
OFFV1
HDEL1
RTSE11
XRVS1
AOSL1
DBRI4
DCON4
DSAT4
HUEC4
CSTD0
CGAIN4
OFFV0
HDEL0
RTSE10
XRVS0
AOSL0
DBRI3
DCON3
DSAT3
HUEC3
DCVF
DBRI2
DCON2
DSAT2
HUEC2
FCTC
DBRI0
DCON0
DSAT0
HUEC0
CCOMB
CGAIN0
LCBW0
YDEL0
RTSE00
OFTS0
APCK0
HUEC1
(1)
CGAIN3
CHBW
RTP0
CGAIN2
LCBW2
YDEL2
RTSE02
OFTS2
OLDSB
CGAIN1
LCBW1
YDEL1
RTSE01
OFTS1
APCK1
RT signal control
RTSE12
XRHS
RTSE03
HLSEL
XTOUTE
RT/X port output control
Analog/ADC/compatibility
control
CM99
UPTCV
VGATE start, FID change
VGATE stop
15
16
VSTA7
VSTO7
VSTA6
VSTO6
VSTA5
VSTO5
VSTA4
VSTO4
VSTA3
VSTO3
VSTA2
VSTO2
VSTA1
VSTO1
VSTA0
VSTO0
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
Miscellaneous,
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
(1)
(1)
(1)
17
LLCE
LLC2E
VGPS
VSTO8
VSTA8
VGATE configuration and MSBs
Raw data gain control
Raw data offset control
Reserved
18
19
RAWG7
RAWG6
RAWG5
RAWG4
RAWG3
RAWG2
RAWG1
RAWG0
RAWO7
RAWO6
RAWO5
RAWO4
RAWO3
RAWO2
RAWO1
RAWO0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
1A to 1E
1F
Status byte video decoder
(read only, OLDSB = 0)
INTL
HLVLN
FIDT
GLIMT
GLIMB
WIPA
COPRO
RDCAP
Status byte video decoder
(read only, OLDSB = 1)
1F
INTL
HLCK
FIDT
GLIMT
GLIMB
WIPA
SLTCA
CODE
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
20 to 2F
Audio clock generator part: registers 30H to 3FH
Audio master clock cycles per
field
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
3A
ACPF7
ACPF6
ACPF5
ACPF4
ACPF3
ACPF2
ACPF1
ACPF9
ACPF0
ACPF8
ACPF15
ACPF14
ACPF13
ACPF12
ACPF11
ACPF10
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
ACPF17
ACPF16
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
Audio master clock nominal
increment
ACNI7
ACNI6
ACNI5
ACNI4
ACNI3
ACNI2
ACNI1
ACNI9
ACNI0
ACNI8
ACNI15
ACNI14
ACNI13
ACNI12
ACNI11
ACNI10
(1)
(1)
ACNI21
ACNI20
ACNI19
ACNI18
ACNI17
ACNI16
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
Clock ratio AMXCLK to ASCLK
Clock ratio ASCLK to ALRCLK
SDIV5
SDIV4
SDIV3
LRDIV3
APLL
SDIV2
LRDIV2
AMVR
SDIV1
LRDIV1
LRPH
SDIV0
LRDIV0
SCPH
LRDIV5
LRDIV4
(1)
(1)
Audio clock generator basic
set-up
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
3B to 3F
General purpose VBI data slicer part: registers 40H to 7FH
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Slicer control 1
40
41 to 57
58
HAM_N
LCRn_6
FC6
FCE
LCRn_5
FC5
HUNT_N
LCRn_4
FC4
LCR2 to LCR24 (n = 2 to 24)
Programmable framing code
Horizontal offset for slicer
Vertical offset for slicer
LCRn_7
FC7
LCRn_3
FC3
LCRn_2
FC2
LCRn_1
FC1
LCRn_0
FC0
59
HOFF7
VOFF7
HOFF6
VOFF6
HOFF5
VOFF5
HOFF4
VOFF4
HOFF3
VOFF3
HOFF2
VOFF2
HOFF1
VOFF1
HOFF0
VOFF0
5A
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
(1)
(1)
Field offset and MSBs for
5B
FOFF
RECODE
VOFF8
HOFF10
HOFF9
HOFF8
horizontal and vertical offset
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved (for testing)
5C
5D
Header and data identification
(DID) code control
FVREF
DID5
DID4
DID3
DID2
DID1
DID0
(1)
(1)
(1)
Sliced data identification (SDID)
code
5E
SDID5
SDID4
SDID3
SDID2
SDID1
SDID0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
5F
60
Slicer status byte 0 (read only)
Slicer status byte 1 (read only)
Slicer status byte 2 (read only)
Reserved
−
−
FC8V
FC7V
VPSV
LN8
PPV
LN7
CCV
LN6
−
−
61
−
F21_N
LN5
LN4
62
LN3
(1)
LN2
(1)
LN1
(1)
LN0
(1)
DT3
(1)
DT2
(1)
DT1
(1)
DT0
(1)
63 to 7F
X port, I port and the scaler part: registers 80H to EFH
TASK INDEPENDENT GLOBAL SETTINGS: 80H TO 8FH
(1)
Global control 1
Reserved
80
SMOD
(1)
TEB
(1)
TEA
(1)
ICKS3
(1)
ICKS2
(1)
ICKS1
(1)
ICKS0
(1)
(1)
81 and
82
(1)
(1)
(1)
X port I/O enable and output
clock phase control
83
XPCK1
XPCK0
XRQT
XPE1
XPE0
I port signal definitions
I port signal polarities
84
85
86
IDG01
ISWP1
VITX1
IDG00
ISWP0
VITX0
IDG11
ILLV
IDG10
IG0P
IDV1
IG1P
FFL1
IDV0
IRVP
FFL0
IDH1
IRHP
FEL1
IDH0
IDQP
FEL0
I port FIFO flag control and
arbitration
IDG02
IDG12
(1)
(1)
I port I/O enable, output clock
and gated clock phase control
87
IPCK3
IPCK2
IPCK1
IPCK0
IPE1
IPE0
(1)
(1)
Power save control
Reserved
88
89 to 8E
8F
CH4EN
CH2EN
SWRST
DPROG
SLM3
(1)
SLM1
(1)
SLM0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Status information scaler part
XTRI
ITRI
FFIL
FFOV
PRDON
ERROF
FIDSCI
FIDSCO
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
TASK A DEFINITION: REGISTERS 90H TO BFH
Basic settings and acquisition window definition
Task handling control
90
91
92
CONLH
CONLV
XFDV
OFIDC
HLDFV
XFDH
FSKP2
SCSRC1
XDV1
FSKP1
SCSRC0
XDV0
FSKP0
SCRQE
XCODE
RPTSK
FSC2
XDH
STRC1
FSC1
XDQ
STRC0
FSC0
X port formats and configuration
X port input reference signal
definitions
XCKS
I port output formats and
configuration
93
ICODE
I8_16
FYSK
FOI1
FOI0
FSI2
FSI1
FSI0
Horizontal input window start
Horizontal input window length
Vertical input window start
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9C
9D
9E
9F
XO7
(1)
XO6
(1)
XO5
(1)
XO4
(1)
XO3
XO11
XS3
XO2
XO10
XS2
XO1
XO9
XS1
XS9
YO1
YO9
YS1
YS9
XD1
XD9
YD1
YD9
XO0
XO8
XS0
XS8
YO0
YO8
YS0
YS8
XD0
XD8
YD0
YD8
XS7
(1)
XS6
(1)
XS5
(1)
XS4
(1)
XS11
YO3
XS10
YO2
YO7
(1)
YO6
(1)
YO5
(1)
YO4
(1)
YO11
YS3
YO10
YS2
Vertical input window length
Horizontal output window length
Vertical output window length
YS7
(1)
YS6
(1)
YS5
(1)
YS4
(1)
YS11
XD3
YS10
XD2
XD7
(1)
XD6
(1)
XD5
(1)
XD4
(1)
XD11
YD3
XD10
YD2
YD7
(1)
YD6
(1)
YD5
(1)
YD4
(1)
YD11
YD10
FIR filtering and prescaling
Horizontal prescaling
Accumulation length
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
A0
A1
A2
XPSC5
XACL5
PFY1
XPSC4
XACL4
PFY0
XPSC3
XACL3
XC2_1
XPSC2
XACL2
XDCG2
XPSC1
XACL1
XDCG1
XPSC0
XACL0
XDCG0
Prescaler DC gain and FIR
prefilter control
PFUV1
PFUV0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
A3
A4
A5
A6
A7
Luminance brightness control
Luminance contrast control
Chrominance saturation control
Reserved
BRIG7
BRIG6
BRIG5
BRIG4
BRIG3
BRIG2
BRIG1
BRIG0
CONT7
CONT6
CONT5
CONT4
CONT3
CONT2
CONT1
CONT0
SATN7
SATN6
SATN5
SATN4
SATN3
SATN2
SATN1
SATN0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Horizontal phase scaling
Horizontal luminance scaling
increment
A8
A9
AA
XSCY7
XSCY6
XSCY5
XSCY4
XSCY12
XPHY4
XSCY3
XSCY11
XPHY3
XSCY2
XSCY10
XPHY2
XSCY1
XSCY9
XPHY1
XSCY0
XSCY8
XPHY0
(1)
(1)
(1)
Horizontal luminance phase
offset
XPHY7
XPHY6
XPHY5
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
AB
AC
AD
AE
Horizontal chrominance scaling
increment
XSCC7
XSCC6
XSCC5
XSCC4
XSCC12
XPHC4
XSCC3
XSCC11
XPHC3
XSCC2
XSCC10
XPHC2
XSCC1
XSCC9
XPHC1
XSCC0
XSCC8
XPHC0
(1)
(1)
(1)
Horizontal chrominance phase
offset
XPHC7
XPHC6
XPHC5
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
AF
Vertical scaling
Vertical luminance scaling
increment
B0
B1
YSCY7
YSCY15
YSCC7
YSCY6
YSCY14
YSCC6
YSCY5
YSCY13
YSCC5
YSCY4
YSCY12
YSCC4
YSCC12
YSCY3
YSCY11
YSCC3
YSCY2
YSCY10
YSCC2
YSCY1
YSCY9
YSCC1
YSCY0
YSCY8
YSCC0
YSCC8
Vertical chrominance scaling
increment
B2
B3
YSCC15
YSCC14
YSCC13
YSCC11
YSCC10
YSCC9
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Vertical scaling mode control
Reserved
B4
YMIR
(1)
YMODE
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
B5 to B7
B8
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘00’
YPC07
YPC06
YPC05
YPC04
YPC14
YPC24
YPC34
YPY04
YPY14
YPY24
YPC03
YPC02
YPC01
YPC00
YPC10
YPC20
YPC30
YPY00
YPY10
YPY20
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘01’
B9
BA
BB
BC
BD
BE
YPC17
YPC27
YPC37
YPY07
YPY17
YPY27
YPC16
YPC26
YPC36
YPY06
YPY16
YPY26
YPC15
YPC25
YPC35
YPY05
YPY15
YPY25
YPC13
YPC23
YPC33
YPY03
YPY13
YPY23
YPC12
YPC22
YPC32
YPY02
YPY12
YPY22
YPC11
YPC21
YPC31
YPY01
YPY11
YPY21
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘10’
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘11’
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘00’
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘01’
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘10’
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘11’
BF
YPY37
YPY36
YPY35
YPY34
YPY33
YPY32
YPY31
YPY30
TASK B DEFINITION REGISTERS C0H TO EFH
Basic settings and acquisition window definition
Task handling control
C0
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
C7
C8
C9
CA
CB
CC
CD
CE
CF
CONLH
CONLV
XFDV
OFIDC
HLDFV
XFDH
I8_16
FSKP2
SCSRC1
XDV1
FSKP1
SCSRC0
XDV0
FSKP0
SCRQE
XCODE
FOI0
RPTSK
FSC2
XDH
FSI2
XO2
STRC1
FSC1
XDQ
FSI1
XO1
XO9
XS1
STRC0
FSC0
XCKS
FSI0
XO0
XO8
XS0
X port formats and configuration
Input reference signal definition
I port formats and configuration
Horizontal input window start
ICODE
FYSK
FOI1
XO7
(1)
XO6
(1)
XO5
(1)
XO4
(1)
XO3
XO11
XS3
XO10
XS2
Horizontal input window length
Vertical input window start
XS7
(1)
XS6
(1)
XS5
(1)
XS4
(1)
XS11
YO3
XS10
YO2
XS9
XS8
YO7
(1)
YO6
(1)
YO5
(1)
YO4
(1)
YO1
YO9
YS1
YO0
YO11
YS3
YO10
YS2
YO8
Vertical input window length
Horizontal output window length
Vertical output window length
YS7
(1)
YS6
(1)
YS5
(1)
YS4
(1)
YS0
YS11
XD3
YS10
XD2
YS9
YS8
XD7
(1)
XD6
(1)
XD5
(1)
XD4
(1)
XD1
XD9
YD1
YD9
XD0
XD8
YD0
YD8
XD11
YD3
XD10
YD2
YD7
(1)
YD6
(1)
YD5
(1)
YD4
(1)
YD11
YD10
FIR filtering and prescaling
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Horizontal prescaling
Accumulation length
D0
D1
D2
XPSC5
XACL5
PFY1
XPSC4
XACL4
PFY0
XPSC3
XACL3
XC2_1
XPSC2
XACL2
XDCG2
XPSC1
XACL1
XDCG1
XPSC0
XACL0
XDCG0
Prescaler DC gain and FIR
prefilter control
PFUV1
PFUV0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
Luminance brightness control
Luminance contrast control
Chrominance saturation control
Reserved
BRIG7
BRIG6
BRIG5
BRIG4
BRIG3
BRIG2
BRIG1
BRIG0
CONT7
CONT6
CONT5
CONT4
CONT3
CONT2
CONT1
CONT0
SATN7
SATN6
SATN5
SATN4
SATN3
SATN2
SATN1
SATN0
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Horizontal phase scaling
Horizontal luminance scaling
increment
D8
D9
DA
XSCY7
XSCY6
XSCY5
XSCY4
XSCY12
XPHY4
XSCY3
XSCY11
XPHY3
XSCY2
XSCY10
XPHY2
XSCY1
XSCY9
XPHY1
XSCY0
XSCY8
XPHY0
(1)
(1)
(1)
Horizontal luminance phase
offset
XPHY7
XPHY6
XPHY5
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
DB
DC
DD
DE
Horizontal chrominance scaling
increment
XSCC7
XSCC6
XSCC5
XSCC4
XSCC12
XPHC4
XSCC3
XSCC11
XPHC3
XSCC2
XSCC10
XPHC2
XSCC1
XSCC9
XPHC1
XSCC0
XSCC8
XPHC0
(1)
(1)
(1)
Horizontal chrominance phase
offset
XPHC7
XPHC6
XPHC5
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Reserved
DF
Vertical scaling
Vertical luminance scaling
increment
E0
E1
YSCY7
YSCY15
YSCC7
YSCY6
YSCY14
YSCC6
YSCY5
YSCY13
YSCC5
YSCY4
YSCY12
YSCC4
YSCC12
YSCY3
YSCY11
YSCC3
YSCY2
YSCY10
YSCC2
YSCY1
YSCY9
YSCC1
YSCY0
YSCY8
YSCC0
YSCC8
Vertical chrominance scaling
increment
E2
E3
YSCC15
YSCC14
YSCC13
YSCC11
YSCC10
YSCC9
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
Vertical scaling mode control
Reserved
E4
YMIR
(1)
YMODE
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(1)
E5 to E7
E8
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘00’
YPC07
YPC06
YPC05
YPC04
YPC14
YPC24
YPC34
YPY04
YPC03
YPC02
YPC01
YPC00
YPC10
YPC20
YPC30
YPY00
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘01’
E9
EA
EB
EC
YPC17
YPC27
YPC37
YPY07
YPC16
YPC26
YPC36
YPY06
YPC15
YPC25
YPC35
YPY05
YPC13
YPC23
YPC33
YPY03
YPC12
YPC22
YPC32
YPY02
YPC11
YPC21
YPC31
YPY01
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘10’
Vertical chrominance phase
offset ‘11’
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘00’
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SUB
REGISTER FUNCTION
ADDR.
(HEX)
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘01’
ED
EE
EF
YPY17
YPY27
YPY37
YPY16
YPY26
YPY36
YPY15
YPY25
YPY35
YPY14
YPY24
YPY34
YPY13
YPY23
YPY33
YPY12
YPY22
YPY32
YPY11
YPY21
YPY31
YPY10
YPY20
YPY30
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘10’
Vertical luminance phase
offset ‘11’
Note
1. All unused control bits must be programmed with logic 0 to ensure compatibility to future enhancements.
18.2.2 I2C-BUS DETAIL
18.2.2.1 Subaddress 00H
Table 153 Chip version (CV) identification; 00H[7:4]; read only register
LOGIC LEVELS
FUNCTION
ID7
ID6
ID5
ID4
CV0
Chip Version (CV)
CV3
CV2
CV1
18.2.2.2 Subaddress 01H
The programming of the horizontal increment delay is used to match internal processing delays to the delay of the ADC. Use recommended position
only.
Table 154 Horizontal increment delay; 01H[3:0]
FUNCTION
IDEL3
IDEL2
IDEL1
IDEL0
No update
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
Minimum delay
Recommended position
Maximum delay
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.3 Subaddress 02H
Table 155 Analog input control 1 (AICO1); 02H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7 and 6 analog function select;
see Fig.15
FUSE[1:0]
00
01
10
11
00
01
10
11
amplifier plus anti-alias filter bypassed
amplifier active
amplifier plus anti-alias filter active
5 and 4 update hysteresis for
9-bit gain; see Fig.16
GUDL[1:0]
off
±1 LSB
±2 LSB
±3 LSB
3 to 0 mode selection
MODE[3:0] 0000 Mode 0: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI11 (pin P13);
see Fig.59
0001 Mode 1: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI12 (pin P11);
see Fig.60
0010 Mode 2: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI21 (pin P10);
see Fig.61
0011 Mode 3: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI22 (pin P9);
see Fig.62
0100 Mode 4: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI23 (pin P7);
see Fig.63
0101 Mode 5: CVBS (automatic gain) from AI24 (pin P6);
see Fig.64
0110 Mode 6: Y (automatic gain) from AI11 (pin P13) + C (gain
adjustable via GAI28 to GAI20) from AI21 (pin P10);
note 1; see Fig.65
0111 Mode 7: Y (automatic gain) from AI12 (pin P11) + C (gain
adjustable via GAI28 to GAI20) from AI22 (pin P9); note 1;
see Fig.66
1000 Mode 8: Y (automatic gain) from AI11 (pin P13) + C (gain
adapted to Y gain) from AI21 (pin P10); note 1; see Fig.67
1001 Mode 9: Y (automatic gain) from AI12 (pin P11) + C (gain
adapted to Y gain) from AI22 (pin P9); note 1; see Fig.68
1010 Modes 10 to 15: reserved
to
1111
Note
1. To take full advantage of the Y/C modes 6 to 9 the I2C-bus bit BYPS (subaddress 09H, bit 7) should be set to logic 1
(full luminance bandwidth).
2004 Jun 29
146
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AD2
AD1
AD2
CHROMA
CHROMA
LUMA
AI12
AI11
LUMA
AD1
AI12
AI11
MHB559
MHB560
Fig.59 Mode 0; CVBS (automatic gain).
Fig.60 Mode 1; CVBS (automatic gain).
AI24
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI23
AI22
AI21
AD2
AD1
AD2
AD1
CHROMA
CHROMA
LUMA
LUMA
AI12
AI11
AI12
AI11
MHB561
MHB562
Fig.61 Mode 2; CVBS (automatic gain).
Fig.62 Mode 3; CVBS (automatic gain).
AI24
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI23
AI22
AI21
AD2
AD1
AD2
AD1
CHROMA
CHROMA
LUMA
LUMA
AI12
AI11
AI12
AI11
MHB563
MHB564
Fig.63 Mode 4; CVBS (automatic gain).
Fig.64 Mode 5; CVBS (automatic gain).
2004 Jun 29
147
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AD2
AD1
AD2
CHROMA
CHROMA
LUMA
AI12
AI11
LUMA
AD1
AI12
AI11
MHB565
MHB566
I2C-bus bit BYPS (subaddress 09H, bit 7) should be set to logic 1
(full luminance bandwidth).
I2C-bus bit BYPS (subaddress 09H, bit 7) should be set to logic 1
(full luminance bandwidth).
Fig.65 Mode 6; Y + C (gain channel 2 adjusted via
GAI2).
Fig.66 Mode 7; Y + C (gain channel 2 adjusted via
GAI2).
AI24
AI24
AI23
AI22
AI21
AI23
AI22
AI21
AD2
AD2
CHROMA
CHROMA
LUMA
LUMA
AI12
AI11
AI12
AI11
AD1
AD1
MHB567
MHB568
I2C-bus bit BYPS (subaddress 09H, bit 7) should be set to logic 1
(full luminance bandwidth).
I2C-bus bit BYPS (subaddress 09H, bit 7) should be set to logic 1
(full luminance bandwidth).
Fig.67 Mode 8; Y + C (gain channel 2 adapted to Y
gain).
Fig.68 Mode 9; Y + C (gain channel 2 adapted to Y
gain).
2004 Jun 29
148
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.4 Subaddress 03H
Table 156 Analog input control 2 (AICO2); 03H[6:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
6
HL not reference select
HLNRS
0
1(1)
0
normal clamping if decoder is in unlocked state
reference select if decoder is in unlocked state
5
AGC hold during vertical
blanking period
VBSL
short vertical blanking (AGC disabled during equalization
and serration pulses)
1
long vertical blanking (AGC disabled from start of
pre-equalization pulses until start of active video (line 22 for
60 Hz, line 24 for 50 Hz)
4
3
2
white peak control off
WPOFF
HOLDG
GAFIX
0(1)
1
white peak control active
white peak control off
automatic gain control
integration
0
AGC active
1
AGC integration hold (freeze)
automatic gain controlled by MODE3 to MODE0
gain is user programmable via GAI[17:10] and GAI[27:20]
see Table 158
gain control fix
0
1
1
0
static gain control channel 2
sign bit
GAI28
GAI18
static gain control channel 1
sign bit
see Table 157
Note
1. HLNRS = 1 should not be used in combination with WPOFF = 0.
18.2.2.5 Subaddress 04H
Table 157 Analog input control 3 (AICO3); static gain control channel 1; 03H[0] and 04H[7:0]
SIGN BIT
03H[0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
DECIMAL
VALUE
GAIN
(dB)
GAI18
GAI17
GAI16
GAI15
GAI14
GAI13
GAI12
GAI11
GAI10
0...
−3
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
...144
145...
...511
0
+6
18.2.2.6 Subaddress 05H
Table 158 Analog input control 4 (AICO4); static gain control channel 2; 03H[1] and 05H[7:0]
SIGN BIT
03H[1]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
DECIMAL
VALUE
GAIN
(dB)
GAI28
GAI27
GAI26
GAI25
GAI24
GAI23
GAI22
GAI21
GAI20
0...
−3
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
...144
145...
...511
0
+6
2004 Jun 29
149
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.7 Subaddress 06H
Table 159 Horizontal sync start; 06H[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
HSB4 HSB3
forbidden (outside available central counter range)
DELAY TIME
(STEP SIZE = 8/LLC)
HSB7
HSB6
HSB5
HSB2
HSB1
HSB0
−128...−109 (50 Hz)
−128...−108 (60 Hz)
−108 (50 Hz)...
−107 (60 Hz)...
...108 (50 Hz)
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
...107 (60 Hz)
109...127 (50 Hz)
108...127 (60 Hz)
forbidden (outside available central counter range)
18.2.2.8 Subaddress 07H
Table 160 Horizontal sync stop; 07H[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
DELAY TIME
(STEP SIZE = 8/LLC)
HSS7
HSS6
HSS5
HSS4
HSS3
HSS2
HSS1
HSS0
−128...−109 (50 Hz)
−128...−108 (60 Hz)
forbidden (outside available central counter range)
−108 (50 Hz)...
−107 (60 Hz)...
...108 (50 Hz)
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
...107 (60 Hz)
109...127 (50 Hz)
108...127 (60 Hz)
forbidden (outside available central counter range)
2004 Jun 29
150
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.9 Subaddress 08H
Table 161 Sync control; 08H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
automatic field detection
AUFD
FSEL
FOET
0
1
0
1
0
1
field state directly controlled via FSEL
automatic field detection; recommended setting
50 Hz, 625 lines
6
5
field selection
60 Hz, 525 lines
forced ODD/EVEN
toggle
ODD/EVEN signal toggles only with interlaced source
ODD/EVEN signal toggles fieldwise even if source is
non-interlaced
4 and 3 horizontal time constant HTC[1:0]
selection
00
01
TV mode, recommended for poor quality TV signals only; do
not use for new applications
VTR mode, recommended if a deflection control circuit is
directly connected to the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
10
11
0
reserved
fast locking mode; recommended setting
PLL closed
2
horizontal PLL
HPLL
1
PLL open; horizontal frequency fixed
normal mode; recommended setting
1 and 0 vertical noise reduction VNOI[1:0]
00
01
fast mode, applicable for stable sources only; automatic field
detection (AUFD) must be disabled
10
11
free running mode
vertical noise reduction bypassed
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.10 Subaddress 09H
Table 162 Luminance control; 09H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
chrominance trap/comb
filter bypass
BYPS
0
chrominance trap or luminance comb filter active;
default for CVBS mode
1
chrominance trap or luminance comb filter bypassed;
default for S-video mode
6
5
adaptive luminance comb YCOMB
filter
0
1
0
1
disabled (= chrominance trap enabled, if BYPS = 0)
active, if BYPS = 0
processing delay in non
comb filter mode
LDEL
processing delay is equal to internal pipelining delay
one (NTSC standards) or two (PAL standards) video
lines additional processing delay
4
remodulation bandwidth
for luminance; see
Figs 21 to 24
LUBW
0
1
small remodulation bandwidth (narrow chrominance
notch
large remodulation bandwidth (wider chrominance
notch smaller luminance bandwidth)
higher luminance bandwidth)
3 to 0
sharpness control,
luminance filter
characteristic; see Fig.25
LUFI[3:0]
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
0000
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
resolution enhancement filter; 8.0 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 6.8 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 5.1 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 4.1 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 3.0 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 2.3 dB at 4.1 MHz
resolution enhancement filter; 1.6 dB at 4.1 MHz
plain
low-pass filter; 2 dB at 4.1 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 4.1 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 3.3 MHz; 4 dB at 4.1 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 2.6 MHz; 8 dB at 4.1 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 2.4 MHz; 14 dB at 4.1 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 2.2 MHz; notch at 3.4 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 1.9 MHz; notch at 3.0 MHz
low-pass filter; 3 dB at 1.7 MHz; notch at 2.5 MHz
18.2.2.11 Subaddress 0AH
Table 163 Luminance brightness control: decoder part; 0AH[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
OFFSET
DBRI7
DBRI6
DBRI5
DBRI4
DBRI3
DBRI2
DBRI1
DBRI0
255 (bright)
128 (ITU level)
0 (dark)
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.12 Subaddress 0BH
Table 164 Luminance contrast control: decoder part; 0BH[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
DCON7 DCON6 DCON5 DCON4 DCON3 DCON2 DCON1 DCON0
GAIN
1.984 (maximum)
1.063 (ITU level)
1.0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0 (luminance off)
−1 (inverse luminance)
−2 (inverse luminance)
18.2.2.13 Subaddress 0CH
Table 165 Chrominance saturation control: decoder part; 0CH[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
GAIN
DSAT7
DSAT6
DSAT5
DSAT4
DSAT3
DSAT2
DSAT1
DSAT0
1.984 (maximum)
1.0 (ITU level)
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0 (colour off)
−1 (inverse chrominance)
−2 (inverse chrominance)
18.2.2.14 Subaddress 0DH
Table 166 Chrominance hue control: 0DH[7:0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
HUE PHASE (DEG)
HUEC7
HUEC6
HUEC5
HUEC4
HUEC3
HUEC2
HUEC1
HUEC0
+178.6...
...0...
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
...−180
2004 Jun 29
153
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.15 Subaddress 0EH
Table 167 Chrominance control 1; 0EH[7:0]
FUNCTION
BIT
DESCRIPTION
clear DTO
SYMBOL
VALUE
50 Hz/625 LINES
disabled
60 Hz/525 LINES
7
CDTO
0
1
Every time CDTO is set, the internal subcarrier DTO
phase is reset to 0° and the RTCO output generates a
logic 0 at time slot 68 (see document “RTC Functional
Description”, available on request). So an identical
subcarrier phase can be generated by an external device
(e.g. an encoder).
6 to 4 colour standard selection CSTD[2:0]
000
001
010
PAL BGDHI (4.43 MHz)
NTSC 4.43 (50 Hz)
NTSC M (3.58 MHz)
PAL 4.43 (60 Hz)
Combination-PAL N
(3.58 MHz)
NTSC 4.43 (60 Hz)
011
100
101
110
111
0
NTSC N (3.58 MHz)
reserved
PAL M (3.58 MHz)
NTSC-Japan (3.58 MHz)
reserved
SECAM
reserved; do not use
reserved; do not use
3
disable chrominance
vertical filter and PAL
phase error correction
DCVF
chrominance vertical filter and PAL phase error
correction on (during active video lines)
1
chrominance vertical filter and PAL phase error
correction permanently off
2
0
fast colour time constant FCTC
0
1
0
1
nominal time constant
fast time constant for special applications
adaptive chrominance
comb filter
CCOMB
disabled
active
18.2.2.16 Subaddress 0FH
Table 168 Chrominance gain control; 0FH[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
VALUE
FUNCTION
7
automatic chrominance
gain control
ACGC
0
1
on
programmable gain via CGAIN6 to CGAIN0; need to be
set for SECAM standard
6 to 0 chrominance gain value
(if ACGC is set to logic 1)
CGAIN[6:0] 000 0000 minimum gain (0.5)
010 0100 nominal gain (1.125)
111 1111 maximum gain (7.5)
2004 Jun 29
154
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.17 Subaddress 10H
Table 169 Chrominance control 2; 10H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
VALUE
FUNCTION
7 and 6
fine offset adjustment B − Y component
OFFU[1:0]
00
01
10
11
00
01
10
11
0
0 LSB
1⁄4 LSB
1⁄2 LSB
3⁄4 LSB
0 LSB
1⁄4 LSB
1⁄2 LSB
3⁄4 LSB
small
5 and 4
fine offset adjustment R − Y component
OFFV[1:0]
3
chrominance bandwidth;
see Figs 19 and 20
CHBW
1
wide
2 to 0
combined luminance/chrominance
bandwidth adjustment; see Figs 19 to 25
LCBW[2:0]
000
smallest chrominance bandwidth or
largest luminance bandwidth
...
... to ...
111
largest chrominance bandwidth or
smallest luminance bandwidth
18.2.2.18 Subaddress 11H
Table 170 Mode/delay control; 11H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL
VALUE
FUNCTION
7
colour on
COLO
0
1
automatic colour killer enabled
colour forced on
6
polarity of RTS1 output signal
RTP1
0
non inverted
1
inverted
5 and 4
fine position of HS (steps in 2/LLC)
HDEL[1:0]
00
01
10
11
0
0
1
2
3
3
polarity of RTS0 output signal
RTP0
non inverted
inverted
−4...
1
2 to 0
luminance delay compensation (steps in YDEL[2:0]
2/LLC)
100
000
011
...0...
...3
2004 Jun 29
155
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.19 Subaddress 12H
Table 171 RT signal control: RTS0 output; 12H[3:0]
The polarity of any signal on RTS0 can be inverted via RTP0[11H[3]].
RTS0 OUTPUT
RTSE03 RTSE02 RTSE01 RTSE00
3-state
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
Constant LOW
CREF (13.5 MHz toggling pulse; see Fig.32)
CREF2 (6.75 MHz toggling pulse; see Fig.32)
HL; horizontal lock indicator (note 1):
HL = 0: unlocked
HL = 1: locked
VL; vertical and horizontal lock:
VL = 0: unlocked
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
VL = 1: locked
DL; vertical and horizontal lock and colour detected:
DL = 0: unlocked
DL = 1: locked
Reserved
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
HREF, horizontal reference signal; indicates 720 pixels valid data on the
expansion port. The positive slope marks the beginning of a new active line.
HREF is also generated during the vertical blanking interval; see Fig.32.
HS:
1
0
0
1
programmable width in LLC8 steps via HSB[7:0] 06H[7:0] and HSS[7:0]
07H[7:0]
fine position adjustment in LLC2 steps via HDEL[1:0] 11H[5:4]; see Fig.32
HQ; HREF gated with VGATE
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
Reserved
V123; vertical sync; see vertical timing diagrams Figs 30 and 31
VGATE; programmable via VSTA[8:0] 17H[0] 15H[7:0], VSTO[8:0] 17H[1]
16H[7:0] and VGPS[17H[2]]
LSBs of the 9-bit ADC’s
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
FID; position programmable via VSTA[8:0] 17H[0] 15H[7:0];
see vertical timing diagrams Figs 30 and 31
Note
1. Function of HL is selectable via HLSEL[13H[3]]:
a) HLSEL = 0: HL is standard horizontal lock indicator.
b) HLSEL = 1: HL is fast horizontal lock indicator (use is not recommended for sources with unstable timebase e.g.
VCRs).
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 172 RT signal control: RTS1 output; 12H[7:4]
The polarity of any signal on RTS1 can be inverted via RTP1[11H[6]].
RTS1 OUTPUT CONTROL
RTSE13 RTSE12 RTSE11 RTSE10
3-state
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
Constant LOW
CREF (13.5 MHz toggling pulse; see Fig.32)
CREF2 (6.75 MHz toggling pulse; see Fig.32)
HL; horizontal lock indicator (note 1):
HL = 0: unlocked
HL = 1: locked
VL; vertical and horizontal lock:
VL = 0: unlocked
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
VL = 1: locked
DL; vertical and horizontal lock and colour detected:
DL = 0: unlocked
DL = 1: locked
Reserved
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
HREF, horizontal reference signal: indicates 720 pixels valid data on the
expansion port. The positive slope marks the beginning of a new active line.
HREF is also generated during the vertical blanking interval; see Fig.32.
HS:
1
0
0
1
programmable width in LLC8 steps via HSB[7:0] 06H[7:0] and HSS[7:0]
07H[7:0]
fine position adjustment in LLC2 steps via HDEL[1:0] 11H[5:4]; see Fig.32
HQ; HREF gated with VGATE
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
Reserved
V123; vertical sync; see vertical timing diagrams Figs 30 and 31
VGATE; programmable via VSTA[8:0] 17H[0] 15H[7:0], VSTO[8:0] 17H[1]
16H[7:0] and VGPS[17H[2]]
Reserved
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
FID; position programmable via VSTA[8:0] 17H[0] 15H[7:0];
see vertical timing diagrams Figs 30 and 31
Note
1. Function of HL is selectable via HLSEL[13H[3]]:
a) HLSEL = 0: HL is standard horizontal lock indicator.
b) HLSEL = 1: HL is fast horizontal lock indicator (use is not recommended for sources with unstable timebase e.g.
VCRs).
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.20 Subaddress 13H
Table 173 RT/X port output control; 13H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
RTCO output enable
RTCE
0
1
0
1
3-state
enabled
6
X port XRH output
selection
XRHS
HREF; see Fig.32
HS:
programmable width in LLC8 steps via HSB[7:0] 06H[7:0]
and HSS[7:0] 07H[7:0]
fine position adjustment in LLC2 steps via HDEL[1:0]
11H[5:4]; see Fig.32
5 and 4 X port XRV output
selection
XRVS[1:0]
00
01
10
11
0
V123; see Figs 30 and 31
ITU 656 related field ID; see Figs 30 and 31
inverted V123
inverted ITU 656 related field ID
copy of inverted HLCK status bit (default)
fast horizontal lock indicator (for special applications only)
ITU 656
3
horizontal lock indicator
selection
HLSEL
1
2 to 0 XPD7 to XPD0 (port
output format selection);
see Section 10.4
OFTS[2:0]
000
001
ITU 656 like format with modified field blanking according
to VGATE position (programmable via VSTA[8:0] 17H[0]
15H[7:0], VSTO[8:0] 17H[1] 16H[7:0] and VGPS[17H[2]])
010
011
100
Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 8-bit format (no SAV/EAV codes inserted)
reserved
multiplexed AD2/AD1 bypass (bits 8 to 1) dependent on
mode settings; if both ADCs are selected AD2 is output at
CREF = 1 and AD1 is output at CREF = 0
101
multiplexed AD2/AD1 bypass (bits 7 to 0) dependent on
mode settings; if both ADCs are selected AD2 is output at
CREF = 1 and AD1 is output at CREF = 0
110
111
reserved
multiplexed ADC MSB/LSB bypass dependent on mode
settings; only one ADC should be selected at a time;
ADx8 to ADx1 are outputs at CREF = 1 and ADx7 to ADx0
are outputs at CREF = 0
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.21 Subaddress 14H
Table 174 Analog/ADC/compatibility control; 14H[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
compatibility bit for
SAA7199
CM99
0
1
off (default)
on (to be set only if SAA7199 is used for re-encoding in
conjunction with RTCO active)
6
update time interval for
AGC value
UPTCV
0
1
horizontal update (once per line)
vertical update (once per field)
AOUT connected to internal test point 1
AOUT connected to input AD1
AOUT connected to input AD2
AOUT connected to internal test point 2
pin P4 (XTOUTd) 3-stated
5 and 4 analog test select
AOSL[1:0]
00
01
10
11
0
3
2
XTOUTd output enable
XTOUTE
OLDSB
1
pin P4 (XTOUTd) enabled
decoder status byte
0
standard
selection; see Table 180
1
backward compatibility to SAA7112
application dependent
1 and 0 ADC sample clock
phase delay
APCK[1:0]
00
01
10
11
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18.2.2.22 Subaddress 15H
Table 175 VGATE start; FID polarity change; 17H[0] and 15H[7:0]
Start of VGATE pulse (LOW-to-HIGH transition) and polarity change of FID pulse, VGPS = 0; see Figs 30 and 31.
MSB
17H[0]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
FRAME LINE
COUNTING
DECIMAL
VALUE
FIELD
VSTA8
VSTA7
VSTA6
VSTA5
VSTA4
VSTA3
VSTA2
VSTA1 VSTA0
50 Hz
1st
2nd
1st
1
312
0...
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
314
2
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
2nd
1st
315
312
625
4
...310
262
2nd
1st
60 Hz
2nd
1st
267
5
0...
2nd
1st
268
265
3
...260
2nd
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18.2.2.23 Subaddress 16H
Table 176 VGATE stop; 17H[1] and 16H[7:0]
Stop of VGATE pulse (HIGH-to-LOW transition), VGPS = 0; see Figs 30 and 31.
MSB
17H[1]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
FRAME LINE
COUNTING
DECIMAL
VALUE
FIELD
VSTO8
VSTO7 VSTO6 VSTO5 VSTO4 VSTO3 VSTO2 VSTO1 VSTO0
50 Hz
1st
2nd
1st
1
312
0...
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
314
2
0
1
1
0
1
2nd
1st
315
312
625
4
...310
262
2nd
1st
60 Hz
2nd
1st
267
5
0...
2nd
1st
268
265
3
...260
2nd
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.24 Subaddress 17H
Table 177 Miscellaneous/VGATE MSBs; 17H[7:6] and 17H[2:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
LLC output enable
LLCE
LLC2E
VGPS
0
1
0
1
0
1
enable
3-state
enable
3-state
6
2
LLC2 output enable
alternative VGATE
position
VGATE position according to Tables 175 and 176
VGATE occurs one line earlier during field 2
see Table 176
1
0
MSB VGATE stop
MSB VGATE start
VSTO8
VSTA8
see Table 175
18.2.2.25 Subaddress 18H
Table 178 Raw data gain control; RAWG[7:0] 18H[7:0]; see Fig.27
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
GAIN
RAWG7 RAWG6 RAWG5 RAWG4 RAWG3 RAWG2 RAWG1 RAWG0
255 (double amplitude)
128 (nominal level)
0 (off)
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
18.2.2.26 Subaddress 19H
Table 179 Raw data offset control; RAWO[7:0] 19H[7:0]; see Fig.27
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
RAWO7 RAWO6 RAWO5 RAWO4 RAWO3 RAWO2 RAWO1 RAWO0
OFFSET
−128 LSB
0 LSB
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
+128 LSB
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.2.27 Subaddress 1FH
Table 180 Status byte video decoder; 1FH[7:0]; read only register
I2C-BUS
CONTROL
BIT
OLDSB
14H[2]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
VALUE
FUNCTION
7
status bit for interlace detection
INTL
HLVLN
HLCK
−
0
1
−
−
−
−
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
non-interlaced
interlaced
both loops locked
unlocked
locked
6
status bit for horizontal and vertical loop
status bit for locked horizontal frequency
identification bit for detected field frequency
unlocked
50 Hz
5
4
3
2
1
FIDT
60 Hz
gain value for active luminance channel is
limited; maximum (top)
GLIMT
GLIMB
WIPA
not active
active
gain value for active luminance channel is
limited; minimum (bottom)
not active
active
white peak loop is activated
not active
active
copy protected source detected according to
Macrovision version up to 7.01
COPRO
SLTCA
RDCAP
CODE
not active
active
slow time constant active in WIPA mode
not active
active
0
ready for capture (all internal loops locked)
not active
active
colour signal in accordance with selected
standard has been detected
not active
active
18.2.3 PROGRAMMING REGISTER AUDIO CLOCK GENERATION
See equations in Section 9.6 and examples in Tables 35 and 36.
18.2.3.1 Subaddresses 30H to 32H
Table 181 Audio master clock (AMCLK) cycles per field
SUBADDRESS
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
30H
31H
32H
ACPF7
ACPF15
−
ACPF6
ACPF14
−
ACPF5
ACPF13
−
ACPF4
ACPF12
−
ACPF3
ACPF11
−
ACPF2
ACPF10
−
ACPF1
ACPF9
ACPF17
ACPF0
ACPF8
ACPF16
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.3.2 Subaddresses 34H to 36H
Table 182 Audio master clock (AMCLK) nominal increment
SUBADDRESS
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
34H
35H
36H
ACNI7
ACNI15
−
ACNI
ACNI14
−
ACNI5
ACNI13
ACNI21
ACNI4
ACNI12
ACNI20
ACNI3
ACNI11
ACNI19
ACNI2
ACNI10
ACNI18
ACNI1
ACNI9
ACNI17
ACNI0
ACNI8
ACNI16
18.2.3.3 Subaddress 38H
Table 183 Clock ratio audio master clock (AMXCLK) to serial bit clock (ASCLK)
SUBADDRESS
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
SDIV4 SDIV3
38H
−
−
SDIV5
SDIV2
SDIV1
SDIV0
18.2.3.4 Subaddress 39H
Table 184 Clock ratio serial bit clock (ASCLK) to channel select clock (ALRCLK)
SUBADDRESS
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
LRDIV4 LRDIV3
39H
−
−
LRDIV5
LRDIV2
LRDIV1
LRDIV0
18.2.3.5 Subaddress 3AH
Table 185 Audio clock control; 3AH[3:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
3
audio PLL modes
APLL
0
1
0
1
PLL active, AMCLK is field-locked
PLL open, AMCLK is free-running
2
audio master clock
vertical reference
AMVR
vertical reference pulse is taken from internal decoder
vertical reference is taken from XRV input
(expansion port)
1
0
ALRCLK phase
ASCLK phase
LRPH
SCPH
0
1
0
1
ALRCLK edges triggered by falling edges of ASCLK
ALRCLK edges triggered by rising edges of ASCLK
ASCLK edges triggered by falling edges of AMCLK
ASCLK edges triggered by rising edges of AMCLK
18.2.4 PROGRAMMING REGISTER VBI DATA SLICER
18.2.4.1 Subaddress 40H
Table 186 Slicer control 1; 40H[6:4]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
Hamming check
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
6
HAM_N
0
Hamming check for 2 bytes after framing code,
dependent on data type (default)
1
0
1
0
1
no Hamming check
5
4
framing code error
amplitude searching
FCE
one framing code error allowed
no framing code errors allowed
amplitude searching active (default)
amplitude searching stopped
HUNT_N
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.4.2 Subaddresses 41H to 57H
Table 187 Line control register; LCR2 to LCR24 (41H to 57H); see Sections 9.2 and 9.4
BITS 7 TO 4
BITS 3 TO 0
(41H TO 57H)
(41H TO 57H)
NAME
DESCRIPTION
FRAMING CODE
DT[3:0] 62H[3:0] DT[3:0] 62H[3:0]
(FIELD 1)
(FIELD 2)
WST625
CC625
VPS
teletext EuroWST, CCST
European Closed Caption
video programming service
wide screen signalling bits
US teletext (WST)
27H
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
001
9951H
WSS
1E3C1FH
WST525
CC525
Test line
Intercast
27H
US Closed Caption (line 21)
video component signal, VBI region
raw data
001
−
−
General text teletext
programmable
VITC625
VITC525
Reserved
NABTS
Japtext
JFS
VITC/EBU time codes (Europe)
programmable
VITC/SMPTE time codes (USA)
reserved
programmable
−
US NABTS
−
programmable (A7H)
programmable
−
MOJI (Japanese)
Japanese format switch (L20/22)
Active video video component signal, active video
region (default)
18.2.4.3 Subaddress 58H
Table 188 Programmable framing code; slicer set 58H[7:0]; see Tables 28 and 187
FRAMING CODE FOR PROGRAMMABLE DATA TYPES
Default value
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
FC[7:0] = 40H
18.2.4.4 Subaddress 59H
Table 189 Horizontal offset for slicer; slicer set 59H and 5BH
HORIZONTAL OFFSET
Recommended value
CONTROL BITS 5BH[2:0]
CONTROL BITS 59H[7:0]
HOFF[10:8] = 3H
HOFF[7:0] = 47H
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.4.5 Subaddress 5AH
Table 190 Vertical offset for slicer; slicer set 5AH and 5BH
CONTROL BIT 5BH[4]
CONTROL BITS 5AH[7:0]
VOFF[7:0]
VERTICAL OFFSET
Minimum value 0
VOFF8
0
1
0
0
00H
38H
03H
06H
Maximum value 312
Value for 50 Hz 625 lines input
Value for 60 Hz 525 lines input
18.2.4.6 Subaddress 5BH
Table 191 Field offset, and MSBs for horizontal and vertical offsets; slicer set 5BH[7:6]
See Sections 18.2.4.4 and 18.2.4.5 for HOFF[10:8] 5BH[2:0] and VOFF8[5BH[4]].
BIT
DESCRIPTION SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
field offset
FOFF
0
no modification of internal field indicator (default for 50 Hz
625 lines input sources)
1
0
1
invert field indicator (default for 60 Hz 525 lines input sources)
let data unchanged (default)
6
recode
RECODE
convert 00H and FFH data bytes into 03H and FCH
18.2.4.7 Subaddress 5DH
Table 192 Header and data identification (DID; ITU 656) code control; slicer set 5DH[7:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
7
field ID and V-blank
selection for text output
(F and V reference
selection)
FVREF
0
1
F and V output of slicer is LCR table dependent
F and V output is taken from decoder real time
signals EVEN_ITU and VBLNK_ITU
5 to 0
default; DID[5:0] = 00H
DID[5:0]
00 0000 ANC header framing; see Fig.39 and Table 34
11 1110 DID[5:0] = 3EH SAV/EAV framing, with FVREF = 1
11 1111 DID[5:0] = 3FH SAV/EAV framing, with FVREF = 0
special cases of DID
programming
18.2.4.8 Subaddress 5EH
Table 193 Sliced data identification (SDID) code; slicer set 5EH[5:0]
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SDID codes
SYMBOL VALUE
SDID[5:0] 00H
FUNCTION
5 to 0
default
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166
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.4.9 Subaddress 60H
Table 194 Slicer status byte 0; 60H[6:2]; read only register
BIT
DESCRIPTION
SYMBOL VALUE
FUNCTION
6
framing code valid
FC8V
FC7V
VPSV
PPV
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
no framing code (0 error) in the last frame detected
framing code with 0 error detected
no framing code (1 error) in the last frame detected
framing code with 1 error detected
no VPS in the last frame
5
4
3
2
framing code valid
VPS valid
VPS detected
PALplus valid
no PALplus in the last frame
PALplus detected
Closed Caption valid
CCV
no Closed Caption in the last frame
Closed Caption detected
18.2.4.10 Subaddresses 61H and 62H
Table 195 Slicer status byte 1; 61H[5:0] and slicer status byte 2; 62H[7:0]; read only registers
SUBADDRESS
BIT
5
SYMBOL
F21_N
DESCRIPTION
field ID as seen by the VBI slicer; for field 1: bit 5 = 0
line number
61H
4 to 0
7 to 4
3 to 0
LN[8:4]
LN[3:0]
DT[3:0]
62H
data type; according to Table 28
18.2.5 PROGRAMMING REGISTER INTERFACES AND SCALER PART
18.2.5.1 Subaddress 80H
Table 196 Global control 1; global set 80H[6:4]
SWRST moved to subaddress 88H[5]; note 1.
CONTROL BITS 6 TO 4
TASK ENABLE CONTROL
SMOD
TEB
TEA
Task of register set A is disabled
Task of register set A is enabled
Task of register set B is disabled
Task of register set B is enabled
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
0
0
1
X
X
X
1
The scaler window defines the F and V timing of the scaler
output
X
VBI data slicer defines the F and V timing of the scaler output
1
X
X
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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167
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 197 Global control 1; global set 80H[3:0]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3 TO 0
I PORT AND SCALER BACK-END CLOCK SELECTION
ICKS3
ICKS2
ICKS1
ICKS0
ICLK output and back-end clock is line-locked clock LLC from decoder
ICLK output and back-end clock is XCLK from X port
ICLK output is LLC and back-end clock is LLC2 clock
Back-end clock is the ICLK input
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
X(2)
0
0
0
1
1
0
X
1
1
IDQ pin carries the data qualifier
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
IDQ pin carries a gated back-end clock (IDQ AND CLK)
IDQ generation only for valid data
1
X
IDQ qualifies valid data inside the scaling region and all data outside the
scaling region
1
X
Notes
1. Although the ICLKO I/O is independent of ICKS2 and ICKS3, this selection can only be used if ICKS2 = 1.
2. X = don’t care.
18.2.5.2 Subaddresses 83H to 87H
Table 198 X port I/O enable and output clock phase control; global set 83H[5:4]
CONTROL BITS 5 AND 4
OUTPUT CLOCK PHASE CONTROL
XPCK1
XPCK0
XCLK default output phase, recommended value
XCLK output inverted
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
XCLK phase shifted by about 3 ns
XCLK output inverted and shifted by about 3 ns
Table 199 X port I/O enable and output clock phase control; global set 83H[2:0]
CONTROL BITS 2 TO 0
X PORT I/O ENABLE
XRQT
XPE1
XPE0
X port output is disabled by software
X(1)
X
0
0
1
1
X
X
0
1
0
1
X
X
X port output is enabled by software
X port output is enabled by pin XTRI at logic 0
X port output is enabled by pin XTRI at logic 1
XRDY output signal is A/B task flag from event handler (A = 1)
X
X
0
XRDY output signal is ready signal from scaler path (XRDY = 1 means
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE is ready to receive data)
1
Note
1. X = don’t care
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 200 I port signal definitions; global set 84H[7:6] and 86H[5]
CONTROL BITS
I PORT SIGNAL DEFINITIONS
86H[5]
84H[7:6]
IDG02 IDG01 IDG00
IGP0 is output field ID, as defined by OFIDC[90H[6]]
IGP0 is A/B task flag, as defined by CONLH[90H[7]]
IGP0 is sliced data flag, framing the sliced VBI data at the I port
IGP0 is set to logic 0 (default polarity)
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
IGP0 is the output FIFO almost filled flag
IGP0 is the output FIFO overflow flag
IGP0 is the output FIFO almost full flag, level to be programmed in subaddress 86H
IGP0 is the output FIFO almost empty flag, level to be programmed in subaddress 86H
Table 201 I port signal definitions; global set 84H[5:4] and 86H[4]
CONTROL BITS
I PORT SIGNAL DEFINITIONS
86H[4]
84H[5:4]
IDG12 IDG11 IDG10
IGP1 is output field ID, as defined by OFIDC[90H[6]]
IGP1 is A/B task flag, as defined by CONLH[90H[7]]
IGP1 is sliced data flag, framing the sliced VBI data at the I port
IGP1 is set to logic 0 (default polarity)
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
IGP1 is the output FIFO almost filled flag
IGP1 is the output FIFO overflow flag
IGP1 is the output FIFO almost full flag, level to be programmed in subaddress 86H
IGP1 is the output FIFO almost empty flag, level to be programmed in subaddress 86H
Table 202 I port output signal definitions; global set 84H[3:0]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3 TO 0
I PORT OUTPUT SIGNAL DEFINITIONS
IDV1
IDV0
IDH1
IDH0
IGPH is a H gate signal, framing the scaler output
X
X
X
0
0
0
1
IGPH is an extended H gate (framing H gate during scaler output and scaler input
H reference outside the scaler window)
X
IGPH is a horizontal trigger pulse, on active going edge of H gate
IGPH is a horizontal trigger pulse, on active going edge of extended H gate
IGPV is a V gate signal, framing scaled output lines
X
X
0
0
1
1
X
X
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
IGPV is the V reference signal from scaler input
IGPV is a vertical trigger pulse, derived from V gate
IGPV is a vertical trigger pulse derived from input V reference
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 203 X port signal definitions text slicer; global set 85H[7:5]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 5
X PORT SIGNAL DEFINITIONS TEXT SLICER
ISWP1
ISWP0
ILLV
Video data limited to range 1 to 254
X
X
0
X
X
0
0
1
Video data limited to range 8 to 247
Dword byte swap, influences serial output timing
X
D0 D1 D2 D3
D1 D0 D3 D2
D2 D3 D0 D1
D3 D2 D1 D0
FF 00 00 SAV CB0 Y0 CR0 Y1
00 FF SAV 00 Y0 CB0 Y1 CR0
00 SAV FF 00 CR0 Y1 CB0 Y0
SAV 00 00 FF Y1 CR0 Y0 CB0
0
1
1
1
0
1
X
X
X
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 204 I port reference signal polarities; global set 85H[4:0]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 4 TO 0
I PORT REFERENCE SIGNAL POLARITIES
IG0P
IG1P
IRVP
X
IRHP
IDQP
0
IDQ at default polarity (1 = active)
IDQ is inverted
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
0
X
1
IGPH at default polarity (1 = active)
IGPH is inverted
X
X
X
1
X
IGPV at default polarity (1 = active)
IGPV is inverted
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
1
X
IGP1 at default polarity
IGP1 is inverted
X
X
1
X
X
IGP0 at default polarity
IGP0 is inverted
X
X
X
X
1
X
X
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 205 I port FIFO flag control and arbitration; global set 86H[7:4]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 4
FUNCTION
VITX1
VITX0
IDG02
IDG12
See subaddress 84H: IDG11 and IDG10
See subaddress 84H: IDG01 and IDG00
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
1
0
1
X
X
I port signal definitions
I port data output inhibited
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Only video data are transferred
Only text data are transferred (no EAV, SAV will occur)
Text and video data are transferred, text has priority
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 206 I port FIFO flag control and arbitration; global set 86H[3:0]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3 TO 0
I PORT FIFO FLAG CONTROL AND ARBITRATION
FFL1
FFL0
FEL1
FEL0
FAE FIFO flag almost empty level
<16 Dwords
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
<8 Dwords
<4 Dwords
0 Dwords
FAF FIFO flag almost full level
≥16 Dwords
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
≥24 Dwords
≥28 Dwords
32 Dwords
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 207 I port I/O enable, output clock and gated clock phase control; global set 87H[7:4]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 4
OUTPUT CLOCK AND GATED CLOCK PHASE CONTROL
IPCK3(2) IPCK2(2)
IPCK1
IPCK0
ICLK default output phase
ICLK phase shifted by 1⁄2 clock cycle
X
X
X
X
0
0
0
1
recommended for ICKS1 = 1
and ICKS0 = 0 (subaddress 80H)
ICLK phase shifted by about 3 ns
ICLK phase shifted by 1⁄2 clock cycle + approximately
3 ns alternatively to setting ‘01’
X
X
X
X
1
1
0
1
IDQ = gated clock default output phase
IDQ = gated clock phase shifted by 1⁄2 clock cycle
0
0
0
1
X
X
X
X
recommended
for gated clock output
IDQ = gated clock phase shifted by approximately 3 ns
IDQ = gated clock phase shifted by 1⁄2 clock cycle + approximately
1
1
0
1
X
X
X
X
3 ns
alternatively to setting ‘01’
Notes
1. X = don’t care.
2. IPCK3 and IPCK2 only affects the gated clock (subaddress 80H, bit ICKS2 = 1).
Table 208 I port I/O enable, output clock and gated clock phase control; global set 87H[1:0]
CONTROL BITS 1 AND 0
I PORT I/O ENABLE
IPE1
IPE0
I port output is disabled by software
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
I port output is enabled by software
I port output is enabled by pin ITRI at logic 0
I port output is enabled by pin ITRI at logic 1
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.5.3 Subaddress 88H
Table 209 Power save control; global set 88H[7:4]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 4
POWER SAVE CONTROL
CH4EN
CH2EN SWRST(2) DPROG
DPROG = 0 after reset
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
1
DPROG = 1 can be used to assign that the device has been
programmed; this bit can be monitored in the scalers status byte,
bit PRDON; if DPROG was set to logic 1 and PRDON status bit
shows a logic 0, a power-up or start-up fail has occurred
Scaler path is reset to its idle state, software reset
Scaler is switched back to operation
AD1x analog channel is in Power-down mode
AD1x analog channel is active
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
0
0
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
1
AD2x analog channel is in Power-down mode
AD2x analog channel is active
X
X
1
Notes
1. X = don’t care.
2. Bit SWRST is now located here.
Table 210 Power save control; global set 88H[3] and 88H[1:0]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3, 1 AND 0
POWER SAVE CONTROL
SLM3
SLM1
SLM0
Decoder and VBI slicer are in operational mode
X
X
X
X
0
1
Decoder and VBI slicer are in Power-down mode; scaler only operates, if scaler
input and ICLK source is the X port (refer to subaddresses 80H and 91H/C1H)
Scaler is in operational mode
X
X
0
0
1
X
X
X
X
Scaler is in Power-down mode; scaler in power-down stops I port output
Audio clock generation active
X
X
Audio clock generation in power-down and output disabled
1
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.5.4 Subaddress 8FH
Table 211 Status information scaler part; 8FH[7:0]; read only register
I2C-BUS
STATUS BIT
BIT
FUNCTION(1)
7
XTRI
status on input pin XTRI, if not used for 3-state control, usable as hardware flag for
software use
6
ITRI
status on input pin ITRI, if not used for 3-state control, usable as hardware flag for
software use
5
4
3
2
FFIL
status of the internal ‘FIFO almost filled’ flag
FFOV
status of the internal ‘FIFO overflow’ flag
PRDON
ERROF
copy of bit DPROG, can be used to detect power-up and start-up fails
error flag of scalers output formatter, normally set, if the output processing needs to be
interrupted, due to input/output data rate conflicts, e.g. if output data rate is much too low
and all internal FIFO capacity used
1
0
FIDSCI
status of the field sequence ID at the scalers input
FIDSCO
status of the field sequence ID at the scalers output, scaler processing dependent
Note
1. Status information is unsynchronized and shows the actual status at the time of I2C-bus read.
18.2.5.5 Subaddresses 90H and C0H
Table 212 Task handing control; register set A [90H[7:6]] and B [C0H[7:6]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 AND 6
EVENT HANDLER CONTROL
Output field ID is field ID from scaler input
CONLH
OFIDC
X
X
0
1
Output field ID is task status flag, which changes every time an selected task
is activated (not synchronized to input field ID)
Scaler SAV/EAV byte bit 7 and task flag = 1, default
0
1
X
X
Scaler SAV/EAV byte bit 7 and task flag = 0
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 213 Task handling control; register set A [90H[5:3]] and B [C0H[5:3]]
CONTROL BITS 5 TO 3
EVENT HANDLER CONTROL
FSKP2
FSKP1
FSKP0
Active task is carried out directly
0
0
0
0
0
1
1 field is skipped before active task is carried out
... fields are skipped before active task is carried out
6 fields are skipped before active task is carried out
7 fields are skipped before active task is carried out
...
1
...
1
...
0
1
1
1
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 214 Task handling control; register set A [90H[2:0]] and B [C0H[2:0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 2 TO 0
EVENT HANDLER CONTROL
RPTSK
STRC1
STRC0
Event handler triggers immediately after finishing a task
Event handler triggers with next V-sync
X
X
X
X
0
0
0
1
1
X
X
0
1
0
1
X
X
Event handler triggers with field ID = 0
Event handler triggers with field ID = 1
If active task is finished, handling is taken over by the next task
Active task is repeated once, before handling is taken over by the next task
1
Note
1. X = don’t care.
18.2.5.6 Subaddresses 91H to 93H
Table 215 X port formats and configuration; register set A [91H[7:3]] and B [C1H[7:3]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 3
HLDFV SCSRC1 SCSRC0 SCRQE
SCALER INPUT FORMAT AND CONFIGURATION SOURCE
SELECTION
CONLV
Only if XRQT[83H[2]] = 1: scaler input source reacts on
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE request
X
X
X
X
0
Scaler input source is a continuous data stream, which cannot
be interrupted (must be logic 1 if SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
decoder part is source of scaler or XRQT[83H[2]] = 0)
X
X
X
X
X
1
Scaler input source is data from decoder, data type is
provided according to Table 28
X
0
0
X
Scaler input source is Y-CB-CR data from X port
X
X
X
X
0
1
1
0
X
X
Scaler input source is raw digital CVBS from selected analog
channel, for backward compatibility only, further use is not
recommended
Scaler input source is raw digital CVBS (or 16-bit Y + CB-CR, if
no 16-bit output are active) from X port
X
X
X
0
X
0
1
X
X
X
X
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
SAV/EAV code bits 6 and 5 (F and V) may change between
SAV and EAV
SAV/EAV code bits 6 and 5 (F and V) are synchronized to
scalers output line start
1
SAV/EAV code bit 5 (V) and V gate on pin IGPV as generated
by the internal processing; see Fig.45
X
X
SAV/EAV code bit 5 (V) and V gate are inverted
1
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 216 X port formats and configuration; register set A [91H[2:0]] and B [C1H[2:0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 2 TO 0
SCALER INPUT FORMAT AND CONFIGURATION FORMAT
CONTROL
FSC2(2)
FSC1(2)
FSC0
Input is Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 like sampling scheme
Input is Y-CB-CR 4 : 1 : 1 like sampling scheme
Chroma is provided every line, default
Chroma is provided every 2nd line
X
X
0
0
1
1
X
X
0
1
0
1
0
1
X
X
X
X
Chroma is provided every 3rd line
Chroma is provided every 4th line
Notes
1. X = don’t care.
2. FSC2 and FSC1 only to be used, if X port input source don’t provide chroma information for every input line. X port
input stream must contain dummy chroma bytes.
Table 217 X port input reference signal definitions; register set A [92H[7:4]] and B [C2H[7:4]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 4
X PORT INPUT REFERENCE SIGNAL DEFINITIONS
XFDV
XFDH
XDV1
XDV0
Rising edge of XRV input and decoder V123 is vertical reference
Falling edge of XRV input and decoder V123 is vertical reference
XRV is a V-sync or V gate signal
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
1
0
1
X
X
XRV is a frame sync, V pulses are generated internally on both edges of
FS input
X port field ID is state of XRH at reference edge on XRV (defined by
XFDV)
X
0
X
X
Field ID (decoder and X port field ID) is inverted
X
0
1
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Reference edge for field detection is falling edge of XRV
Reference edge for field detection is rising edge of XRV
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 218 X port input reference signal definitions; register set A [92H[3:0]] and B [C2H[3:0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3 TO 0
X PORT INPUT REFERENCE SIGNAL DEFINITIONS
XCODE
XDH
XDQ
XCKS
XCLK input clock and XDQ input qualifier are needed
Data rate is defined by XCLK only, no XDQ signal used
Data are qualified at XDQ input at logic 1
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
0
0
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
Data are qualified at XDQ input at logic 0
1
Rising edge of XRH input is horizontal reference
Falling edge of XRH input is horizontal reference
Reference signals are taken from XRH and XRV
Reference signals are decoded from EAV and SAV
X
X
X
X
1
X
X
1
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 219 I port output format and configuration; register set A [93H[7:5]] and B [C3H[7:5]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 5
I PORT OUTPUT FORMATS AND CONFIGURATION
ICODE
I8_16
FYSK
All lines will be output
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
1
0
1
Skip the number of leading Yonly lines, as defined by FOI1 and FOI0
Dwords are transferred byte wise, see subaddress 85H bits ISWP1 and ISWP0
X
X
Dwords are transferred 16-bit word wise via IPD and HPD, see subaddress 85H bits
ISWP1 and ISWP0
No ITU 656 like SAV/EAV codes are available
0
1
X
X
X
X
ITU 656 like SAV/EAV codes are inserted in the output data stream, framed by a
qualifier
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 220 I port output format and configuration; register set A [93H[4:0]] and B [C3H[4:0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 4 TO 0
I PORT OUTPUT FORMATS AND CONFIGURATION
FOI1
FOI0
FSI2
FSI1
FSI0
4 : 2 : 2 Dword formatting
4 : 1 : 1 Dword formatting
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
4 : 2 : 0, only every 2nd line Y + CB-CR output, in between
Yonly output
4 : 1 : 0, only every 4th line Y + CB-CR output, in between
Yonly output
X
X
0
1
1
Yonly
X
X
X
X
0
0
1
1
X
X
X
X
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
1
Not defined
Not defined
1
1
0
Not defined
1
1
1
No leading Yonly line, before 1st Y + CB-CR line is output
1 leading Y only line, before 1st Y + CB-CR line is output
2 leading Y only lines, before 1st Y + CB-CR line is output
3 leading Y only lines, before 1st Y + CB-CR line is output
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Note
1. X = don’t care.
18.2.5.7 Subaddresses 94H to 9BH
Table 221 Horizontal input window start; register set A [94H[7:0]; 95H[3:0]] and B [C4H[7:0]; C5H[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
HORIZONTAL INPUT
ACQUISITION WINDOW
DEFINITION OFFSET IN
X (HORIZONTAL) DIRECTION(1)
A [95H[3:0]]
B [C5H[3:0]]
A [94H[7:0]]
B [C4H[7:0]]
XO11 XO10 XO9 XO8 XO7 XO6 XO5 XO4 XO3 XO2 XO1 XO0
A minimum of 2 should be kept, due
to a line counting mismatch
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
Odd offsets are changing the
CB-CR sequence in the output
stream to CR-CB sequence
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Maximum possible pixel
offset = 4095
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Note
1. Reference for counting are luminance samples.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 222 Horizontal input window length; register set A [96H[7:0]; 97H[3:0]] and B [C6H[7:0]; C7H[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
A [96H[7:0]]
HORIZONTAL INPUT
ACQUISITION WINDOW
DEFINITION INPUT WINDOW
LENGTH IN X (HORIZONTAL)
DIRECTION(1)
A [97H[3:0]]
B [C7H[3:0]]
B [C6H[7:0]]
XS11 XS10 XS9 XS8 XS7 XS6 XS5 XS4 XS3 XS2 XS1 XS0
No output
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Odd lengths are allowed, but will be
rounded up to even lengths
Maximum possible number of input
pixels = 4095
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Note
1. Reference for counting are luminance samples.
Table 223 Vertical input window start; register set A [98H[7:0]; 99H[3:0]] and B [C8H[7:0]; C9H[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
VERTICAL INPUT ACQUISITION
WINDOW DEFINITION OFFSET IN
Y (VERTICAL) DIRECTION(1)
A [99H[3:0]]
B [C9H[3:0]]
A [98H[7:0]]
B [C8H[7:0]]
YO11 YO10 YO9 YO8 YO7 YO6 YO5 YO4 YO3 YO2 YO1 YO0
Line offset = 0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
Line offset = 1
Maximum line offset = 4095
Note
1. For trigger condition: STRC[1:0] 90H[1:0] = 00; YO + YS > (number of input lines per field − 2), will result in field
dropping. Other trigger conditions: YO > (number of input lines per field − 2), will result in field dropping.
Table 224 Vertical input window length; register set A [9AH[7:0]; 9BH[3:0]] and B [CAH[7:0]; CBH[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
VERTICAL INPUT ACQUISITION
WINDOW DEFINITION INPUT
WINDOW LENGTH IN
Y (VERTICAL) DIRECTION(1)
A [9BH[3:0]]
B [CBH[3:0]]
A [9AH[7:0]]
B [CAH[7:0]]
YS11 YS10 YS9 YS8 YS7 YS6 YS5 YS4 YS3 YS2 YS1 YS0
No input lines
1 input line
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
Maximum possible number of input
lines = 4095
Note
1. For trigger condition: STRC[1:0] 90H[1:0] = 00; YO + YS > (number of input lines per field − 2), will result in field
dropping. Other trigger conditions: YS > (number of input lines per field − 2), will result in field dropping.
2004 Jun 29
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.5.8 Subaddresses 9CH to 9FH
Table 225 Horizontal output window length; register set A [9CH[7:0]; 9DH[3:0]] and B [CCH[7:0]; CDH[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
A [9CH[7:0]]
HORIZONTAL OUTPUT
ACQUISITION WINDOW
DEFINITION NUMBER OF
DESIRED OUTPUT PIXEL IN
X (HORIZONTAL) DIRECTION(1)
A [9DH[3:0]]
B [CDH[3:0]]
B [CCH[7:0]]
XD11 XD10 XD9 XD8 XD7 XD6 XD5 XD4 XD3 XD2 XD1 XD0
No output
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Odd lengths are allowed, but will be
filled up to even lengths
Maximum possible number of input
pixels = 4095; note 2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Notes
1. Reference for counting are luminance samples.
2. If the desired output length is greater than the number of scaled output pixels, the last scaled pixel is repeated.
Table 226 Vertical output window length; register set A [9EH[7:0]; 9FH[3:0]] and B [CEH[7:0]; CFH[3:0]]
CONTROL BITS
VERTICAL OUTPUT ACQUISITION
WINDOW DEFINITION NUMBER
OF DESIRED OUTPUT LINES IN
Y (VERTICAL) DIRECTION
A [9FH[3:0]]
B [CFH[3:0]]
A [9EH[7:0]]
B [CEH[7:0]]
YD11 YD10 YD9 YD8 YD7 YD6 YD5 YD4 YD3 YD2 YD1 YD0
No output
1 pixel
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
Maximum possible number of output
lines = 4095; note 1
Note
1. If the desired output length is greater than the number of scaled output lines, the processing is cut.
18.2.5.9 Subaddresses A0H to A2H
Table 227 Horizontal prescaling; register set A [A0H[5:0]] and B [D0H[5:0]]
CONTROL BITS 5 TO 0
HORIZONTAL INTEGER PRESCALING RATIO (XPSC)
XPSC5 XPSC4 XPSC3 XPSC2 XPSC1 XPSC0
Not allowed
Downscale = 1
Downscale = 1⁄2
...
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
Downscale = 1⁄63
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 228 Accumulation length; register set A [A1H[5:0]] and B [D1H[5:0]]
CONTROL BITS 5 TO 0
HORIZONTAL PRESCALER ACCUMULATION
SEQUENCE LENGTH (XACL)
XACL5 XACL4 XACL3 XACL2 XACL1 XACL0
Accumulation length = 1
Accumulation length = 2
...
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
...
1
Accumulation length = 64
Table 229 Prescaler DC gain and FIR prefilter control; register set A [A2H[7:4]] and B [D2H[7:4]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 4
FIR PREFILTER CONTROL
PFUV1
PFUV0
PFY1
PFY0
Luminance FIR filter bypassed
H_y(z) = 1⁄4 (1 2 1)
H_y(z) = 1⁄8 (−1 1 1.75 4.5 1.75 1 −1)
H_y(z) = 1⁄8 (1 2 2 2 1)
X
X
X
X
0
0
1
1
X
X
X
X
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
Chrominance FIR filter bypassed
H_uv(z) = 1⁄4 (1 2 1)
H_uv(z) = 1⁄32 (3 8 10 8 3)
H_uv(z) = 1⁄8 (1 2 2 2 1)
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 230 Prescaler DC gain and FIR prefilter control; register set A [A2H[3:0]] and B [D2H[3:0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 3 TO 0
PRESCALER DC GAIN
XC2_1
XDCG2
XDCG1
XDCG0
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄2
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄4
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄8
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄16
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄32
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄64
Prescaler output is renormalized by gain factor = 1⁄128
Weighting of all accumulated samples is factor 1;
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
X
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
X
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
X
e.g. XACL = 4
sequence 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1
Weighting of samples inside sequence is factor 2;
1
X
X
X
e.g. XACL = 4
sequence 1 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 1
Note
1. X = don’t care.
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181
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
18.2.5.10 Subaddresses A4H to A6H
Table 231 Luminance brightness control; register set A [A4H[7:0]] and B [D4H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
LUMINANCE
BRIGHTNESS CONTROL
BRIG7
BRIG6
BRIG5
BRIG4
BRIG3
BRIG2
BRIG1
BRIG0
Value = 0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
Nominal value = 128
Value = 255
Table 232 Luminance contrast control; register set A [A5H[7:0]] and B [D5H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
CONT7 CONT6 CONT5 CONT4 CONT3 CONT2 CONT1 CONT0
LUMINANCE CONTRAST
CONTROL
Gain = 0
Gain = 1⁄64
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
Nominal gain = 64
Gain = 127
⁄
64
Table 233 Chrominance saturation control; register set A [A6H[7:0]] and B [D6H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
CHROMINANCE
SATURATION CONTROL
SATN7
SATN6
SATN5
SATN4
SATN3
SATN2
SATN1
SATN0
Gain = 0
Gain = 1⁄64
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
Nominal gain = 64
Gain = 127
⁄
64
18.2.5.11 Subaddresses A8H to AEH
Table 234 Horizontal luminance scaling increment; register set A [A8H[7:0]; A9H[7:0]] and B [D8H[7:0]; D9H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS
HORIZONTAL LUMINANCE SCALING
INCREMENT
A [A9H[7:4]]
B [D9H[7:4]]
A [A9H[3:0]]
B [D9H[3:0]]
A [A8H[7:4]]
B [D8H[7:4]]
A [A8H[3:0]]
B [D8H[3:0]]
XSCY[15:12](1)
XSCY[11:8]
XSCY[7:4]
XSCY[3:0]
Scale = 1024⁄1 (theoretical) zoom
0000
0000
0000
0001
0000
0010
0000
0110
Scale = 1024
data path structure
Scale = 1024
1023 zoom
Scale = 1, equals 1024
⁄294, lower limit defined by
⁄
0000
0000
0000
0001
0011
0100
0100
1111
1111
0000
0000
1111
1111
0000
0001
1111
Scale = 1024
Scale = 1024
⁄
1025 downscale
8191 downscale
⁄
Note
1. Bits XSCY[15:13] are reserved and are set to logic 0.
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 235 Horizontal luminance phase offset; register set A [AAH[7:0]] and B [DAH[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
HORIZONTAL LUMINANCE PHASE
OFFSET
XPHY7 XPHY6 XPHY5 XPHY4 XPHY3 XPHY2 XPHY1 XPHY0
Offset = 0
Offset = 1⁄32 pixel
Offset = 32
Offset = 255
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
⁄
32 = 1 pixel
32 pixel
⁄
Table 236 Horizontal chrominance scaling increment; register set A [ACH[7:0]; ADH[7:0]] and B [DCH[7:0]; DDH[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS
HORIZONTAL CHROMINANCE
SCALING INCREMENT
A [ADH[7:4]]
B [DDH[7:4]]
A [ADH[3:0]]
B [DDH[3:0]]
A [ACH[7:4]]
B [DCH[7:4]]
A [ACH[3:0]]
B [DCH[3:0]]
XSCC[15:12](1)
XSCC[11:8]
XSCC[7:4]
XSCC[3:0]
This value must be set to the
luminance value 1⁄2XSCY[15:0]
0000
0000
0001
0000
0000
1111
0000
0000
1111
0000
0001
1111
Note
1. Bits XSCC[15:13] are reserved and are set to logic 0.
Table 237 Horizontal chrominance phase offset; register set A [AEH[7:0]] and B [DEH[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
HORIZONTAL CHROMINANCE
PHASE OFFSET
XPHC7 XPHC6 XPHC5 XPHC4 XPHC3 XPHC2 XPHC1 XPHC0
This value must be set to 1⁄2XPHY[7:0]
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
18.2.5.12 Subaddresses B0H to BFH
Table 238 Vertical luminance scaling increment; register set A [B0H[7:0]; B1H[7:0]] and B [E0H[7:0]; E1H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS
VERTICAL LUMINANCE SCALING
INCREMENT
A [B1H[7:4]]
B [E1H[7:4]]
A [B1H[3:0]]
B [E1H[3:0]]
A [B0H[7:4]]
B [E0H[7:4]]
A [B0H[3:0]]
B [E0H[3:0]]
YSCY[15:12]
YSCY[11:8]
YSCY[7:4]
YSCY[3:0]
Scale = 1024⁄1 (theoretical) zoom
0000
0000
0000
0000
1111
0000
0011
0100
0100
1111
0000
1111
0000
0000
1111
0001
1111
0000
0001
1111
Scale = 1024
Scale = 1, equals 1024
Scale = 1024
1025 downscale
⁄1023 zoom
⁄
Scale = 1⁄63.999 downscale
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 239 Vertical chrominance scaling increment; register set A [B2H[7:0]; B3H[7:0]] and B [E2H[7:0]; E3H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS
VERTICAL CHROMINANCE
SCALING INCREMENT
A [B3H[7:4]]
B [E3H[7:4]]
A [B3H[3:0]]
B [E3H[3:0]]
A [B2H[7:4]]
B [E2H[7:4]]
A [B2H[3:0]]
B [E2H[3:0]]
YSCC[15:12]
YSCC[11:8]
YSCC[7:4]
YSCC[3:0]
This value must be set to the
luminance value YSCY[15:0]
0000
1111
0000
1111
0000
1111
0001
1111
Table 240 Vertical scaling mode control; register set A [B4H[4 and 0]] and B [E4H[4 and 0]]; note 1
CONTROL BITS 4 AND 0
VERTICAL SCALING MODE CONTROL
YMIR
YMODE
Vertical scaling performs linear interpolation between lines
X
X
0
1
Vertical scaling performs higher order accumulating interpolation, better alias
suppression
No mirroring
0
1
X
X
Lines are mirrored
Note
1. X = don’t care.
Table 241 Vertical chrominance phase offset ‘00’; register set A [B8H[7:0]] and B [E8H[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
VERTICAL CHROMINANCE PHASE
OFFSET
YPC07 YPC06 YPC05 YPC04 YPC03 YPC02 YPC01 YPC00
Offset = 0
Offset = 32
Offset = 255
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
⁄
32 = 1 line
32 lines
⁄
Table 242 Vertical luminance phase offset ‘00’; register set A [BCH[7:0]] and B [ECH[7:0]]
CONTROL BITS 7 TO 0
VERTICAL LUMINANCE PHASE
OFFSET
YPY07 YPY06 YPY05 YPY04 YPY03 YPY02 YPY01 YPY00
Offset = 0
Offset = 32
Offset = 255
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
⁄
32 = 1 line
32 lines
⁄
2004 Jun 29
184
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
19 PROGRAMMING START SET-UP OF DIGITAL VIDEO DECODER PART
19.1 Decoder part
The given values force the following behaviour of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE decoder part:
• The analog input AI11 expects an NTSC M, PAL B, D, G, H and I or SECAM signal in CVBS format; analog anti-alias
filter and AGC active
• Automatic field detection enabled
• Standard ITU 656 output format enabled on the expansion port
• Contrast, brightness and saturation control in accordance with ITU standards
• Adaptive comb filter for luminance and chrominance activated
• Pins LLC, LLC2, XTOUTd, RTS0, RTS1 and RTCO are set to 3-state.
Table 243 Decoder part start set-up values for the three main standards
VALUES (HEX)
SUB
ADDRESS
(HEX)
REGISTER
FUNCTION
BIT NAME(1)
PAL B, D,
G, H AND I
NTSC M
SECAM
00
01
02
chip version
ID7 to ID4
read only
08
increment delay
X, X, X, X, IDEL3 to IDEL0
08
08
analog input control 1
FUSE1, FUSE0, GUDL1, GUDL0 and
MODE3 to MODE0
C0
C0
C0
03
analog input control 2
X, HLNRS, VBSL, WPOFF, HOLDG,
GAFIX, GAI28 and GAI18
10
10
10
04
05
06
07
08
analog input control 3
analog input control 4
horizontal sync start
horizontal sync stop
sync control
GAI17 to GAI10
GAI27 to GAI20
HSB7 to HSB0
HSS7 to HSS0
90
90
EB
E0
98
90
90
EB
E0
98
90
90
EB
E0
98
AUFD, FSEL, FOET, HTC1, HTC0,
HPLL, VNOI1 and VNOI0
09
0A
0B
0C
luminance control
BYPS, YCOMB, LDEL, LUBW and
LUFI3 to LUFI0
40
80
44
40
40
80
44
40
1B
80
44
40
luminance brightness
control
DBRI7 to DBRI0
DCON7 to DCON0
DSAT7 to DSAT0
luminance contrast
control
chrominance saturation
control
0D
0E
chrominance hue control HUEC7 to HUEC0
chrominance control 1 CDTO, CSTD2 to CSTD0, DCVF, FCTC,
X and CCOMB
chrominance gain control ACGC and CGAIN6 to CGAIN0
00
89
00
81
00
D0
0F
10
2A
0E
2A
06
80
00
chrominance control 2
OFFU1, OFFU0, OFFV1, OFFV0,
CHBW and LCBW2 to LCBW0
11
mode/delay control
COLO, RTP1, HDEL1, HDEL0, RTP0
and YDEL2 to YDEL0
00
00
00
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
VALUES (HEX)
PAL B, D,
SUB
ADDRESS
(HEX)
REGISTER
FUNCTION
BIT NAME(1)
NTSC M
SECAM
G, H AND I
12
13
14
RT signal control
RTSE13 to RTSE10 and
RTSE03 to RTSE00
00
00
00
RT/X port output control
RTCE, XRHS, XRVS1, XRVS0, HLSEL
and OFTS2 to OFTS0
00
00
00
00
00
00
analog/ADC/compatibility CM99, UPTCV, AOSL1, AOSL0,
control XTOUTE, OLDSB, APCK1 and APCK0
VGATE start, FID change VSTA7 to VSTA0
15
16
17
11
FE
40
11
FE
40
11
FE
40
VGATE stop
VSTO7 to VSTO0
miscellaneous, VGATE
configuration and MSBs
LLCE, LLC2E, X, X, X, VGPS,
VSTO8 and VSTA8
18
19
raw data gain control
raw data offset control
RAWG7 to RAWG0
RAWO7 to RAWO0
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
40
80
00
40
80
40
80
00
1A to 1E reserved
1F
00
status byte video decoder INTL, HLVLN, FIDT, GLIMT, GLIMB,
(OLDSB = 0) WIPA, COPRO and RDCAP
read only
Note
1. All X values must be set to logic 0.
2004 Jun 29
186
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
19.2 Audio clock generation part
The given values force the following behaviour of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE audio clock generation part:
• Used crystal is 24.576 MHz
• Expected field frequency is 59.94 Hz (e.g. NTSC M standard)
• Generated audio master clock frequency at pin AMCLK is 256 × 44.1 kHz = 11.2896 MHz
• AMCLK is externally connected to AMXCLK (short-cut between pins K12 and J12)
• ASCLK = 32 × 44.1 kHz = 1.4112 MHz
• ALRCLK is 44.1 kHz.
Table 244 Audio clock part set-up values
SUB
ADDRESS
(HEX)
START VALUES
REGISTER FUNCTION
BIT NAME(1)
ACPF7 to ACPF0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
HEX
30
31
32
audio master clock cycles per
field; bits 7 to 0
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
BC
audio master clock cycles per
field; bits 15 to 8
ACPF15 to ACPF8
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
DF
02
audio master clock cycles per
field; bits 17 and 16
X, X, X, X, X, X, ACPF17 and
ACPF16
33
34
reserved
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
ACNI7 to ACNI0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
00
audio master clock nominal
increment; bits 7 to 0
CD
35
36
audio master clock nominal
increment; bits 15 to 8
ACNI15 to ACNI8
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
CC
3A
audio master clock nominal
increment; bits 21 to 16
X, X, ACNI21 to ACNI16
37
38
39
3A
reserved
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
X, X, SDIV5 to SDIV0
X, X, LRDIV5 to LRDIV0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
00
03
10
00
clock ratio AMXCLK to ASCLK
clock ratio ASCLK to ALRCLK
audio clock generator basic
set-up
X, X, X, X, APLL, AMVR,
LRPH, SCPH
3B to 3F reserved
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
00
Note
1. All X values must be set to logic 0.
2004 Jun 29
187
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
19.3 Data slicer and data type control part
The given values force the following behaviour of the SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE VBI data slicer part:
• Closed captioning data is expected at line 21 of field 1 (60 Hz/525 line system)
• All other lines are processed as active video
• Sliced data are framed by ITU 656 like SAV/EAV sequence (DID[5:0] = 3EH
MSB of SAV/EAV = 1).
Table 245 Data slicer start set-up values
SUB
ADDRESS
(HEX)
START VALUES
REGISTER FUNCTION
BIT NAME(1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
HEX
40
slicer control 1
X, HAM_N, FCE, HUNT_N, X, X,
X, X
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
40
41 to 53 line control register 2 to 20
54 line control register 21
LCRn_7 to LCRn_0 (n = 2 to 20)
LCR21_7 to LCR21_0
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
FF
5F
55 to 57 line control register 22 to 24 LCRn_7 to LCRn_0 (n = 22 to 24)
FF
58
59
5A
5B
programmable framing code FC7 to FC0
00
horizontal offset for slicer
vertical offset for slicer
field offset and MSBs for
HOFF7 to HOFF0
47
VOFF7 to VOFF0
06(2)
83(2)
FOFF, RECODE, X, VOFF8, X,
horizontal and vertical offset HOFF10 to HOFF8
5C
5D
reserved
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
0
00
3E
header and data
FVREF, X, DID5 to DID0
identification code control
5E
5F
60
sliced data identification code X, X, SDID5 to SDID0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
00
00
reserved
X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X
slicer status byte 0
−, FC8V, FC7V, VPSV, PPV, CCV,
−, −
read-only register
61
62
slicer status byte 1
slicer status byte 2
−, −, F21_N, LN8 to LN4
read-only register
read-only register
LN3 to LN0, DT3 to DT0
Notes
1. All X values must be set to logic 0.
2. Changes for 50 Hz/625 line systems: subaddress 5AH = 03H and subaddress 5BH = 03H.
2004 Jun 29
188
Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
19.4 Scaler and interfaces
19.4.1 TRIGGER CONDITION
Table 246 shows some examples for the scaler
programming where:
For trigger condition STRC[1:0] 90H[1:0] not equal ‘00’.
If the value of (YO + YS) is ≥262 (NTSC), and 312 (PAL)
the output field rate is reduced to 30 Hz and 25 Hz
respectively.
• prsc = prescale ratio
• fisc = fine scale ratio
• vsc = vertical scale ratio.
Horizontal and vertical offsets (XO and YO) have to be
used to adjust the displayed video in the display window.
As this adjustment is application dependent, the listed
values are only dummy values.
number of input pixel
number of output pixel
The ratio is defined as:
----------------------------------------------------------
In the following settings the VBI data slicer is inactive.
To activate the VBI data slicer, VITX[1:0] 86H[7:6] has to
be set to ‘11’. Depending on the VBI data slicer settings,
the sliced VBI data is inserted after the end of the scaled
video lines, if the regions of the VBI data slicer and scaler
overlap.
19.4.2 MAXIMUM ZOOM FACTOR
The maximum zoom factor is dependent on the back-end
data rate and is therefore back-end clock and data format
dependent (8 or 16-bit output). The maximum horizontal
zoom is limited to approximately 3.5, due to internal data
path restrictions.
To compensate for the running-in of the vertical scaler, the
vertical input window lengths are extended by
2 to 290 lines, respectively 242 lines for XS, but the scaler
increment calculations are done with 288, respectively
240 lines.
19.4.3 EXAMPLES
Table 246 Example of configurations
EXAMPLE
NUMBER
INPUT
WINDOW WINDOW
OUTPUT
SCALE
RATIOS
SCALER SOURCE AND REFERENCE EVENTS
1
analog input to 8-bit I port output, with SAV/EAV codes, 8-bit
serial byte stream decoder output at X port; acquisition trigger
at falling edge vertical and rising edge horizontal reference
signal; H and V gates on IGPH and IGPV, IGP0 = VBI sliced
data flag, IGP1 = FIFO almost full, level ≥24, IDQ qualifier
logic 1 active
720 × 240 720 × 240 prsc = 1;
fisc = 1;
vsc = 1
2
3
4
analog input to 16-bit output, without SAV/EAV codes, Yon
I port, CB-CR on H port and decoder output at X port;
acquisition trigger at falling edge vertical and rising edge
horizontal reference signal; H and V pulses on IGPH and IGPV,
output FID on IGP0, IGP1 fixed to logic 1, IDQ qualifier logic 0
active
704 × 288 768 × 288 prsc = 1;
fisc = 0.91667;
vsc = 1
X port input 8 bit with SAV/EAV codes, no reference signals on 720 × 240 352 × 288 prsc = 2;
XRH and XRV, XCLK as gated clock; field detection and
acquisition trigger on different events; acquisition triggers at
rising edge vertical and rising edge horizontal; I port output
8-bit with SAV/EAV codes like example number 1;
see Table 247
fisc = 1.022;
vsc = 0.8333
X port and H port for 16-bit Y-CB-CR 4 : 2 : 2 input (if no 16-bit 720 × 288 200 × 80 prsc = 2;
output selected); XRH and XRV as references; field detection
and acquisition trigger at falling edge of vertical and rising edge
of horizontal; I port output 8-bit with SAV/EAV codes, but Yonly
output
fisc = 1.8;
vsc = 3.6
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
Table 247 Scaler and interface configuration examples
I2C-BUS
ADDRESS
(HEX)
EXAMPLE 1 EXAMPLE 2 EXAMPLE 3 EXAMPLE 4
HEX DEC HEX DEC HEX DEC HEX DEC
MAIN FUNCTION
Global settings
80
task enable, IDQ and back-end clock
definition
10
01
−
10
−
10
−
10
−
83
84
85
XCLK output phase and X port output enable
−
−
−
01
C5
09
−
−
−
00
A0
10
−
−
−
00
A0
10
−
−
−
IGPH, IGPV, IGP0 and IGP1 output definition A0
signal polarity control and I port byte
swapping
10
86
FIFO flag thresholds and video/text
arbitration
45
−
40
−
45
−
45
−
87
88
ICLK and IDQ output phase and I port enable 01
power save control and software reset F0
−
−
01
F0
−
−
01
F0
−
−
01
F0
−
−
Task A: scaler input configuration and output format settings
90
91
92
93
task handling
00
08
10
80
−
−
−
−
00
08
10
40
−
−
−
−
00
18
10
80
−
−
−
−
00
38
10
84
−
−
−
−
scaler input source and format definition
reference signal definition at scaler input
I port output formats and configuration
Input and output window definition
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9C
9D
9E
9F
horizontal input offset (XO)
10
00
D0
02
0A
00
F2
00
D0
02
F0
00
16
−
10
00
C0
02
0A
00
22
01
00
03
20
01
16
−
10
00
D0
02
0A
00
F2
00
60
01
20
01
16
−
10
00
D0
02
0A
00
22
01
C8
00
50
00
16
−
horizontal input (source) window length (XS)
vertical input offset (YO)
720
−
704
−
720
−
720
−
10
−
10
−
10
−
10
−
vertical input (source) window length (YS)
242
−
290
−
242
−
290
−
horizontal output (destination) window length
(XD)
720
−
768
−
352
−
200
−
vertical output (destination) window length
(YD)
240
−
288
−
288
−
80
−
Prefiltering and prescaling
A0
A1
A2
A4
A5
A6
integer prescale (value ‘00’ not allowed)
01
00
00
80
40
40
−
−
01
00
00
80
40
40
−
−
02
02
AA
80
40
40
−
−
02
03
F2
80
11
11
−
−
accumulation length for prescaler
FIR prefilter and prescaler DC normalization
scaler brightness control
−
−
−
−
128
64
64
128
64
64
128
64
64
128
17
17
scaler contrast control
scaler saturation control
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
I2C-BUS
ADDRESS
(HEX)
EXAMPLE 1 EXAMPLE 2 EXAMPLE 3 EXAMPLE 4
HEX DEC HEX DEC HEX DEC HEX DEC
MAIN FUNCTION
Horizontal phase scaling
A8
A9
AA
AC
AD
AE
horizontal scaling increment for luminance
00
04
00
00
02
00
1024 AA
938
−
18
04
00
0C
02
00
1048
34
07
00
9A
03
00
1844
−
−
03
00
D5
01
00
−
−
−
−
horizontal phase offset luminance
−
horizontal scaling increment for chrominance
512
−
469
−
524
−
922
−
horizontal phase offset chrominance
−
−
−
−
Vertical scaling
B0
B1
B2
B3
B4
vertical scaling increment for luminance
00
04
00
04
00
1024
00
04
00
04
00
1024
55
03
55
03
00
853
−
66
0E
66
0E
01
3686
−
1024
−
−
1024
−
−
3686
−
vertical scaling increment for chrominance
vertical scaling mode control
853
−
−
−
−
−
B8 to BF vertical phase offsets luminance and
chrominance (needs to be used for interlace the interlaced scaled output optimize according to
correct scaled output) Section 9.3.3.2
start with B8 to BF at 00H, if there are no problems with
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
20 PACKAGE OUTLINE
BGA156: plastic ball grid array package; 156 balls; body 15 x 15 x 1.15 mm
SOT472-1
B
D
A
D
1
ball A1
index area
A
2
A
E
E
1
A
1
detail X
C
e
1
y
y
b
1/2
e
e
v
M
M
C
C
A B
C
1
w
P
N
M
L
e
K
J
H
G
F
e
2
1/2
e
E
D
C
B
A
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 10 11 12 13 14
shape
optional (4x)
X
10 mm
0
5
scale
DIMENSIONS (mm are the original dimensions)
A
UNIT
A
A
b
E
e
e
1
e
2
y
y
1
D
D
E
v
w
1
1
2
1
max.
0.5
0.3
1.25
1.05
0.6
0.4
15.2 13.7 15.2 13.7
14.8 13.0 14.8 13.0
mm
1.75
0.15 0.35
13
13
1
0.3
0.1
REFERENCES
JEDEC JEITA
OUTLINE
VERSION
EUROPEAN
PROJECTION
ISSUE DATE
IEC
144E
00-03-04
03-01-22
SOT472-1
MS-034
- - -
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
21 SOLDERING
To overcome these problems the double-wave soldering
method was specifically developed.
21.1 Introduction to soldering surface mount
packages
If wave soldering is used the following conditions must be
observed for optimal results:
This text gives a very brief insight to a complex technology.
A more in-depth account of soldering ICs can be found in
our “Data Handbook IC26; Integrated Circuit Packages”
(document order number 9398 652 90011).
• Use a double-wave soldering method comprising a
turbulent wave with high upward pressure followed by a
smooth laminar wave.
• For packages with leads on two sides and a pitch (e):
There is no soldering method that is ideal for all surface
mount IC packages. Wave soldering can still be used for
certain surface mount ICs, but it is not suitable for fine pitch
SMDs. In these situations reflow soldering is
recommended.
– larger than or equal to 1.27 mm, the footprint
longitudinal axis is preferred to be parallel to the
transport direction of the printed-circuit board;
– smaller than 1.27 mm, the footprint longitudinal axis
must be parallel to the transport direction of the
printed-circuit board.
21.2 Reflow soldering
Reflow soldering requires solder paste (a suspension of
fine solder particles, flux and binding agent) to be applied
to the printed-circuit board by screen printing, stencilling or
pressure-syringe dispensing before package placement.
Driven by legislation and environmental forces the
The footprint must incorporate solder thieves at the
downstream end.
• For packages with leads on four sides, the footprint must
be placed at a 45° angle to the transport direction of the
printed-circuit board. The footprint must incorporate
solder thieves downstream and at the side corners.
worldwide use of lead-free solder pastes is increasing.
Several methods exist for reflowing; for example,
convection or convection/infrared heating in a conveyor
type oven. Throughput times (preheating, soldering and
cooling) vary between 100 and 200 seconds depending
on heating method.
During placement and before soldering, the package must
be fixed with a droplet of adhesive. The adhesive can be
applied by screen printing, pin transfer or syringe
dispensing. The package can be soldered after the
adhesive is cured.
Typical reflow peak temperatures range from
215 to 270 °C depending on solder paste material. The
top-surface temperature of the packages should
preferably be kept:
Typical dwell time of the leads in the wave ranges from
3 to 4 seconds at 250 °C or 265 °C, depending on solder
material applied, SnPb or Pb-free respectively.
A mildly-activated flux will eliminate the need for removal
of corrosive residues in most applications.
• below 225 °C (SnPb process) or below 245 °C (Pb-free
process)
– for all BGA, HTSSON-T and SSOP-T packages
21.4 Manual soldering
– for packages with a thickness ≥ 2.5 mm
Fix the component by first soldering two
diagonally-opposite end leads. Use a low voltage (24 V or
less) soldering iron applied to the flat part of the lead.
Contact time must be limited to 10 seconds at up to
300 °C.
– for packages with a thickness < 2.5 mm and a
volume ≥ 350 mm3 so called thick/large packages.
• below 240 °C (SnPb process) or below 260 °C (Pb-free
process) for packages with a thickness < 2.5 mm and a
volume < 350 mm3 so called small/thin packages.
When using a dedicated tool, all other leads can be
soldered in one operation within 2 to 5 seconds between
270 and 320 °C.
Moisture sensitivity precautions, as indicated on packing,
must be respected at all times.
21.3 Wave soldering
Conventional single wave soldering is not recommended
for surface mount devices (SMDs) or printed-circuit boards
with a high component density, as solder bridging and
non-wetting can present major problems.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
21.5 Suitability of surface mount IC packages for wave and reflow soldering methods
SOLDERING METHOD
WAVE
REFLOW(2)
not suitable suitable
PACKAGE(1)
BGA, HTSSON..T(3), LBGA, LFBGA, SQFP, SSOP..T(3), TFBGA,
USON, VFBGA
DHVQFN, HBCC, HBGA, HLQFP, HSO, HSOP, HSQFP, HSSON,
HTQFP, HTSSOP, HVQFN, HVSON, SMS
not suitable(4)
suitable
PLCC(5), SO, SOJ
suitable
suitable
LQFP, QFP, TQFP
not recommended(5)(6) suitable
SSOP, TSSOP, VSO, VSSOP
CWQCCN..L(8), PMFP(9), WQCCN..L(8)
not recommended(7)
suitable
not suitable
not suitable
Notes
1. For more detailed information on the BGA packages refer to the “(LF)BGA Application Note” (AN01026); order a copy
from your Philips Semiconductors sales office.
2. All surface mount (SMD) packages are moisture sensitive. Depending upon the moisture content, the maximum
temperature (with respect to time) and body size of the package, there is a risk that internal or external package
cracks may occur due to vaporization of the moisture in them (the so called popcorn effect). For details, refer to the
Drypack information in the “Data Handbook IC26; Integrated Circuit Packages; Section: Packing Methods”.
3. These transparent plastic packages are extremely sensitive to reflow soldering conditions and must on no account
be processed through more than one soldering cycle or subjected to infrared reflow soldering with peak temperature
exceeding 217 °C ± 10 °C measured in the atmosphere of the reflow oven. The package body peak temperature
must be kept as low as possible.
4. These packages are not suitable for wave soldering. On versions with the heatsink on the bottom side, the solder
cannot penetrate between the printed-circuit board and the heatsink. On versions with the heatsink on the top side,
the solder might be deposited on the heatsink surface.
5. If wave soldering is considered, then the package must be placed at a 45° angle to the solder wave direction.
The package footprint must incorporate solder thieves downstream and at the side corners.
6. Wave soldering is suitable for LQFP, TQFP and QFP packages with a pitch (e) larger than 0.8 mm; it is definitely not
suitable for packages with a pitch (e) equal to or smaller than 0.65 mm.
7. Wave soldering is suitable for SSOP, TSSOP, VSO and VSSOP packages with a pitch (e) equal to or larger than
0.65 mm; it is definitely not suitable for packages with a pitch (e) equal to or smaller than 0.5 mm.
8. Image sensor packages in principle should not be soldered. They are mounted in sockets or delivered pre-mounted
on flex foil. However, the image sensor package can be mounted by the client on a flex foil by using a hot bar
soldering process. The appropriate soldering profile can be provided on request.
9. Hot bar or manual soldering is suitable for PMFP packages.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors
Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
22 DATA SHEET STATUS
DATA SHEET
LEVEL
PRODUCT
STATUS(2)(3)
DEFINITION
STATUS(1)
I
Objective data
Development This data sheet contains data from the objective specification for product
development. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to change the
specification in any manner without notice.
II
Preliminary data Qualification
This data sheet contains data from the preliminary specification.
Supplementary data will be published at a later date. Philips
Semiconductors reserves the right to change the specification without
notice, in order to improve the design and supply the best possible
product.
III
Product data
Production
This data sheet contains data from the product specification. Philips
Semiconductors reserves the right to make changes at any time in order
to improve the design, manufacturing and supply. Relevant changes will
be communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change Notification
(CPCN).
Notes
1. Please consult the most recently issued data sheet before initiating or completing a design.
2. The product status of the device(s) described in this data sheet may have changed since this data sheet was
published. The latest information is available on the Internet at URL http://www.semiconductors.philips.com.
3. For data sheets describing multiple type numbers, the highest-level product status determines the data sheet status.
23 DEFINITIONS
24 DISCLAIMERS
Short-form specification
The data in a short-form
Life support applications
These products are not
specification is extracted from a full data sheet with the
same type number and title. For detailed information see
the relevant data sheet or data handbook.
designed for use in life support appliances, devices, or
systems where malfunction of these products can
reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Philips
Semiconductors customers using or selling these products
for use in such applications do so at their own risk and
agree to fully indemnify Philips Semiconductors for any
damages resulting from such application.
Limiting values definition Limiting values given are in
accordance with the Absolute Maximum Rating System
(IEC 60134). Stress above one or more of the limiting
values may cause permanent damage to the device.
These are stress ratings only and operation of the device
at these or at any other conditions above those given in the
Characteristics sections of the specification is not implied.
Exposure to limiting values for extended periods may
affect device reliability.
Right to make changes
Philips Semiconductors
reserves the right to make changes in the products -
including circuits, standard cells, and/or software -
described or contained herein in order to improve design
and/or performance. When the product is in full production
(status ‘Production’), relevant changes will be
Application information
Applications that are
communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change
Notification (CPCN). Philips Semiconductors assumes no
responsibility or liability for the use of any of these
products, conveys no licence or title under any patent,
copyright, or mask work right to these products, and
makes no representations or warranties that these
products are free from patent, copyright, or mask work
right infringement, unless otherwise specified.
described herein for any of these products are for
illustrative purposes only. Philips Semiconductors make
no representation or warranty that such applications will be
suitable for the specified use without further testing or
modification.
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Product specification
HD-CODEC
SAA7108AE; SAA7109AE
25 PURCHASE OF PHILIPS I2C COMPONENTS
Purchase of Philips I2C components conveys a license under the Philips’ I2C patent to use the
components in the I2C system provided the system conforms to the I2C specification defined by
Philips. This specification can be ordered using the code 9398 393 40011.
2004 Jun 29
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Philips Semiconductors – a worldwide company
Contact information
For additional information please visit http://www.semiconductors.philips.com.
Fax: +31 40 27 24825
For sales offices addresses send e-mail to: sales.addresses@www.semiconductors.philips.com.
© Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. 2004
SCA76
All rights are reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without the prior written consent of the copyright owner.
The information presented in this document does not form part of any quotation or contract, is believed to be accurate and reliable and may be changed
without notice. No liability will be accepted by the publisher for any consequence of its use. Publication thereof does not convey nor imply any license
under patent- or other industrial or intellectual property rights.
Printed in The Netherlands
R21/02/pp197
Date of release: 2004 Jun 29
Document order number: 9397 750 13425
相关型号:
SAA7109AE/V1/G,518
IC SPECIALTY CONSUMER CIRCUIT, PBGA156, 15 X 15 MM, 1.05 MM HEIGHT, PLASTIC, MO-192, SOT-700-1, BGA-156, Consumer IC:Other
NXP
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