LM94
LM94 TruTherm Hardware Monitor with PI Loop Fan Control for Server
Management
Literature Number: SNAS264B
LM94
July 15, 2010
TruTherm™ Hardware Monitor with PI Loop Fan Control for
Server Management
1.0 General Description
The LM94 hardware monitor has a two wire digital interface
compatible with SMBus 2.0. Using a ΣΔ ADC, the LM94 mea-
sures the temperature of four remote diode connected tran-
sistors as well as its own die and 16 power supply voltages.
The LM94 has new TruTherm technology that supports pre-
cision thermal diode measurements of processors on sub-
micron processes.
To set fan speed, the LM94 has two PWM outputs that are
each controlled by up to six temperature zones. The fan-con-
trol algorithm can be based on a lookup table, PI (proportional/
integral) control loop, or a combination of both. The LM94 in-
cludes digital filters that can be invoked to smooth tempera-
ture readings for better control of fan speed such that
acoustical noise is minimized. The LM94 has four tachometer
inputs to measure fan speed. Limit and status registers for all
measured values are included.
The LM94 builds upon the functionality of previous mother-
board server management ASICs, such as the LM93. It also
adds measurement and control support for dynamic Vccp
monitoring for VRD10/11 and PROCHOT. It is designed to
monitor a dual processor Xeon class motherboard with a min-
imum of external components.
2.0 Features
8-bit ΣΔ ADC
Monitors 16 power supplies
Monitors 4 remote thermal diodes and 2 LM60
New TruTherm technology support for precision thermal
diode measurements
Internal ambient temperature sensing
Programmable autonomous fan control based on
temperature readings with fan boost support
Fan boost support on tachometer limit error event
Fan control based on 13-step lookup table or PI Control
Loop or combination of both
PI fan control loop supports Tcontrol
Temperature reading digital filters
0.5°C digital temperature sensor resolution
0.0625°C filtered temperature resolution for fan control
2 PWM fan speed control outputs
4 fan tachometer inputs
Dual processor thermal throttling (PROCHOT) monitoring
Dual dynamic VID monitoring (6/7 VIDs per processor)
supports VRD10.2/11
8 general purpose I/Os:
4 can be configured as fan tachometer inputs
2 can be configured to connect to processor
THERMTRIP
2 are standard GPIOs that could be used to monitor
IERR signal
2 general purpose inputs that can be used to monitor the
7th VID signal for VRD11
Limit register comparisons of all monitored values
2-wire serial digital interface, SMBus 2.0 compliant
Supports byte/block read and write
Selectable slave address (tri-level pin selects 1 of 3
possible addresses)
ALERT output supports interrupt or comparator modes
2.5V reference voltage output
56-pin TSSOP package
XOR-tree test mode
3.0 Key Specifications
Voltage Measurement Accuracy ±2% FS (max)
Temperature Resolution 9-bits, 0.5°C
Temperature Sensor Accuracy ±2.5 °C (max)
Temperature Range:
LM94 Operational 0°C to +85°C
Remote Temp Accuracy 0°C to +125°C
Power Supply Voltage +3.0V to +3.6V
Power Supply Current 1.6 mA
4.0 Applications
Servers
Workstations
Multi-processor based equipment
5.0 Ordering Information
Order Number NS Package
Number
Transport media
LM94CIMT MTD56 34 units in rail
LM94CIMTX MTD56 1000 units in tape-
and-reel
I2C is a registered trademark of the Philips Corporation.
© 2010 National Semiconductor Corporation 201124 www.national.com
LM94 TruTherm™ Hardware Monitor with PI Loop Fan Control for Server Management
6.0 Block Diagram
The block diagram of LM94 hardware is illustrated below. The hardware implementation is a single chip ASIC solution.
20112401
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LM94
7.0 Application
Baseboard management of a dual processor server. Two
LM94s may be required to manage a quad processor board.
The system diagram below shows a dual processor server
2 Way Xeon Server Management
20112405
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LM94
8.0 Connection Diagram
56 Pin TSSOP
20112402
NS Package MTD56
Top View
NS Order Numbers:
LM94CIMT (34 units per rail), or
LM94CIMTX (1000 units per tape-and-reel)
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LM94
9.0 Pin Descriptions
Symbol Pin # Type Function
GPIO_0/TACH1 1 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be configured as fan tach input or a general purpose open-drain digital
I/O.
GPIO_1/TACH2 2 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be configured as fan tach input or a general purpose open-drain digital
I/O.
GPIO_2/TACH3 3 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be configured as fan tach input or a general purpose open-drain digital
I/O.
GPIO_3/TACH4 4 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be configured as fan tach input or a general purpose open-drain digital
I/O..
GPIO_4 /
P1_THERMTRIP
5 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
A general purpose open-drain digital I/O. Can be configured to monitor a
CPU's THERMTRIP signal to mask other errors. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
GPIO_5 /
P2_THERMTRIP
6 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
A general purpose open-drain digital I/O. Can be configured to monitor a
CPU's THERMTRIP signal to mask other errors. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
GPIO_6 7 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be used to detect the state of CPU1 IERR or a general purpose open-
drain digital I/O. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL compatible input
logic levels.
GPIO_7 8 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Can be used to detect the state of CPU2 IERR or a general purpose open-
drain digital I/O. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL compatible input
logic levels.
VRD1_HOT 9 Digital Input CPU1 voltage regulator HOT. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL
compatible input logic levels.
VRD2_HOT 10 Digital Input CPU2 voltage regulator HOT. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL
compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID6/GPI8 11 Digital Input CPU2 VID6 input. Could also be used as a general purpose input to trigger
an error event. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL compatible input
logic levels.
P1_VID6/GPI9 12 Digital Input CPU1 VID6 input. Could also be used as a general purpose input to trigger
an error event. Supports TTL input logic levels and AGTL compatible input
logic levels.
SMBDAT 13 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Bidirectional System Management Bus Data. Output configured as 5V
tolerant open-drain. SMBus 2.0 compliant.
SMBCLK 14 Digital Input System Management Bus Clock. Driven by an open-drain output, and is 5V
tolerant. SMBus 2.0 Compliant.
ALERT/XtestOut 15 Digital Output (Open-
Drain)
Open-drain ALERT output used in an interrupt driven system to signal that
an error event has occurred. Masked error events do not activate the
ALERT output. When in XOR tree test mode, functions as XOR Tree output.
RESET 16 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Open-drain reset output when power is first applied to the LM94. Used as
a reset for devices powered by 3.3V stand-by. After reset, this pin becomes
a reset input. See Section 15.2 RESETS for more information. If this pin is
not used, connection to an external resistive pull-up is required to prevent
LM94 malfunction.
AGND 17 GROUND Input Analog Ground. Digital ground and analog ground need to be tied together
at the chip then both taken to a low noise system ground. A voltage
difference between analog and digital ground may cause erroneous results.
VREF 18 Analog Output 2.5V used for external ADC reference, or as a VREF reference voltage
REMOTE1− 19 Remote Thermal
Diode_1- Input (CPU 1
THERMDC)
This is the negative input (current sink) from both of the CPU1 thermal
diodes. Connected to THERMDC pin of Pentium processor or the emitter
of a diode connected MMBT3904 NPN transistor. Serves as the negative
input into the A/D for thermal diode voltage measurements. A 100 pF
capacitor is optional and can be connected between REMOTE1− and
REMOTE1+.
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LM94
Symbol Pin # Type Function
REMOTE1a+ 20 Remote Thermal
Diode_1+ I/O (CPU1
THERMDA1)
This is a positive connection to the first CPU1 thermal diode. Serves as the
positive input into the A/D for thermal diode voltage measurements. It also
serves as a current source output that forward biases the thermal diode.
Connected to THERMDA pin of Pentium processor or the base of a diode
connected MMBT3904 NPN transistor. A 100 pF capacitor is optional and
can be connected between REMOTE1− and each REMOTE1+.
REMOTE2− 21 Remote Thermal
Diode_2 - Input (CPU2
THERMDC)
This is the negative input (current sink) from both of the CPU2 thermal
diodes. Connected to THERMDC pins of Pentium processor or the emitter
of a diode connected MMBT3904 NPN transistor. Serves as the negative
input into the A/D for thermal diode voltage measurements. A 100 pF
capacitor is optional and can be connected between REMOTE2− and each
REMOTE2+.
REMOTE2a+ 22 Remote Thermal
Diode_2 + I/O (CPU2
THERMDA1)
This is a positive connection to the first CPU2 thermal diode. Serves as the
positive input into the A/D for thermal diode voltage measurements. It also
serves as a current source output that forward biases the thermal diode.
Connected to THERMDA pin of Pentium processor or the base of a diode
connected MMBT3904 NPN transistor. A 100 pF capacitor is optional and
can be connected between REMOTE2− and REMOTE2+.
AD_IN1/REMOTE1b+ 23 Analog Input (+12V1 or
CPU1 THERMDA2)
Analog Input for +12V Rail 1 monitoring, for CPU1 voltage regulator.
External attenuation resistors required such that 12V is attenuated to
0.927V for nominal ¾ scale reading. This pin may also serve as the second
positive thermal diode input for CPU1.
AD_IN2/REMOTE2b+ 24 Analog Input (+12V2 or
CPU2 THERMDA2)
Analog Input for +12V Rail 2 monitoring, for CPU2 voltage regulator.
External attenuation resistors required such that 12V is attenuated to
0.927V for nominal ¾ scale reading. This pin may also serve as the second
positive thermal diode input for CPU2.
AD_IN3 25 Analog Input (+12V3) Analog Input for +12V Rail 3, for Memory/3GIO slots. External attenuation
resistors required such that 12V is attenuated to 0.927V for nominal ¾ scale
reading.
AD_IN4 26 Analog Input (FSB_Vtt) Analog input for 1.2V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading
AD_IN5 27 Analog Input (3GIO /
PXH / MCH_Core)
Analog input for 1.5V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading
AD_IN6 28 Analog Input
(ICH_Core)
Analog input for 1.5V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading
AD_IN7 (P1_Vccp) 29 Analog Input
(CPU1_Vccp)
Analog input for +Vccp (processor voltage) monitoring.
AD_IN8 (P2_Vccp) 30 Analog Input
(CPU2_Vccp)
Analog input for +Vccp (processor voltage) monitoring.
AD_IN9 31 Analog Input (+3.3V) Analog input for +3.3V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading
AD_IN10 32 Analog Input (+5V) Analog input for +5V monitoring silver box supply monitoring, nominal ¾
scale reading
AD_IN11 33 Analog Input
(SCSI_Core)
Analog input for +2.5V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading. This pin may
also be used to monitor an analog temperature sensor such as the LM60,
since readings from this input can be routed to the fan control logic.
AD_IN12 34 Analog Input
(Mem_Core)
Analog input for +1.969V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading.
AD_IN13 35 Analog Input
(Mem_Vtt)
Analog input for +0.984V monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading.
AD_IN14 36 Analog Input
(Gbit_Core)
Analog input for +0.984V S/B monitoring, nominal ¾ scale reading.
AD_IN15 37 Analog Input (-12V) Analog input for -12V monitoring. External resistors required to scale to
positive level. Full scale reading at 1.236V, , nominal ¾ scale reading. This
pin may also be used to monitor an analog temperature sensor such as the
LM60, since readings from this input can be routed to the fan control logic.
Address Select 38 3 level analog input This input selects the lower two bits of the LM94 SMBus slave address.
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LM94
Symbol Pin # Type Function
3.3V SB (AD_IN16) 39 POWER (VDD) +3.3V
standby power
VDD power input for LM94. Generally this is connected to +3.3V standby
power.
The LM94 can be powered by +3.3V if monitoring in low power states is not
required, but power should be applied to this input before any other pins.
This pin also serves as the analog input to monitor the 3.3V stand-by (SB)
voltage. It is necessary to bypass this pin with a 0.1 µF in parallel with 100
pF. A bulk capacitance of 10 µF should be in the near vicinity. The 100 pF
should be closest to the power pin.
GND 40 GROUND Digital Ground. Digital ground and analog ground need to be tied together
at the chip then both taken to a low noise system ground. A voltage
difference between analog and digital ground may cause erroneous results.
PWM1 41 Digital Output (Open-
Drain)
Fan control output 1.
PWM2 42 Digital Output (Open-
Drain)
Fan control output 2
P1_VID0/P1_VID7 43 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_VID1 44 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_VID2 45 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_VID3 46 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_VID4 47 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_VID5 48 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P1_PROCHOT 49 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Connected to CPU1 PROCHOT (processor hot) signal through a
bidirectional level shifter. Supports TTL input logic level.
P2_PROCHOT 50 Digital I/O (Open-
Drain)
Connected to CPU2 PROCHOT (processor hot) signal through a
bidirectional level shifter. Supports TTL input logic level.
P2_VID0/P2_VID7 51 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID1 52 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID2 53 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID3 54 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID4 55 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
P2_VID5 56 Digital Input Voltage Identification signal from the processor. Supports TTL input logic
levels and AGTL compatible input logic levels.
The over-score indicates the signal is active low (“Not”).
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LM94
10.0 Server Terminology
A/D Analog to Digital Converter
ACPI Advanced Configuration and Power
Interface
ALERT SMBus signal to bus master that an event
occurred that has been flagged for attention.
ASF Alert Standard Format
BMC Baseboard Management Controller
BW Bandwidth
DIMM Dual in line memory module
DP Dual-processor
ECC Error checking and correcting
FRU Field replaceable unit
FSB Front side bus
FW Firmware
Gb Gigabit
GB Gigabyte
Gbe Gigabit Ethernet
GPI General purpose input
GPIO General purpose I/O
HW Hardware
I2C Inter integrated circuit (bus)
LAN Local area network
LSb Least Significant Bit
LSB Least Significant Byte
LVDS Low-Voltage Differential Signaling
LUT Look-Up Table
Mb Megabit
MB Megabyte
MP Multi-processor
MSb Most Significant Bit
MSB Most Significant Byte
MTBF Mean time between failures
MTTR Mean time to repair
NIC Network Interface Card (Ethernet Card)
OS Operating system
P/S Power Supply
PCI PCI Local Bus
PDB Power Distribution Board
POR Power On Reset
PS Power Supply
SMBCLK and
SMBDAT
These signals comprise the SMBus
interface (data and clock) See the SMBus
Interface section for more information.
VRD Voltage Regulator Down - regulates Vccp
voltage for a CPU
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LM94
11.0 Recommended Implementation
20112406
Recommended implementation without thermal diode connections
20112407
Note: 100 pF cap across each thermal diode is optional and should be placed close to the LM94, if used. The maximum capacitance between thermal diode pins
is 300 pF.
Thermal diode recommended implementation
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LM94
12.0 Functional Description
The LM94 provides 16 channels of voltage monitoring, 4 re-
mote thermal diode monitors, an internal/local ambient tem-
perature sensor, 2 PROCHOT monitors, 4 fan tachometers,
8 GPIOs, THERMTRIP monitor for masking error events, 2
sets of 7 VID inputs, an ALERT output and all the associated
limit registers on a single chip, and communicates to the rest
of the baseboard over the System Management Bus (SM-
Bus). The LM94 also provides 2 PWM outputs and associated
fan control logic for controlling the speed of system fans.
There are two sets of fan control logic, a lookup table and a
PI (proportional/integral) loop controller. The lookup table and
PI controller are interactive, such that the fans run at the
fastest required speed. Upon a temperature or fan tach error
event, the PWM outputs may be programmed such that they
automatically boost to 100% duty cycle. A timer is included
that sets the minimum time that the fans are in the boost con-
dition when activated by a fan tach error.
The LM94 incorporates National Semiconductor's TruTherm
technology for precision “Remote Diode” readings of proces-
sors on 90nm process geometry or smaller. Readings from
the external thermal diodes and the internal temperature sen-
sor are made available as an 9-bit two's-complement digital
value with the LSb representing 0.5°C. Filtered temperature
readings are available as a 12-bit two's-complement digital
value with the LSb representing 0.0625°C.
All but 4 of the analog inputs include internal scaling resistors.
External scaling resistors are required for measuring ±12V.
The inputs are converted to 8-bit digital values such that a
nominal voltage appears at ¾ scale for positive voltages and
¼ scale for negative voltages. The analog inputs are intended
to be connected to both baseboard resident VRDs and to
standard voltage rails supplied by a SSI compliant power
supply.
The LM94 has logic that ties a set of dynamically moving VID
inputs to their associated Vccp analog input for real time win-
dow comparison fault determination. Voltage mapping for
VRD10, VRD10 extended and VRD11are supported by the
LM94. When VRD10 mode is selected GPI8 and GPI9 can be
used to detect external error flags whose state is be reflected
in the status registers.
Error events are captured in two sets of mirrored status reg-
isters (BMC Error Status Registers and Host Status Regis-
ters) allowing two controllers access to the status information
without any interference.
The LM94's ALERT output supports interrupt mode or com-
parator mode of operation. The comparator mode is only
functional for thermal monitoring.
The LM94 provides a number of internal registers, which are
detailed in the register section of this document.
12.1 MONITORING CYCLE TIME
When the LM94 is powered up, it cycles through each tem-
perature measurement followed by the analog voltages in
sequence, and it continuously loops through the sequence.
The total monitoring cycle time is not more than 100 ms, as
this is the time period that most external micro-controllers re-
quire to read the register values.
Each measured value is compared to values stored in the limit
registers. When the measured value violates the pro-
grammed limit, a corresponding status bit in the B_Error and
H_Error Status Registers is set.
The PROCHOT, tachometer and dynamic VID/Vccp monitor-
ing is performed independently of the analog and temperature
monitoring cycle.
12.2 ΣΔ A/D INHERENT AVERAGING
The ΣΔ A/D architecture filters the input signal. During one
conversion many samples are taken of the input voltage and
these samples are effectively averaged to give the final result.
The output of the ΣΔ A/D is the average value of the signal
during the sampling interval. For a voltage measurement, the
samples are accumulated for 1.5 ms. For a temperature mea-
surement, the samples are accumulated for 8.4 ms.
12.3 TEMPERATURE MONITORING
The LM94 remote diode target is the embedded thermal diode
found in a Xeon class processor in 90nm processes but can
also work with any Intel based processor in 90nm or 65nm.
The LM94 has an advanced thermal diode input stage using
National's TruTherm technology that reduces the spread in
ideality found in sub-micron geometry thermal diodes. Inter-
nal analog filtering has been included in the thermal diode
input stage thus minimizing the need for external thermal
diode filter capacitors. In addition a digital filter has been in-
cluded for the thermal diode temperature readings.
In some cases instead of using the embedded thermal diode,
found on the Xeon processor, a diode connected 2N3904
transistor type can also be used. An example of this would be
a MMBT3904 with its collector and base tied to the thermal
diode REMOTE+ pin and the emitter tied to the thermal diode
REMOTE− pin. Since the MMBT3904 is a surface mount de-
vice and has very small thermal mass, it measures the board
temperature where it is mounted. The ideality and series re-
sistance varies for different diodes. Therefore the LM94 has
register support to allow calibration selection between a
2N3904 or a Xeon processor. The LM94 is optimized for typ-
ical Intel processors on 90nm or 65nm process or 2N3904
transistor. Other transistor types may used but may have ad-
ditional error that can be can be corrected for by programming
the appropriate Zone Adjustment Offset register.
The LM94 acquires temperature data from four different
sources:
4 external diodes (embedded in a processor or discrete)
1 internal diode (internal to the LM94)
2 analog temperature sensors, such as the LM60, that are
connected to the AD_IN11 or AD_15 pins
a temperature value can be externally written into an LM94
register from the SMBus.
All of these values, although not necessarily simultaneously,
can be used to control fans, compared against limits, etc.
The temperature value registers are located at addresses
06h-09h, 50h–55h and 10h-23h. The temperature sources
are referred to as “zones” for convenience:
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LM94
Zone Description
Zone 1a Processor 1 remote diode 1
(REMOTE1a+, REMOTE1−)
Zone 1b Processor 1 remote diode 2
(REMOTE1b+, REMOTE1–)
Zone 2a Processor 2 remote diode 1
(REMOTE2a+, REMOTE2−)
Zone 2b Processor 2 remote diode 2
(REMOTE2b+, REMOTE2–)
Zone 3 Internal LM94 on-chip sensor or external LM60
analog sensor connected to AD_IN11; also
accepts writes via SMBus
Zone 4 External digital temperature value from SMBus
write to register 53h or external LM60 analog
sensor connected to AD_IN15
12.3.1 “Remote Diode” TruTherm Mode
The processor “remote thermal diode” is more correctly de-
scribed as a transistor. The LM93 treated the “remote diode”
as a diode thus introducing inaccuracies. These inaccuracies
have become more apparent as the geometry of processors
is shrinking. The LM94 can sense the “remote diode” using a
new TruTherm technology that treats the remote device as a
transistor. The TruTherm Mode is more accurate for proces-
sors on 90nm and smaller geometry. The LM94 still supports
the old diode method and is callibrated for 2N3904 transistor
type.
12.3.2 Temperature Data Format
Most of the temperature data for the LM94 is represented in
three formats:
8-bit, two's complement byte with the LSb equal to 1.0 °C;
this applies to temperature measurements as well as any
temperature limit registers and some configuration
registers.
Temperature Binary Hex
+125°C 0111 1101 7Dh
+25°C 0001 1001 19h
+1.0°C 0000 0001 01h
0°C 0000 0000 00h
−1.0°C 1111 1111 FFh
−25°C 1110 0111 E7h
−55°C 1100 1001 C9h
−127°C 1000 0001 81h
Note: A value of 80h has a special meaning in the limit registers. It means
that the temperature channel is masked. In addition, temperature readings
of 80h indicate thermal diode faults.
9–bit two's complement word with the LSb equal to 0.5°C;
this applies to unfiltered temperature measurement
extended resolution value registers
Temperature Binary Hex
MSB LSB
+125.5°C 0111 1101 1000 0000 7D 80h
+25.5°C 0001 1001 1000 0000 19 80h
+0.5°C 0000 0000 1000 0000 00 80h
0°C 0000 0000 0000 0000 00 00h
−0.5°C 1111 1111 1000 0000 FF 80h
Temperature Binary Hex
MSB LSB
−25.5°C 1110 0111 1000 0000 E7 80h
−55.5°C 1100 1001 1000 0000 C9 80h
−127.5°C 1000 0001 1000 0000 81 80h
12–bit two's complement word with the LSb equal to
0.0625°C; this applies to extended filtered temperature
measurement extended resolution value registers
Temperature Binary Hex
MSB LSB
+125.0625°C 0111 1101 0001 0000 7D 10h
+25.0625°C 0001 1001 0001 0000 19 10h
+1.0625°C 0000 0001 0001 0000 01 10h
0°C 0000 0000 0000 0000 00 00h
−0.0625°C 1111 1111 1111 0000 FF F0h
−25.0625°C 1110 0111 1111 0000 E7 F0h
−55.0625°C 1100 1001 1111 0000 C9 F0h
−127.0625°C 1000 0000 1111 0000 80 F0h
Some fan control configuration registers use four bits and
have an unsigned binary format, please see the fan control
configuration register descriptions for further details on this 4-
bit format.
12.3.3 Thermal Diode Fault Status
The LM94 provides for indications of a fault (open or short
circuit) with the remote thermal diodes. Before a remote diode
conversion is updated, the status of the remote diode is
checked for an open or short circuit condition. If such a fault
condition occurs, a status bit is set in the status register. A
short circuit is defined as the diode pins connected to each
other. When an open or short circuit is detected, the corre-
sponding temperature register is set to 80h.
12.4 EVENT ERRORS FOR FAN BOOST
Temperature boost error and tachometer error events can
cause the fan control PWM output(s) to go to full on. A boost
temperature error event will cause both PWM outputs to go
to full on, while a tachometer event can be either bound to
PWM1 or PWM2.
A fan boost temperature event occurs if any of the four tem-
perature zones exceeds the temperature Fan Boost Limit for
that zone. Once a temperature has exceed the boost limit, it
must drop to a value equal to the boost limit minus the boost
hysteresis before the boost condition is deactivated. The de-
fault setting for Zones 1 and 2 is 60°C and for Zones 3 and 4
it is 35°C.
The tachometer error boost function is enabled via the
Tachometer Fan Boost Control register. Depending on the
setting of the tachometer to PWM binding bits one or both of
the PWM outputs will go to 100% duty cycle upon the detec-
tion of an unmasked Fan Tachometer Error Event. A Fan
Tachometer Error event occurs when a tachometer reading
exceeds the value set in it's FAN Tach Limit register. Once
the error event ends the PWM output(s) will remain at 100%
duty cycled for a time interval, Tach Boost Timeout, as pro-
grammed in the Tachometer Fan Boost Control register. If the
tachometer error event returns during the middle of the timout
interval the Tach Boost Timeout interval will be reset and
restart once the error event ends.
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LM94
12.5 VOLTAGE MONITORING
The LM94 contains inputs for monitoring voltages. Scaling is
such that the correct value refers to approximately 3/4 scale
or 192 decimal on all inputs, except the ±12V. Scaling is ac-
complished by using internal resistor dividers, except for the
±12V. The typical input resistance of these inputs is 200 k
ohms. Input voltages are converted by an 8-bit Delta-Sigma
(ΔΣ) A/D. The Delta-Sigma A/D architecture provides inher-
ent filtering and spike smoothing of the analog input signal.
The ±12V inputs must be scaled externally. A full scale read-
ing is achieved when 1.236V is applied to these inputs. For
optimum performance the +12V should be scaled to provide
a nominal ¾ full scale reading, while the −12V should be
scaled to provide a nominal ¼ scale reading. The thevenin
resistance at the pin should be kept between 1 k and 7 kΩ.
The −12V monitoring is particularly challenging. It is required
that an external offset voltage and external resistors be used
to bring the −12V rail into the positive input voltage region of
the A/D input. It is suggested that the supply rail for the LM94
device be used as the offset voltage. This voltage is usually
derived from the P/S 5V stand-by voltage rail via a ±1% ac-
curate linear regulator. In this fashion we can always assume
that the offset voltage is present when the −12V rail is present
as the system cannot be turned on without the 3.3V stand-by
voltage being present.
Voltage vs Register Reading
Pin Normal
Use
Nominal
Voltage
Register
Reading
at
Nominal
Voltage
Maximum
Voltage
Register
Reading
at
Maximum
Voltage
Minimum
Voltage
Register
Reading
at
Minimum
Voltage
Absolute
Maximum
Range
AD_IN1 +12V1 0.927V C0h 1.236V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to (VDD + 0.05V)
AD_IN2 +12V2 0.927V C0h 1.236V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to (VDD + 0.05V)
AD_IN3 +12V3 0.927V C0h 1.236V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to (VDD + 0.05V)
AD_IN4 FSB_Vtt 1.20V C0h 1.60V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN5 3GIO 1.5V C0h 2V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN6 ICH_Core 1.5V C0h 2V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN7 Vccp1 1.20V C0h 1.60V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN8 Vccp2 1.20V C0h 1.60V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN9 +3.3V 3.30V C0h 4.40V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN10 +5V 5.0V C0h 6.667V FAh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.5V
AD_IN11 SCSI_Core 2.5V C0h 3.333V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN12 Mem_Core 1.969V C0h 2.625V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN13 Mem_Vtt 0.984V C0h 1.312V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN14 Gbit_Core 0.984V C0h 1.312V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to +6.0V
AD_IN15 −12V 0.309V 40h 1.236V FFh 0V 00h −0.3V to (VDD + 0.05V)
AD_IN16 +3.3V S/B 3.3V C0h 3.6V D1h 3.0V AEh −0.3V to +6.0V
The nominal voltages listed in this table are only typical val-
ues. Voltage rails with different nominal voltages can be
monitored, but the register reading at the nominal value is no
longer C0h. For example, a Mem_Core rail at 2.5V nominal
could be monitored with AD_IN12, or a Mem_Vtt rail at 1.2V
could be monitored with AD_IN13.
AD_IN16 is also the power pin of the LM94, therefore special
limitations apply to this AD input. The guaranteed operational
voltage range for the LM94 is 3.0V to 3.6V, therefore the volt-
age input to this pin is limited by this restriction. Care should
also be taken not to apply more than 6V to this pin to prevent
catastrophic damage.
www.national.com 12
LM94
12.6 RECOMMENDED EXTERNAL SCALING RESISTORS
FOR +12V POWER RAILS
The +12V inputs require external scaling resistors. The resis-
tors need to scale 12V down to 0.927V.
20112408
FIGURE 1. Required External Scaling
Resistors for +12V Power Input
To calculate the required ratio of R1 to R2 use this equation:
(1)
It is recommended that the equivalent thevenin resistance of
the divider be between 1k and 7k to minimize errors caused
by leakage currents at extreme temperatures. The best val-
ues for the resistors are: R1=13.7 k and R2=1.15 k. This
yields a ratio of 11.94498, which has a +0.27% deviation from
the theoretical. It is also recommended that the resistors have
±1% tolerance or better.
Each LSB in the voltage value registers has a weight of 12V /
192 = 62.5 mV. To calculate the actual voltage of the +12V
power input, use the following equation:
VIN = (8-bit value register code) x (62.5 mV) (2)
12.7 RECOMMENDED EXTERNAL SCALING CIRCUIT
FOR −12V POWER INPUT
The −12V input requires external resistors to level shift the
nominal input voltage of −12V to +0.309V.
20112410
FIGURE 2. Required External Level Shifting
Resistors for −12V Power Input
The +3.3V standby voltage is used as a reference for the level
shifting. Therefore, the tolerance of this voltage directly ef-
fects the accuracy of the −12V reading. To minimize ratio
errors, a tolerance of better than ±1% should be used. It is
recommended that the equivalent thevenin resistance of the
divider is between 1k and 7k to minimize errors caused by
leakage currents at extreme temperatures. To calculate the
ratio of R1 to R2 use this equation:
(3)
where VIN is the nominal input voltage of −12V, VREF is the
reference voltage of +3.3V and AD_IN is the voltage required
at the AD input for a ¼ scale reading or 0.309V.
Therefore, for this case:
(4)
Using standard 1% resistor values for R1 of 5.76 k and R2
of 1.4 k yields an R1 to R2 ratio of 4.1143.
The input voltage VIN can be calculated using the value reg-
ister reading (VR) using this equation:
(5)
The table below summarizes the theoretical voltage values
for value register readings near −12V.
Value Register VIN % Δ from −12V
15 -13.2068 -10.0563
16 -13.1821 -9.8505
17 -13.1574 -9.6448
18 -13.1327 -9.4390
19 -13.1080 -9.2332
20 -13.0833 -9.0275
21 -13.0586 -8.8217
22 -13.0339 -8.6159
23 -13.0092 -8.4101
24 -12.9845 -8.2044
25 -12.9598 -7.9986
26 -12.9351 -7.7928
27 -12.9104 -7.5871
28 -12.8858 -7.3813
29 -12.8611 -7.1755
30 -12.8364 -6.9698
31 -12.8117 -6.7640
32 -12.7870 -6.5582
33 -12.7623 -6.3524
34 -12.7376 -6.1467
35 -12.7129 -5.9409
36 -12.6882 -5.7351
37 -12.6635 -5.5294
38 -12.6388 -5.3236
39 -12.6141 -5.1178
13 www.national.com
LM94
Value Register VIN % Δ from −12V
40 -12.5894 -4.9121
41 -12.5648 -4.7063
42 -12.5401 -4.5005
43 -12.5154 -4.2947
44 -12.4907 -4.0890
45 -12.4660 -3.8832
46 -12.4413 -3.6774
47 -12.4166 -3.4717
48 -12.3919 -3.2659
49 -12.3672 -3.0601
50 -12.3425 -2.8544
51 -12.3178 -2.6486
52 -12.2931 -2.4428
53 -12.2684 -2.2370
54 -12.2438 -2.0313
55 -12.2191 -1.8255
56 -12.1944 -1.6197
57 -12.1697 -1.4140
58 -12.1450 -1.2082
59 -12.1203 -1.0024
60 -12.0956 -0.7967
61 -12.0709 -0.5909
62 -12.0462 -0.3851
63 -12.0215 -0.1793
64 -11.9968 0.0264
65 -11.9721 0.2322
66 -11.9474 0.4380
67 -11.9228 0.6437
68 -11.8981 0.8495
69 -11.8734 1.0553
70 -11.8487 1.2610
71 -11.8240 1.4668
72 -11.7993 1.6726
73 -11.7746 1.8784
74 -11.7499 2.0841
75 -11.7252 2.2899
76 -11.7005 2.4957
77 -11.6758 2.7014
78 -11.6511 2.9072
79 -11.6264 3.1130
80 -11.6018 3.3188
81 -11.5771 3.5245
82 -11.5524 3.7303
83 -11.5277 3.9361
84 -11.5030 4.1418
85 -11.4783 4.3476
86 -11.4536 4.5534
87 -11.4289 4.7591
88 -11.4042 4.9649
89 -11.3795 5.1707
Value Register VIN % Δ from −12V
90 -11.3548 5.3765
91 -11.3301 5.5822
92 -11.3054 5.7880
93 -11.2807 5.9938
94 -11.2561 6.1995
95 -11.2314 6.4053
96 -11.2067 6.6111
97 -11.1820 6.8168
98 -11.1573 7.0226
99 -11.1326 7.2284
100 -11.1079 7.4342
101 -11.0832 7.6399
102 -11.0585 7.8457
103 -11.0338 8.0515
104 -11.0091 8.2572
105 -10.9844 8.4630
106 -10.9597 8.6688
107 -10.9351 8.8745
108 -10.9104 9.0803
109 -10.8857 9.2861
110 -10.8610 9.4919
111 -10.8363 9.6976
112 -10.8116 9.9034
113 -10.7869 10.1092
12.8 ADDING EXTERNAL SCALING RESISTORS TO
OTHER ANALOG INPUTS
All analog inputs, except AD_IN1 through AD_IN3 and
AD_IN15, include internal resistor dividers. Further scaling of
AD_IN4 through AD_IN14 inputs with external scaling resis-
tors is possible if the errors due to the internal dividers are
accounted. The internal resistors, RIN1 + RIN2 shown in Figure
3, will present to the external divider a minimum resistive load
of 140 kΩ.
20112421
FIGURE 3. AD_IN4 - AD_IN14 External Resistor Divider
12.9 DYNAMIC Vccp MONITORING USING VID
The AD_IN7 (CPU1 Vccp) and AD_IN8 (CPU2 Vccp) inputs
are dynamically monitored using the P1_VIDx and P2_VIDx
inputs to determine the limits. The dynamic comparisons op-
erate independently of the static comparisons which use the
statically programmed limits. The LM94 supports 3 different
specifications for the Voltage Regulator (VRM or VRD) used
on motherboards with Intel CPUs with four different VID
www.national.com 14
LM94
Modes of operation. The Voltage Regulator Specifications
supported are the VRD10/VRM10, VRD10.2 Extended and
VRD11/VRM11, and in this document they will be referred to
as the VRD10, VRD10.2 and VRD11 specifications, respec-
tively.
According to the VRD 10 specification when a VID signal is
ramping to a new value, it steps by one LSB at a time, and
one step occurs every 5 µs. In worse case, up to 20 steps may
occur at once over 100 µs. The Vccp voltage from the VRD
has to settle to the new value within 50 µs of the last VID
change. The LM94 expects that the VID changes will not oc-
cur more frequently than every 5 µs in the VRD10 mode.
Similarly the LM94 can support the timing requirements of the
VRD10.2 and VRD11 specifications.
The VID signals can be changed by the processor under pro-
gram control, by internal thermal events or by external control,
like force PROCHOT.
The reference voltages selected by each value of the VID
code can be found in the different VRM/VRD specifications.
Transient VID values caused by line-to-line skew are ignored
by the LM94. See the VRM/VRD specifications for the worst
case line-to-line skew.
The LM94 averages the VID values over a sampling window
to determine the average voltage that the VID input was indi-
cating during the sampling window. At the completion of a
voltage conversion cycle the LM94 performs limit compar-
isons based on average VID values and not instantaneous
values. The upper limit is determined by adding the upper limit
offset to the average voltage indicated by VID. The lower limit
is determined by subtracting the lower limit offset from aver-
age voltage indicated by VID. If the AD_IN7 (or AD_IN8)
voltage falls outside the upper and lower limits, an error event
is generated. Dynamic and static comparisons are performed
once every 100 ms. The averaging time interval is 1.5 ms.
If at any time during the Vccp sampling window, the VID code
indicates that the VRD/VRM should turn off its output, the dy-
namic Vccp checking is disabled for that sample.
The comparison accuracy is ±25 mV, therefore the compari-
son limits must be set to include this error. Since the Vccp
voltage may be in the process of settling to a new value (due
to a VID change), this settling should be taken into account
when setting the upper and lower limit offsets.
The LM94 has a limitation on the upper limit voltage for dy-
namic Vccp checking. The upper limit cannot exceed
1.5875V. If the sum of the voltage indicated by VID and the
upper offset voltage exceed 1.5875, the upper limit checking
is disabled.
Pins 11 and 12 have dual purpose. When VRD10 mode is
selected they can be used as general purpose inputs whose
state is reflected the BMC and Host Error Status registers. In
the other VRD modes they are used as a VID6 input.
12.10 MONITORING ANALOG TEMPERATURE SENSORS
AD_IN11 and AD_IN15 readings can be routed to the fan
control logic to facilitate the use of external temperature sen-
sors such as the LM60. When these inputs are used for
temperature sensing the digital output returned is in signed
format, that is the MSb is inverted.
The following table lists critical parameters necessary for con-
verting the binary data to temperature.
Input V NOM Full
Scale
(code
256) V
254.5
code V
mV
/LSb
LM60
deg
/LSb
LM50
deg
/LSb
AD_
IN11
2.500
(¾ scale)
3.3333 3.3138 13.0 2.0833 1.3021
AD_
IN15
0.309
(¼ scale)
1.2360 1.2288 4.8 0.7725 0.4828
The following table lists the equations to use for converting
the AD_IN11 or AD_IN15 Digital Value (DV) to a temperature
value.
Input LM60 Equation LM50 Equation
AD_IN11 (DV + 95.44) × 2.0833 (DV + 89.60) × 1.3021
AD_IN15 (DV + 40.18) × 0.7725 (DV + 24.44) × 0.4828
The following table lists the ideal values generated when us-
ing the LM60 at different temperatures.
Temp LM60
Ideal
Vout
AD_IN11 Reading AD_IN15 Reading
Signed
Decimal
Signed
Hex
Signed
Decimal
Signed
Hex
0 0.424 -95.44 A1 -40.18 D8
25 0.5803 -83 AD -8 F8
30 0.6115 -81 AF -1 FF
35 0.6428 -79 B1 5 5
40 0.6740 -76 B4 12 C
45 0.7053 -74 B6 18 12
50 0.7365 -71 B9 25 19
55 0.7678 -69 BB 31 1F
60 0.7990 -67 BD 37 25
65 0.8303 -64 C0 44 2C
70 0.8615 -62 C2 50 32
75 0.8928 -59 C5 57 39
80 0.9240 -57 C7 63 3F
85 0.9553 -55 C9 70 46
90 0.9865 -52 CC 76 4C
95 1.0178 -50 CE 83 53
100 1.0490 -47 D1 89 59
105 1.0803 -45 D3 96 60
110 1.1115 -43 D5 102 66
115 1.1428 -40 D8 109 6D
120 1.1740 -38 DA 115 73
125 1.2053 -35 DD 122 7A
130 1.2365 -33 DF 127 7F
15 www.national.com
LM94
The following table lists the expected ideal digital values when
using the LM50.
Temp LM50
Ideal
Vout
AD_IN11 Reading AD_IN15 Reading
Signed
Decimal
Signed
Hex
Signed
Decimal
Signed
Hex
0 0.5 -89.60 A7 -24.44 E8
25 0.7500 -70 BA 27 1B
30 0.8000 -67 BD 38 26
35 0.8500 -63 C1 48 30
40 0.9000 -59 C5 58 3A
45 0.9500 -55 C9 69 45
50 1.0000 -51 CD 79 4F
55 1.0500 -47 D1 89 59
60 1.1000 -44 D4 100 64
65 1.1500 -40 D8 110 6E
70 1.2000 -36 DC 121 79
75 1.2500 -32 E0 127 7F
80 1.3000 -28 E4 127 7F
85 1.3500 -24 E8 127 7F
90 1.4000 -20 EC 127 7F
95 1.4500 -17 EF 127 7F
100 1.5000 -13 F3 127 7F
105 1.5500 -9 F7 127 7F
110 1.6000 -5 FB 127 7F
115 1.6500 -1 FF 127 7F
120 1.7000 3 3 127 7F
125 1.7500 6 6 127 7F
130 1.8000 10 A 127 7F
12.11 VREF OUTPUT
VREF is a fixed voltage to be used by an external VRD or as
a voltage reference input for the BMC A/D inputs. VREF is 2.5V
±1%. There is internal current limit protection for the VREF
output in case it gets shorted to supply or ground accidentally.
12.12 PROCHOT BACKGROUND INFORMATION
PROCHOT is an output from a processor that indicates that
the processor has reached a predetermined temperature trip
point. At this trip point the processor can be programmed to
lower its internal operating frequency and/or lower its supply
voltage by changing the value of the 6 bit VID that it supplies
to the VRD. The final VID setting and the rate at which it tran-
sitions to the new VID is programmable within the processor.
If PROCHOT is 100% throttled, it does not mean that the CPU
is not executing, but it may mean that the CPU is about to
encounter a thermal trip if the processor temperature contin-
ues to rise.
PROCHOT is also an input to some processors so that an
external controller can force a thermal throttle based on ex-
ternal events.
PROCHOT is no longer asserted by the processor when the
temperature drops below the predefined thermal trip point.
Oscillation around the trip point is avoided by the processor
by requiring that the temperature be above/below the trip
point for a predetermined period of time. A counter inside the
processor is used to track this time and it has to be incre-
mented to a max count for an above temperature trip and
decremented to zero when below the trip temperature setting,
to remove the trip.
The minimum time for PROCHOT assertion is time depen-
dant on the FSB frequency. The minimum time that the pro-
cessor asserts PROCHOT is estimated to be 187 µs.
12.13 PROCHOT MONITORING
PROCHOT monitoring applies to both the P1_PROCHOT
and P2_PROCHOT inputs. Both inputs are monitored in the
same fashion, but the following description discusses a single
monitor. (Px_PROCHOT represents both P1_PROCHOT
and P2_PROCHOT).
PROCHOT monitoring is meant to achieve two goals. One
goal is to measure the percentage of time that PROCHOT is
asserted over a programmable time period. The result of this
measurement can be read from an 8-bit register where one
LSB equals 1/256th of the PROCHOT Time Interval (0.39%).
The second goal is to have a status register that indicates, as
a coarse percentage, the amount of time a processor has
been throttled. This second goal is required in order to com-
municate information over the NIC using ASF, i.e. status can
be sent, not values.
To achieve the first goal, the PROCHOT input is monitored
over a period of time as defined by the PROCHOT Time In-
terval Register. At the end of each time period, the 8-bit
measurement is transferred to the Current Px_PROCHOT
register. Also at the end of each measurement period, the
Current Px_PROCHOT register value is moved to the Aver-
age Px_PROCHOT register by adding the new value to the
old value and dividing the result by 2. Note that the value that
is averaged into the Average Px_PROCHOT register is not
the new measurement but rather the previous measurement.
If the SMBus writes to the Current P1_PROCHOT (or Current
P2_PROCHOT) register, the capture cycle restarts for both
monitoring channels (P1_PROCHOT and P2_PROCHOT).
Also note, that a strict average of two 8-bit values may result
in Average Px_PROCHOT reflecting a value that is one LSB
lower than the Current Px_PROCHOT in steady state.
It should be noted that the 8-bit result has a positive bias of
one half of an LSB. This is necessary because a value of 00h
represents that Px_PROCHOT was not asserted at all during
the sampling window. Any amount of throttling results in a
reading of 01h.
The following table demonstrates the mapping for the 8-bit
result:
8–Bit Result Percentage Thottled
0 Exactly 0%
1 Between 0% and 0.39%
2 Between 0.39% and 0.78%
- -
n Between (n-1)/256 and n/256
- -
253 Between 98.4% and 98.8%
254 Between 98.8% and 99.2%
255 Greater than 99.2%
To achieve the second goal, the LM94 has several compara-
tors that compare the measured percentage reading against
several fixed and 1 variable value. The variable value is user
programmable.
The result of these comparisons generates several error sta-
tus bits described in the following table:
www.national.com 16
LM94
Status Description Comparison Formula
100% Throttle PROCHOT was never de-
asserted during monitoring
interval.
Greater than or equal to 75%
and less than 100%
193 measured value and
not 100%
Greater than or equal to 50%
and less than 75%
129 measured value < 193
Greater than or equal to 25%
and less than 50%
65 measured value < 129
Greater than or equal to
12.5% and less than 25%
33 measured value < 65
Greater than 0% and less
than 12.5%
0 < measured value < 33
Greater than 0% 0 < measured value
Greater than user limit user limit < measured value
These status bits are reflected in the PROCHOT Error Status
Registers. Each of the P1_PROCHOT and P2_PROCHOT
inputs is monitored independently, and each has its own set
of status registers.
In S3 and S4/5 sleep states, the PROCHOT Monitoring func-
tion does not run. VRDx_Hot is disabled from activating
PROCHOT pins in S3 and S4/5. The Current Px_PRO-
CHOT registers are reset to 00h and the Average Px_PRO-
CHOT registers hold their current state. Once the sleep state
changes back to S0, the monitoring function is restarted. After
the first PROCHOT measurement has been made, the mea-
surement is written directly into the Current and Average
Px_PROCHOT registers without performing any averaging.
Averaging returns to normal on the second measurement.
12.14 PROCHOT OUTPUT CONTROL
In some cases, it is necessary for the LM94 to drive the
Px_PROCHOT outputs low. There are several conditions that
cause this to happen.
The LM94 can be told to logically short the two PROCHOT
inputs together. When this is done, the LM94 monitors each
of the Px_PROCHOT inputs. If any external device asserts
one of the PROCHOT signals, the LM94 responds by assert-
ing the other PROCHOT signal until the first PROCHOT
signal is de-asserted. This feature should never be enabled if
the PROCHOT signals are already being shorted by another
means.
Whenever one of the VRDx_HOT inputs is asserted, the cor-
responding Px_PROCHOT pins are asserted by the LM94.
The response time is less than 10 µs. When the
VRDx_HOT input is de-asserted, the Px_PROCHOT pin is no
longer asserted by the LM94. If the LM94 is configured to
short the PROCHOT signals together, it always asserts them
together whenever either of the VRDx_HOT inputs is assert-
ed. This response is disabled in sleep states 3 and 4/5 and
can be disabled through the PROCHOT Control register.
Software can manually program the LM94 to drive a PWM
type signal onto P1_PROCHOT or P2_PROCHOT. This is
done via the PROCHOT Override register. See the descrip-
tion of this register for more details. Once again, if the LM94
is configured to short the PROCHOT signals together, it al-
ways asserts them together whenever this function is en-
abled.
12.15 FAN SPEED MEASUREMENT
The fan tach circuitry measures the period of the fan pulses
by enabling a counter for two periods of the fan tach signal.
The accumulated count is proportional to the fan tach period
and inversely proportional to the fan speed. All four fan tach
signals are measured within 1 second.
Fans in general do not over-speed if run from the correct volt-
age, so the failure condition of interest is under speed due to
electrical or mechanical failure. For this reason only low-
speed limits are programmed into the limit registers for the
fans. It should be noted that, since fan period rather than
speed is being measured, a fan tach error event occurs when
the measurement exceeds the limit value.
12.16 SMART FAN SPEED MEASUREMENT
If a fan's speed is varied using PWM drive of either of the fans
power pins, the tachometer output of the fan is corrupted. The
LM94 includes smart tachometer circuitry that allows an ac-
curate tachometer reading to be achieved despite the signal
corruption. In smart tach mode all four signals are measured
within 4 seconds.
A smart tach capture cycle works according to the following
steps:
1. Both PWM outputs are synchronized such that they
activate simultaneously.
2. Both PWM output active times are extended for up to 50
ms.
3. The number of tach signal periods during the 50 ms
interval are tracked:
a) If less than 1 period is sensed during the 50 ms exten-
sion the result returned is 3FFh.
b) After one period occurs the count for that period is
memorized.
c) If during the 50 ms interval 2 periods do not occur, the
tach value reported is the 1 period count multiplied by
2.
d) If 2 periods do occur, the 2 period count is loaded into
the value register and the 50 ms PWM extension is ter-
minated.
The lowest two bits in each of the Fan Tach value registers
are reserved. The smart tach feature takes advantage of
these bits. In normal tach mode, these bits return 00. In smart
tach mode the two bits determine the accuracy level of the
reading. 11 is most accurate (2 periods used) and 10 is the
least accurate (1 period used). If less than 1 period occurred
during the measurement cycle, the lower two bits are set to
10.
In smart fan tach mode, the TACH_EDGE field is honored in
the LM94 Status/Control register. If only one edge type is ac-
tive, the measurement always uses that edge type (rising or
falling). If both are active, the measurement uses whichever
edge type occurs first.
Typically the minimum RPM captured by smart fan tach mode
is 900 RPM for a fan that produces two pulses per revolution
at about 50% duty cycle.
13.0 Inputs/Outputs
Besides all the pins associated with sensor inputs the LM94
has several pins that are assigned for other specific functions.
13.1 ALERT OUTPUT
The ALERT output is an active-low open drain output signal.
The ALERT output is used to signal a micro-controller that
one or more sensors have crossed their corresponding limit
17 www.national.com
LM94
thresholds. This is generally not a fatal event unless the mi-
cro-controller decides it to be.
If enabled, the ALERT output is asserted whenever any bit in
any BMC Error Status register is set (with the exception of the
fixed PROCHOT threshold bits). By definition, when ALERT
is enabled, it always matches the inverse of the BMC_ERR
bit in the LM94 Status/Control register. When the ALERT out-
put is disabled, an alert event can still be determined by
reading the state of the BMC_ERR bit.
The ALERT functions like an interrupt. The LM94 does not
support the SMBus ARA (Alert Response Address) protocol.
ALERT is only de-asserted when there are no error status bits
set in any BMC Error Status registers. Alternatively, software
can disable the ALERT output to cause it to de-assert. The
ALERT output re-asserts once enabled if any BMC Error Sta-
tus register bits are still set.
The ALERT output also functions in comparator mode for
thermal events, that is the ALERT output will be asserted for
unmasked thermal error events and will de-assert immedi-
ately when the error event ceases. The operation of the
ALERT output is controlled by the LM94 Configuration regis-
ter.
Further information on how the ALERT output behaves can
be found in Section 15.7 MASKING, ERROR STATUS AND
ALERT.
13.2 RESET INPUT/OUTPUT
This pin acts as an active low reset output when power is ap-
plied to the LM94. It is asserted when the LM94 first sees a
voltage that exceeds the internal POR level on its +3.3V S/B
VDD input. The internal registers of the LM94 are reset to their
defaults when power is applied.
After this reset has completed, the RESET pin becomes an
input. When an external device asserts RESET, the LM94
clears the LOCK bit in the LM94 Configuration register. This
feature allows critical registers to be locked and provides a
controlled mechanism to unlock them.
If the LM94 RESET is not used it must be tied high through
an external resistive pull-up to prevent LM94 malfunction.
Within 10 µsec of asserting RESET externally, the Sleep
State Control register shall be automatically set to S4/5. This
causes several error events to be masked according to the
S4/5 masking definitions. Refer to the register descriptions for
more information. RESET may not be detected if it is asserted
for less than 4 µsec.
13.3 PWM1 AND PWM2 OUTPUTS
The PWM outputs are used to control the speed of fans. The
duty cycle of each output is automatically controlled by the
temperature of one or more temperature zones. They are also
influenced by various other inputs and registers. See Sec-
tion 15.10 FAN CONTROL for further information on the
behavior of the PWM outputs.
13.4 VRD1_HOT AND VRD2_HOT INPUTS
These inputs monitor the thermal sensor associated with
each processor VRD on a baseboard. When one of the inputs
is activated, it indicates that the VRD has exceeded a prede-
termined temperature threshold. The LM94 responds by
gradually increasing the duty cycle of any PWM outputs that
are bound to the corresponding processor and setting the ap-
propriate error status bits. The corresponding PROCHOT
signal is also asserted. See the Section 15.10 FAN CON-
TROL and the Section 12.14 PROCHOT OUTPUT CON-
TROL for more information.
13.5 GPIO and GPI PINS
The LM94 has 8 GPIO pins than can act as either as general
purpose inputs or outputs and 2 GPI pins that can act as gen-
eral purpose inputs. Each can be configured and controlled
independently. When acting as an input the pin can be
masked to prevent it from setting a corresponding bit in the
GPI Error status registers. Some of these pins can also func-
tion as tachometer or VID inputs.
13.6 FAN TACH INPUTS
The fan inputs are Schmitt-Trigger digital inputs. Schmitt-
Trigger input circuitry is included to accommodate slow rise
and fall times typical of fan tachometer outputs.
The maximum input signal range is 0V to +6.0V, even when
VDD is less than 5V. In the event that these inputs are supplied
from fan outputs, which exceed 0V to +6.0V, either resistive
attenuation of the fan signal or diode clamping must be in-
cluded to keep inputs within an acceptable range, thereby
preventing damage to the LM94.
Hot plugging fans can involve spikes on the Tach signals of
up to 12V so diode protection or other circuitry is required. For
“Hot Plug” fans, external clamp diodes may be required for
signal conditioning.
14.0 SMBus Interface
The SMBus is used to communicate with the LM94. LM94
SMBus interface lines are designed to be tolerant to 5V sig-
nalling. Necessary pull-ups are located on the baseboard.
Care should be taken to ensure that only one pull-up is used
for each SMBus signal. The SMBus interface obeys the SM-
Bus 2.0 protocols and signaling levels.
The SMBus interface of the LM94 does not load down the
SMBus if no power is applied to the LM94. This allows a mod-
ule containing the LM94 to be powered down and replaced, if
necessary.
14.1 SMBus ADDRESSING
Each time the LM94 is powered up, it latches the assigned
SMBus slave address (determined by ADDR_SEL) during the
first valid SMBus transaction in which the first five bits of the
targeted slave address match those of the LM94 slave ad-
dress. Once the address has been latched, the LM94 contin-
ues to use that address for all future transactions until power
is lost.
The address select input detects three different voltage levels
and allows for up to 3 devices to exist in a system. The ad-
dress assignment is as follows:
Address Select Pin
(ADDR_SEL)
Slave Address
Assignment
High 01011 01
VDD/2 01011 10
Low 01011 00
14.2 DIGITAL NOISE EFFECT ON SMBus
COMMUNICATION
Noise coupling into the digital lines (greater than 150mV),
overshoot greater than VDD and undershoot less than GND,
may prevent successful SMBus communication with the
LM94. SMBus No Acknowledge (NACK) is the most common
symptom, causing unnecessary traffic on the bus. Although,
the SMBus maximum frequency of communication is rather
low (100 kHz max), care still needs to be taken to ensure
proper termination within a system with multiple parts on the
bus and long printed circuit board traces. The LM94 includes
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LM94
on chip low-pass filtering of the SMBCLK and SMBDAT sig-
nals to make it more noise immune. Minimize noise coupling
by keeping digital traces out of switching baseboard areas as
well as ensuring that digital lines containing high speed data
communications cross at right angles to the SMBDAT and
SMBCLK lines.
14.3 GENERAL SMBus TIMING
The SMBus 2.0 specification defines specific conditions for
different types of read and write operations but in general the
SMBus protocol operates as follows:
The master initiates data transfer by establishing a START
condition, defined as a high to low transition on the serial data
line SMBDAT while the serial clock line SMBCLK remains
high. This indicates that a data stream follows. All slave pe-
ripherals connected to the serial bus respond to the START
condition, and shift in the next 8 bits. This consists of a 7-bit
slave address (MSB first) plus a R/W bit, which determines
the direction of the data transfer, i.e. whether data is written
to or read from the slave device (0 = write, 1 = read).
The peripheral whose address corresponds to the transmitted
address responds by pulling the data line low during the low
period before the ninth clock pulse, known as the Acknowl-
edge Bit, and holding it low during the high period of this clock
pulse. All other devices on the bus now remain idle while the
selected device waits for data to be read from or written to it.
If the R/W bit is a 0 then the master writes to the slave device.
If the R/W bit is a 1 the master reads from the slave device.
Data is sent over the serial bus in sequences of 9 clock puls-
es, 8 bits of data followed by an Acknowledge bit. Data
transitions on the data line must occur during the low period
of the clock signal and remain stable during the high period,
as a low to high transition when the clock is high may be in-
terpreted as a STOP signal.
If the operation is a write operation, the first data byte after
the slave address is a command byte. This tells the slave de-
vice what to expect next. It may be an instruction, such as
telling the slave device to expect a block write, or it may simply
be a register address that tells the slave where subsequent
data is to be written.
Since data can flow in only one direction as defined by the R/
W bit, it is not possible to send a command to a slave device
during a read operation. Before doing a read operation, it is
necessary to do a write operation to tell the slave what sort of
read operation to expect and/or the address from which data
is to be read.
When all data bytes have been read or written, stop conditions
are established. In WRITE mode, the master will allow the
data line to go high during the 10th clock pulse to assert a
STOP condition. In READ mode, the slave drives the data not
the master. For the bit in question, the slave is looking for an
acknowledge and the master doesn't drive low. This is known
as ‘No Acknowledge’. The master then takes the data line low
during the low period before the 10th clock pulse, then high
during the 10th clock pulse to assert a STOP condition.
Note, a repeated START may be given only between a write
and read operation that are in succession.
14.4 SMBus ERROR SAFETY FEATURES
To provide a more robust SMBus interface, the LM94 incor-
porates a timeout feature for both SMBCLK and SMBDAT. If
either signal is low for a long period of time (see SMBus AC
specs), the LM94 SMBus state machine reverts to the idle
state and waits for a START signal. Large block transfers of
all zeros should be avoided if the SMBCLK is operating at a
very low frequency to avoid accidental timeouts. Pulling the
Reset pin low does not reset the SMBus state machine. If the
LM94 SMBDAT pin is low during a system reset, the LM94’s
state machine timeouts and resets automatically. If the
LM94’s SMBDAT pin is high during a system reset, the first
assertion of a start by the master resets the LM94’s interface
state machine.
Although it is a violation of the SMBus specification, in some
cases a START or STOP signal occurs in the middle of a byte
transfer instead of coming after an acknowledge bit. If this
occurs, only a partial byte was transferred. If a byte was being
written, it is aborted and the partial byte is not committed. If a
byte was being read from a read-to-clear register, the register
is not cleared.
14.5 SERIAL INTERFACE PROTOCOLS
The LM94 contains volatile registers, the registers occupy
address locations from 00h to EFh.
Data can be read and written as a single byte, a word, or as
a block of several bytes. The LM94 supports the following
SMBus/I2C transactions/protocols:
Send Byte
Write Byte
Write Word
SMBus Write Block
I2C Block Write
Read Byte
Read Word
SMBus Read Block
SMBus Block-Write Block-Read Process Call
I2C Block Read
In addition to these transactions the LM94 supports a few ex-
tra items and also has some behavior that must be defined
beyond the SMBus 2.0 specification. No other SMBus 2.0
transactions are supported (PEC, ARA etc.).
The SMBus specification defines several protocols for differ-
ent types of read and write operations. The ones used in the
LM94 are discussed below. The following abbreviations are
used in the diagrams:
S— START
P— STOP
R— READ
W— WRITE
A— ACKNOWLEDGE
/A — NO ACKNOWLEDGE
14.5.1 Address Incrementing
The established base address does not increment. Repeat-
edly reading without re-establishing a new base address
returns data from the same address each time. I2C read
transactions can use this information and skip reestablishing
the base address, when only one master is used. One ex-
ception to this rule exists when a block write and block read
is used to emulate a block write/read process call. This is de-
tailed later, see the Block Write/Read Process Call descrip-
tion.
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LM94
14.5.2 Block Command Code Summary
Block command codes control the block read and write operations of the LM94 as summarized in the following table:
Command Code Name Value Description
Block Write Command F0h SMBus Block Write Command Code
Block Read Command F1h SMBus Block Write/Read Process Call
Fixed Block 0 F2h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 40h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 1 F3h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 48h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 2 F4h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 50h, size 6 bytes
Fixed Block 3 F5h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 56h, size 16 bytes
Fixed Block 4 F6h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 67h, size 4 bytes
Fixed Block 5 F7h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 6Eh, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 6 F8h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 78h, size 12 bytes
Fixed Block 7 F9h Fixed Block Read Command Code: address 90h, size 32 bytes
Fixed Block 8 FAh Fixed Block Read Command Code: address B4h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 9 FBh Fixed Block Read Command Code: address C8h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 10 FCh Fixed Block Read Command Code: address D00h, size 16 bytes
Fixed Block 11 FDh Fixed Block Read Command Code: address E5h, size 9 bytes
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LM94
14.5.3 Write Operations
The LM94 supports the following SMBus write protocols.
14.5.3.1 Write Byte
In this operation the master device sends an address byte and one data byte to the slave device, as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a command code (register address).
5. The slave asserts ACK.
6. The master sends the data byte.
7. The slave asserts ACK.
8. The master asserts a STOP condition to end the transaction.
12 34 5678
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A Data
Byte
A P
14.5.3.2 Write Word
In this operation the master device sends an address byte and two data bytes to the slave device, as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a command code (register address).
5. The slave asserts ACK.
6. The master sends the low data byte.
7. The slave asserts ACK.
8. The master sends the high data byte.
9. The slave asserts ACK.
10. The master asserts a STOP condition to end the transaction.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A Data Byte
Low
A Data Byte
High
A P
14.5.3.3 SMBus Write Block to Any Address
The start address for a block write is embedded in this transaction. In this operation the master sends a block of data to the slave
as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a command code that tells the slave device to expect a block write. The LM94 command code for a block
write is F0h.
5. The slave asserts ACK.
6. The master sends a byte that tells the slave device how many data bytes it will send (N). The SMBus specification allows a
maximum of 32 data bytes to be sent in a block write.
7. The slave asserts ACK.
8. The master sends data byte 1, the starting address of the block write.
9. The slave asserts ACK after each data byte.
10. The master sends data byte 2.
11. The slave asserts ACK.
12. The master continues to send data bytes and the slave asserts ACK for each byte.
13. The master asserts a STOP condition to end the transaction.
21 www.national.com
LM94
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
S Slave
Address
W A Comman
d
F0h
(Block
Write)
A Byte
Count
(N)
A Data
Byte 1
(Start
Address)
A Data
Byte 2
AData
Byte N
A P
Special Notes
1. Any attempts to write to bytes beyond normal address space are acknowledged by the LM94 but are ignored.
2. Block writes do not wrap from address FFh back to 00h the address remains at FFh.
3. The Byte Count field is ignored by the LM94. The master device may send more or less bytes and the LM94 accepts them.
4. The SMBus specification requires that block writes never exceed 32 data bytes. Meeting this requirement means that only 31
actual data bytes can be sent (the register address counts as one byte). The LM94 does not care if this requirement is met.
14.5.3.4 I2C Block Write
In this transaction the master sends a block of data to the LM94 as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends the starting address of the block write.
5. The slave asserts ACK after each data byte.
6. The master sends data byte 1.
7. The slave asserts ACK.
8. The master continues to send data bytes and the slave asserts ACK for each byte.
9. The master asserts a STOP condition to end the transaction
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A Data
Byte 1
AData
Byte N
A P
Special Notes:
1. Any attempts to write to bytes beyond normal address space are acknowledged by the LM94 but are ignored.
2. Block writes do not wrap from address FFh back to 00h the address remains at FFh.
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LM94
14.5.4 Read Operations
The LM94 uses the following SMBus read protocols.
14.5.4.1 Read Byte
In the LM94, the read byte protocol is used to read a single byte of data from a register. In this operation the master device receives
a single byte from a slave device, as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a register address.
5. The slave asserts an ACK.
6. The master sends a Repeated START.
7. The master sends the slave address followed by the read bit (high).
8. The slave asserts an ACK.
9. The master receives a data byte and asserts a NACK.
10. The master asserts a STOP condition and the transaction ends.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A S Slave
Address
R A Data
Byte
/A P
14.5.4.2 Read Word
In the LM94, the read word protocol is used to read two bytes of data from a register or two consecutive registers. In this operation
the master device reads two bytes from a slave device, as follows:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a register address.
5. The slave asserts an ACK.
6. The master sends a Repeated START.
7. The master sends the slave address followed by the read bit (high).
8. The slave asserts an ACK.
9. The master receives the Low data byte and asserts an ACK.
10. The master receives the High data byte and asserts a NACK.
11. The master asserts a STOP condition and the transaction ends.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A S Slave
Address
R A Data
Byte Low
A Data
Byte High
/A P
14.5.4.3 SMBus Block-Write Block-Read Process Call
This transaction is used to read a block of data from the LM94. Below is the sequence of events that occur in this transaction:
1. The master device asserts a START condition.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the write bit (low).
3. The addressed slave device asserts ACK.
4. The master sends a command code that tells the slave device to expect a block read (F1h) and the slave asserts ACK.
5. The master sends the Byte Count for this write which is 2 and the slave asserts ACK.
6. The master sends the Start Register Address for the block read and the slave asserts the ACK.
7. The master sends the Byte Count (1-32) for the block read processes call and the slave asserts ACK.
8. The master asserts a repeat START condition.
9. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by the read bit (high).
10. The slave asserts ACK.
11. The master receives a byte count data byte that tells it how many data bytes will received. This field reflects the number of
bytes requested by the Byte Count transmitted to the LM94. The SMBus specification allows a maximum of 32 data bytes to
be received in a block read. Then master asserts ACK.
23 www.national.com
LM94
12. The master receives byte 1 and then asserts ACK.
13. The master receives byte 2 and then asserts ACK.
14. The master receives N-3 data bytes, and asserts ACK for each one.
15. The master receives data byte N and asserts a NACK.
16. The master asserts a STOP condition to end the transaction.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
S Slave
Address
W A Block
Read
Comman
d
Code
(F1h)
A Byte
Count
(2h)
A Start
Register
Address
A Byte
Count
(1–20h)
(N)
A S Slave
Address
R A
11 12 13 14 15 15 16
Byte
Count
(1–20h)
(N)
A Data
Byte 1
A Data
Byte 2
AData
Byte N
/A P
Special Notes:
1. The LM94 returns 00h when address locations outside of normal address space are read.
2. Block reads do not wrap around from address FFh to 00h
3. If the master acknowledges more bytes that it requested, the LM94 continues to supply data until the master does not
acknowledge a byte.
4. If the master does not acknowledges a byte to prematurely abort a block read, the LM94 gets off the bus to allow the master
to issue a STOP signal.
14.5.4.4 Simulated SMBus Block-Write Block-Read Process Call
Alternatively, if the master cannot support an SMBus Block-Write Block-Read process call, it can be emulated by two transactions
(a block write followed by a block read). This should only be done in a single master system, since in a dual master system collisions
can occur that corrupt the data and transaction. Below is the sequence of events for these transactions:
1. The master issues a START to start this transaction.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a write bit (low).
3. The slave asserts the ACK.
4. The master sends the Block Read command code (F1h) and the slave asserts the ACK.
5. The master sends the Byte Count (2h) for this transaction and the slave asserts the ACK.
6. The master sends the Start Register Address and the slave asserts the ACK.
7. The master sends the Byte Count (1-20h) for the Block-Read Process Call and the slave asserts the ACK.
8. The master sends a STOP to end this transaction.
9. The master sends a START to start this transaction.
10. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a write bit (low) and the slave asserts the ACK.
11. The master sends the Block Read Command code (F1h) and the slave asserts the ACK.
12. The master sends a repeat START.
13. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a read bit (high) and the slave asserts the ACK.
14. The master receives Byte Count (this matches the size sent by the master in step 7) and asserts the ACK.
15. The master receives Data Byte 1 and asserts the ACK.
16. The master receives Data Byte 2 and asserts the ACK.
17. The master receives N-3 data bytes, and asserts ACK for each one.
18. The master receives the last data byte and asserts a NACK.
19. The master issues a STOP to end this transaction.
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LM94
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
S Slave
Address
W A Block
Read
Comman
d
Code
(F1h)
A Byte
Count
(2h)
A Start
Register
Address
A Byte
Count
(1–20h)
(N)
A P S Slave
Address
W A
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 16
Block
Read
Command
Code
(F1h)
A S Slave
Address
R A Byte
Count
(1–20h)
(N)
A Data
Byte 1
A Data
Byte 2
AData
Byte N
/A P
Special Notes:
1. Steps 9 through 19 can be repeated to read another block of data. The address auto-increments such that the next block starts
where the last block left off. The size returned by the LM94 is the same each time.
2. The LM94 returns 00h when address locations outside of normal address space are read.
3. Block reads do not wrap around from address FFh to 00h
4. If the master acknowledges more bytes that it requested, the LM94 continues to supply data until the master does not
acknowledge a byte.
5. If the master does not acknowledges a byte to prematurely abort a block read, the LM94 gets off the bus to allow the master
to issue a STOP signal.
6. After a block read is finished, the base address of the LM94 is updated to point to the byte just beyond the last byte read.
14.5.4.5 SMBus Fixed Address Block Reads
Block reads can be performed from pre-defined addresses. A special command code has been reserved for each pre-defined
address. See the Section 14.5.2 Block Command Code Summary for more details on the command codes. Below is the sequence
of events that occur for this type of block read:
1. The master sends a START to start this transaction.
2. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a write bit (low).
3. The slave asserts an ACK.
4. The master sends a Fixed Block Command Code (F2h-FDh) and the slave asserts an ACK.
5. The master sends a repeated START.
6. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a read bit (high).
7. The slave asserts an ACK.
8. The master receives the Byte Count (depends on the Fixed Block Command Code used) and asserts an ACK.
9. The master receives the first data byte and asserts an ACK.
10. The master continues to receive data bytes and asserting an ACK.
11. The master receives the last data byte.
12. The master asserts a NACK.
13. The master issues a STOP to end this transaction.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
S Slave
Address
W A Fixed
Block
Command
Code
(F2h–FDh)
A S Slave
Address
R A Byte
Count
(N)
A Data
Byte 1
AData
Byte N
/A P
Special Notes:
1. The LM94 returns 00h when address locations outside of normal address space are read.
2. Block reads do not wrap around from address FFh to 00h.
3. If the master acknowledges more bytes that it requested, the LM94 continues to supply data until the master does not
acknowledge a byte.
4. If the master does not acknowledges a byte to prematurely abort a block read, the LM94 gets off the bus to allow the master
to issue a STOP signal.
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LM94
14.5.4.6 I2C Block Reads
The LM94 supports I2C block reads. The following sequence of events occur in this transaction:
1. The master sends a START to start this transaction .
2. The master send 7-bit slave address followed by a write bit (low).
3. The slave asserts an ACK.
4. The master sends the register address and the slave asserts an ACK.
5. The master sends a repeated START.
6. The master sends the 7-bit slave address followed by a read bit (high).
7. The slave asserts an ACK.
8. The master receives Data Byte 1 and asserts an ACK.
9. The master continues to receive bytes and asserting an ACK for each byte received.
10. The master receives the last byte.
11. The master asserts a NACK.
12. The master issues a STOP.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
S Slave
Address
W A Register
Address
A S Slave
Address
R A Data
Byte 1
A Data
Byte 2
AData
Byte N
/A P
Special Notes:
1. The LM94 returns 00h when address locations outside of normal address space are read.
2. Block reads do not wrap around from address FFh to 00h.
3. If the master acknowledges more bytes that it requested, the LM94 continues to supply data until the master does not
acknowledge a byte.
4. If the master does not acknowledges a byte to prematurely abort a block read, the LM94 gets off the bus to allow the master
to issue a STOP signal.
14.6 READING AND WRITING 16-BIT REGISTERS
Whenever the low byte of a 16-bit register is read, the high
byte is frozen. After the high byte is read, it is unfrozen. This
ensures that the entire 16-bit value is read properly and the
high byte matches with the low byte. If the low byte of a dif-
ferent 16-bit register is read, the currently frozen high byte is
unfrozen and the high byte of the new 16-bit register is frozen.
In a system with two SMBus masters, it is very important that
only one master reads any 16-bit registers at a time. One
possible method to achieve this would involve using 16-bit
SMBus reads (instead of two separate 8-bit reads) to read 16-
bit registers.
Whenever the low byte of a 16-bit register is written, the write
is buffered and does not take effect until the corresponding
high byte is written. If the low byte of a different 16-bit register
is written, the previously buffered low byte of the first register
is discarded. If a device attempts to write the high byte of a
16-bit register, and the corresponding low byte was not written
(or was discarded), then the LM94 will NACK the byte.
15.0 Using The LM94
15.1 POWER ON
The LM94 generates a power on reset signal on RESET when
power is applied for the first time to the part.
15.2 RESETS
Upon power up, the RESET output is asserted when the volt-
age on the power supply crosses the power-on-reset thresh-
old level (see Electrical Specifications). The RESET output is
open-drain and should be used with an external pull-up re-
sistor connected to VDD. Once the power on reset has com-
pleted, the RESET pin becomes an input and 10 µs after
assertion of RESET the LOCK bit in the LM94 Configuration
register shall be cleared. In addition, 10 µs after assertion of
RESET the sleep control register shall be automatically set to
S4/S5. This causes several error events to be masked ac-
cording to the S4/S5 masking definitions. Since the RESET
pin becomes an active input, it must not be left floating at any
time as this may cause the LM94 to drift into S4/S5 and thus
have unpredictable behavior. RESET must be asserted for
more than 4µs in order to guarantee detection.
Register Types Power
On Reset
External
Reset
Factory regs x
BMC Error Status regs x
Host Error Status regs x
Value regs
Limit regs x
Setup regs x
LM94 Configuration Lock Bit x x
LM94 Configuration GMSK Bit x (reset)
Sleep Mask x
Sleep State Control x
Other Mask regs x
All other registers are not effected by power on reset or ex-
ternal reset.
15.3 ADDRESS SELECTION
LM94 is designed to be used primarily in dual processor serv-
er systems that may require only one monitoring device.
If multiple LM94 devices are implemented in a system, they
must have unique SMBus slave addresses. See the Sec-
tion 14.1 SMBus ADDRESSING for more information.
The board designer may apply a 10 k pull-down and/or pull-
up resistors to ground and/or to 3.3V SB VDD on the
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LM94
ADDR_SEL pin. The LM94 is designed to work with resistors
of 5% tolerance for the case where two resistors are required.
Upon the first SMBus communication to the part, the LM94
assigns itself an SMBus address according to the ADDR_SEL
input.
Address
Select
Board
Implementation
SMBus
Address
less-than 10% of VDD Pulled to ground through a 10 k resistor 0101 100b
VDD/2 10 kΩ (5%) Resistor to 3.3V SB VDD and to Ground 0101 110b
greater-than 90% of VDD Pulled to 3.3V SB VDD through a 10 k resistor 0101 101b
15.4 DEVICE SETUP
BIOS executes the following steps to configure the registers
in the LM94. All steps may not be necessary if default values
are acceptable.
Set limits and parameters (not necessarily in this order):
Set up Fan control
Set up PWM temperature bindings
Set fan tach limits
Set fan boost temperature and hysteresis
Set the VRD_HOT and PROCHOT PWM ramp control rate
Enable Smart Tach Mode and Tachometer Input to PWM
binding (required with PWM drive of fan ground or power
pins)
Set the temperature absolute limits
Set the temperature hysteresis values
Set temperature filtered or unfiltered usage
Set the Zone Adjustment Offset temperature
Set the PROCHOT override and time interval values
Set the PROCHOT user limit
Enable THERMTRIP masking of error events (if GPIO4
and GPIO5 are used as THERMTRIP inputs)
Set voltage sensor limits and hysteresis
Set the Dynamic Vccp offset limits
Set the Sleep State control and mask registers
Set Other Mask Registers (GPI Error, VRDx_HOT, and
Dynamic Vccp limit checking)
Set start bit to select user values and unmask error events
Set the sleep state to 0
Set Lock bit to lock the limit and parameter registers
(optional)
15.5 ROUND ROBIN VOLTAGE/TEMPERATURE
CONVERSION CYCLE
The LM94 monitoring function is started as soon as the part
is powered up. The LM94 performs a “round robin” sampling
of the inputs, in the order shown below. Each cycle of the
round robin is completed in less than 100 ms.
The results of the sampling and conversions can be found in
the value registers and are available at any time.
Channel
#
Input Typical Assignment
3 Temp Zone 3 Internal Temperature
Reading
1 Temp Zone 1a Remote Diode 1a Temp
Reading
Temp Zone 1b Remote Diode 1b Temp
Reading (if selected)
2 Temp Zone 2a Remote Diode 2a Temp
Reading
Temp Zone 2b Remote Diode 2b Temp
Reading (if selected)
4 AIN1 +12V1 (if selected)
5 AIN2 +12V2 (if selected)
6 AIN3 +12V3
7 AIN4 FSB_Vtt
8 AIN5 3GIO/PXH/MCH_Core
9 AIN6 ICH_Core
10 AIN7 CPU_1Vccp
11 AIN8 CPU2_Vccp
12 AIN9 3.3V
13 AIN10 +5V
14 AIN11 SCSI_Core
Channel
#
Input Typical Assignment
15 AIN12 Mem_Core
16 AIN13 Mem_Vtt
17 AIN14 GBIT_Core
18 AIN15 −12V
19 AIN16 3.3V SB VDD Supply Rail
15.6 ERROR STATUS REGISTERS
The LM94 contains several error status registers for the BMC
side, and duplicated error status registers for the Host side.
These registers are used to reflect the state of all the possible
error conditions that the LM94 monitors.
The BMC/Host Error Status registers hold a set bit until the
event is cleared by software, even if the condition causing the
error event goes away.
To clear a bit in the Error Status registers, a ‘1’ has to be writ-
ten to the specific bit that is required to be cleared. If the event
that caused the error is no longer active then the bit is cleared.
Clearing a bit in a BMC Error Status register does not clear
the corresponding bit in the Host Error Status register or vise
versa.
15.6.1 ASF Mode
Error Status registers function allow the LM94 to act as a
legacy sensor (6.1.2 of ASF spec DSP0114 rev 2) and to
easily connect to the SMBus of an ASF capable NIC chip.
The LM94 can be placed into ASF mode by setting the ap-
propriate bit in the LM94 Status/Control register. Once this bit
is set, the BMC Error Status registers become read-to-clear.
Writing a ‘1’ to clear a particular bit is also allowed in ASF
mode. The Host Error Status registers are not effected by ASF
mode.
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LM94
15.7 MASKING, ERROR STATUS AND ALERT
Masking is always applied to bits in the HOST and BMC Error
Status registers. If an event is masked, the corresponding er-
ror bit in the HOST or BMC Error Status registers is prevented
from ever being set. As a result, this prevents the event from
ever causing ALERT to be asserted. Masking an event does
not clear its associated Error Status bit if it is currently set.
Voltage errors are masked by writing a high voltage limit value
of FFh. This is the default high limit for all voltages.
Temperature errors are masked by writing a high temperature
limit value of 80h. This is the default high limit for all temper-
atures. Masking a temperature channel masks both temper-
ature errors and diode fault errors.
The GPI Mask register allows GPI errors to be masked. Any
bits that are set in this register mask events for the corre-
sponding GPIO_x pin.
User PROCHOT status is not really an error but it can be used
to notify the user of processor throttling past a preset USER
limit. A user limit of FFh acts as the mask for this register.
Error bits associated with the predefined PROCHOT thresh-
olds cannot be masked. It is important to note though, that
these error bits do not cause BMC_ERR, HOST_ERR, or
ALERT to be asserted under any condition.
Fan tach errors are masked if the tach limit for the given tach
is set to FFh .
GPI errors and VRDx_HOT errors can be masked by setting
the appropriate bit in the GPI and Miscellaneous Error Mask
registers.
When the LM94 powers up, the ALERT output is disabled.
The ALERT output can be enabled by setting the ALERT_EN
bit in the LM94 Configuration register.
In addition the manual masking options, the LM94 also masks
some errors depending on the sleep state of the system. The
sleep state of the system is communicated to the LM94 by
writing to the Sleep State Control register. Some types of error
events are always masked in certain sleep modes. Some
types of error events are optionally masked in certain sleep
modes if their sleep mask register bit is set. Refer to the reg-
ister descriptions for more information.
15.8 LAYOUT AND GROUNDING
Analog components such as voltage dividers should be phys-
ically located as close as possible to the LM94. See Sec-
tion 15.9.2 PCB Layout for Minimizing Noise for thermal diode
layout recommendations.
The LM94 bypass capacitors, the parallel combination of
100 pF, 10 µF (electrolytic or tantalum) and 0.1 µF (ceramic)
bypass capacitors must be connected between power pin (pin
39) and ground, and should be located as close as possible
to the LM94. The 100 pF capacitor should be placed closest
to the power pin.
15.9 THERMAL DIODE APPLICATION
To measure temperature external to the LM94, use a remote
discrete diode to sense the temperature of external objects or
ambient air. The temperature of a discrete diode is affected,
and often dominated, by the temperature of its leads.
Most silicon diodes do not lend themselves well to this appli-
cation. It is recommended that a MMBT3904 transistor type
base emitter junction be used with the collector tied to the
base.
Thermal Diode Temperature vs. LM94 Temperature
Reading
20112415
15.9.1 DIODE NON-IDEALITY
15.9.1.1 Diode Non-Ideality Factor Effect on Accuracy
When a transistor is connected as a diode, the following re-
lationship holds for variables VBE, T and IF:
(6)
where:
q = 1.6×10−19 Coulombs (the electron charge),
T = Absolute Temperature in Kelvin
k = 1.38×10−23joules/K (Boltzmann's constant),
η is the non-ideality factor of the process the diode is
manufactured on,
IS = Saturation Current and is process dependent,
If= Forward Current through the base emitter junction
VBE = Base Emitter Voltage drop
In the active region, the -1 term is negligible and may be elim-
inated, yielding the following equation
(7)
In Equation 7, η and IS are dependant upon the process that
was used in the fabrication of the particular diode. By forcing
two currents with a well controlled ratio(IF2/IF1) and measuring
the resulting voltage difference, it is possible to eliminate the
IS term. Solving for the forward voltage difference yields the
relationship:
(8)
Solving Equation 8 for temperature yields:
(9)
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LM94
Equation 9 holds true when a diode connected transistor such
as the MMBT3904 is used. When this “diode” equation is ap-
plied to an integrated diode such as a processor transistor
with its collector tied to GND as shown in Figure 4 it will yield
a wide non-ideality spread. This wide non-ideality spread is
not due to true process variation but due to the fact that
Equation 9 is an approximation.
TruTherm technology uses the transistor equation, Equation
10, which is a more accurate representation of the topology
of the thermal diode found in an FPGA or processor.
(10)
20112443
FIGURE 4. Thermal Diode Current Paths
TruTherm should only be enabled when measuring the tem-
perature of a transistor integrated as shown in the processor
of Figure 4, because Equation 10 only applies to this topology.
15.9.1.2 Calculating Total System Accuracy
The voltage seen by the LM94 also includes the IFRS voltage
drop of the series resistance. The non-ideality factor, η, is the
only other parameter not accounted for and depends on the
diode that is used for measurement. Since ΔVBE is propor-
tional to both η and T, the variations in η cannot be distin-
guished from variations in temperature. Since the non-ideality
factor is not controlled by the temperature sensor, it will di-
rectly add to the inaccuracy of the sensor. For the Pentium D
processor on 65nm process, Intel specifies a +4.06%/−0.89%
variation in η from part to part when the processor diode is
measured by a circuit that assumes diode equation, Equation
9, as true. As an example, assume a temperature sensor has
an accuracy specification of ±2.5°C at a temperature of 75 °
C (348 Kelvin) and the processor diode has a non-ideality
variation of +4.06%/−0.89%. The resulting system accuracy
of the processor temperature being sensed will be:
TACC = ± 2.5°C + (+4.06% of 348 K) = +16.6 °C
and
TACC = ± 2.5°C + (−0.89% of 348 K) = −5.6 °C
TruTherm technology uses the transistor equation, Equation
10, resulting in a non-ideality spread that truly reflects the
process variation which is very small. The transistor equation
non-ideality spread is ±0.4% for the Pentium D processor on
65nm process. The resulting accuracy when using TruTherm
technology improves to:
TACC = ±2.5°C + (±0.4% of 348 K) = ± 3.9 °C
The next error term to be discussed is that due to the series
resistance of the thermal diode and printed circuit board
traces. The thermal diode series resistance is specified on
most processor data sheets. For the Pentium D processor on
65 nm process, this is specified at 4.52 typical. The LM94
accommodates the typical series resistance of the Pentium D
processor on 90 nm process. The error that is not accounted
for is the spread of the Pentium's series resistance, that is
2.79 to 6.24 or ±1.73. The equation to calculate the tem-
perature error due to series resistance (TER) for the LM94 is
simply:
(11)
Solving Equation 11 for RPCB equal to ±1.73 results in the
additional error due to the spread in the series resistance of
±1.07°C. The spread in error cannot be canceled out, as it
would require measuring each individual thermal diode de-
vice. This is quite difficult and impractical in a large volume
production environment.
Equation 11 can also be used to calculate the additional error
caused by series resistance on the printed circuit board. Since
the variation of the PCB series resistance is minimal, the bulk
of the error term is always positive and can simply be can-
celled out by subtracting it from the output readings of the
LM94.
15.9.1.3 Compensating for Different Non-Ideality
In order to compensate for the errors introduced by non-ide-
ality, the temperature sensor is calibrated for a particular
processor. National Semiconductor temperature sensors are
always calibrated to the typical non-ideality and series resis-
tance of a given processor type. The LM94 is calibrated for
two non-ideality factors and series resistance values thus
supporting the MMBT3904 transistor and the Pentium D pro-
cessor on 65nm process without the requirement for addi-
tional trims. For most accurate measurements TruTherm
mode should be turned on when measuring the Pentium D
processor on the 65nm process the error introduced by the
false non-ideality spread (see Section 15.9.1.1 Diode Non-
Ideality Factor Effect on Accuracy). When a temperature
sensor calibrated for a particular processor type is used with
a different processor type, additional errors are introduced.
Temperature errors associated with non-ideality of different
processor types may be reduced in a specific temperature
range of concern through use of software calibration. Typical
non-ideality specification differences cause a gain variation of
29 www.national.com
LM94
the transfer function, therefore the center of the temperature
range of interest should be the target temperature for calibra-
tion purposes. The following equation can be used to calcu-
late the temperature correction factor (TCF) required to
compensate for a target non-ideality differing from that sup-
ported by the LM94.
TCF = [(ηS−ηProcessor) ÷ ηS] × (TCR+ 273 K) (12)
where
ηS = LM94 non-ideality for accuracy specification
ηT = target thermal diode typical non-ideality
TCR = center of the temperature range of interest in °C
The correction factor of Equation 12 should be directly added
to the temperature reading produced by the LM94. For ex-
ample when using the LM94, with the 3904 mode selected, to
measure a AMD Athlon processor, with a typical non-ideality
of 1.008, for a temperature range of 60 °C to 100 °C the cor-
rection factor would calculate to:
TCF=[(1.003−1.008)÷1.003]×(80+273) =−1.75°C
Therefore, 1.75°C should be subtracted from the temperature
readings of the LM94 to compensate for the differing typical
non-ideality target.
15.9.2 PCB Layout for Minimizing Noise
In the following guidelines, Remote+ and Remote -− refer to
the REMOTE1a+, Remote 1b+, REMOTE1−, REMOTE2a+,
Remote2b+ and REMOTE2− pins.
In a noisy environment, such as a power supply, layout con-
siderations are very critical. Noise induced on traces running
between the remote temperature diode sensor and the LM94
can cause temperature conversion errors.
The following guidelines should be followed:
1. Place a 0.1 µF and 100 pF LM94 power bypass
capacitors as close as possible to the VDD pin, with the
100pF capacitor being the closest. Place 10 µF capacitor
in the near vicinity of the LM94 power pin.
2. Place a 100 pF capacitor as close as possible to the
LM94 thermal diode Remote+ and Remote− pins. Make
sure the traces to the 100 pF capacitor are matched and
as short as possible. This capacitor is required to
minimize high frequency noise error.
3. Thermal diodes that share one Remote− pin must have
a separate trace from the LM94 Remote− pin run to each
diode cathode. Do not "daisy chain" these connections.
4. Ideally, the LM94 should be placed within 10 cm of the
thermal diode pins with the traces being as straight, short
and identical as possible. Trace resistance of 1 can
cause as much as 1°C of error.
5. Diode traces should be surrounded by a GND guard ring
to either side, above and below, if possible. This GND
guard should not be between the Remote+ and Remote
− lines. In the event that noise does couple to the diode
lines, it would be ideal if it is coupled to both identically,
i.e. common mode. That is, equally to the Remote+ (D+)
and Remote−(D-) lines. (See figure below):
Recommended Diode Trace Layout
20112420
6. Avoid routing diode traces in close proximity to any power
supply switching or filtering inductors.
7. Avoid running diode traces close to or parallel to high
speed digital and bus lines. Diode traces should be kept
at least 2 cm apart from the high speed digital traces.
8. If it is necessary to cross high speed digital traces, the
diode traces and the high speed digital traces should
cross at a 90 degree angle.
9. The ideal place to connect the LM94’s GND pin is as
close as possible to the Processors GND associated with
the sense diode. In the case of two processors pick a
node in between the two that has the least noise.
10. Leakage current between Remote+ and GND should be
kept to a minimum. Error in the diode temperature
reading may reach 0.4°C with 30 nA of leakage current.
Keeping the printed circuit board as clean as possible
minimizes leakage current. The residue from some
freeze spray can induce high leakage current.
15.10 FAN CONTROL
15.10.1 Automatic Fan Control Methods
The LM94 fan speed control method is optimized for fan noise
reduction, fan power efficiency, fan reliability and minimum
cost. The PWMx outputs can be filtered using an external
switching regulator type output stage that provides 5V to 12V
DC for fan power. A high PWM frequency is required to min-
imize the size and cost of the inductor and other components
used in the output stage. The PWM outputs of the LM94 can
operate up to 22.5 kHz with a variable step size depending
on the fan control mode of operation. The LM94 supports LUT
(Lookup Table) and PI (Proportional Integral) fan control
methods. These methods can function interactively or inde-
pendently as controlled by the PWM binding registers. Figure
5 shows the high level block diagram for these fan control
methods. The mapping/binding of the temperature zones to
the LUTs is completely independent of the PI loops. The tem-
perature zones can be first independently bound to the LUTs
and/or PI loops then each LUT or PI loop can be bound to
either PWM Output. The LUT parameters are independent of
the temperature zone binding. The PI loop controller is a pro-
portional-integral feedback controller. It generates a 9-bit
PWM duty cycle and uses temperature feedback from the
processor thermal zones (Zones 1 and 2). The PWM output
controls the airflow over the processors and thus the temper-
ature of the processors is adjusted by the PI loop to maintain
the hottest temperature reading between the values Tcontrol
and Tcontrol - hysteresis. The LM94 supports 2 processors
and each processor can have two thermal sub-zones. The
hottest of each processor temperature is reported to the Zone
selectors and PI loop inputs. Each processor has an inde-
pendent Tcontrol setting.
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LM94
20112429
FIGURE 5. LUT and PI controller high level block diagram
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LM94
15.10.2 LUT Fan Control Duty Cycles
Several registers in the LM94 use 4-bit values to represent a
duty cycle. All of them use a common mapping that associates
the 4-bit value with a duty cycle. The 4-bit values correspond
also with the 14 steps of the auto fan control algorithm. The
mapping is shown below. This applies for PWM outputs run-
ning at the default 22.5 kHz (high) frequency.
4-Bit Value Step 22.5 kHz (High Frequency)
Duty Cycle
0h 0.00%
1h 1 25.00%
2h 2 31.25%
3h 3 37.50%
4h 4 43.75%
5h 5 50.00%
6h 6 56.25%
7h 7 62.50%
8h 8 68.75%
9h 9 75.00%
Ah 10 81.25%
Bh 11 87.50%
Ch 12 93.75%
Dh 13 100.00%
Eh Reserved
Fh Reserved
15.10.3 Alternate LUT PWM Mapping
The PWM output can operate at lower frequencies, instead of
the default 22.5 kHz. The lower frequencies can be enabled
through the PWMx Control 4 registers. Operating in the lower
frequency mode, enables an alternate mapping of step num-
bers to duty cycle. This effects the auto fan control and all
LM94 registers that describe a duty cycle using a 4-bit value.
This alternate mapping can also be enable when using the
default 22.5 kHz PWM frequency.
The alternate LUT PWM duty cycle mapping is listed in the
following table:
4-Bit Value LUT Step Alternate LUT
Duty Cycle
0h 0%
1h 1 25.00%
2h 2 28.57%
3h 3 32.14%
4h 4 35.71%
5h 5 39.29%
6h 6 42.86%
7h 7 46.43%
8h 8 50.00%
9h 9 53.57%
Ah 10 57.14%
Bh 11 71.43%
Ch 12 85.71%
Dh 13 100.00%
4-Bit Value LUT Step Alternate LUT
Duty Cycle
Eh Reserved
Fh Reserved
15.10.4 Fan Control Priorities
The automatic fan control is not the only function that influ-
ences PWM duty cycle. There are several other functions that
influence the PWM duty cycle. All the functions can be clas-
sified into several categories:
Category
#Category Name
1 PWM to 100% conditions
2 VRDx_HOT ramp-up/ramp-down
3 PROCHOT ramp-up/ramp-down function
4 Manual PWM Override
5 Fan Spin-Up Control
6 Automatic Fan Control Algorithm
The ultimate PWM duty cycle that is chosen can be described
by the following formula:
If (Manual PWM Override is active)
PWM = max(1,2,3,4)
Else
PWM = max(1,2,3,5,6)
So in general, categories 1, 2 and 3 are always active. In ad-
dition to that, either category 4 or categories 5 and 6 are active
depending on whether manual override is enabled. In this
sense the manual override, when enabled, replaces category
5 and 6.
15.10.5 PWM to 100% Conditions
There are several conditions that cause the duty cycles of all
PWM outputs to immediately get set to 100%. They are:
1. any of the four temperature zones exceed the
programmed Fan Boost Limit setting but has not yet
cooled down enough to drop below the hysteresis point
2. a tachometer reading exceeds its limit
3. the OVRID bit is set in the LM94 Status/Control
15.10.6 VRDx_HOT Ramp-Up/Ramp-Down
This function causes the duty cycle of the PWM outputs to
gradually increase over time if VRD1_HOT or VRD2_HOT are
asserted.
When VRDx_HOT is asserted, the ramp function is enabled.
The enabling process involves two steps:
1. The current duty cycle being requested by other PWM
functions is memorized.
2. The ramp function immediately adds one PWM duty
cycle step to the memorized value and requests this duty
cycle.
Once the function is enabled, it gradually adds additional duty
cycle steps every X milliseconds whenever VRDx_HOT is
asserted (X is programmable via the PWM Ramp Control
register). If VRDx_HOT remains asserted for a long enough
time, the duty cycle eventually reaches 100%.
Whenever VRDx_HOT is de-asserted, the ramp function be-
gins to ramp down by subtracting one PWM duty cycle step
every X milliseconds. If VRDx_HOT is currently de-asserted,
and the ramp function is less than to the PWM duty cycle be-
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LM94
ing requested by other functions, the ramp function is dis-
abled.
As long as the function is enabled, it continues to ramp up or
ramp down depending on the state of VRDx_HOT. The ramp
enabling process described above can only re-occur after the
ramp function has been disabled. Rapid assertion/de-asser-
tion of VRDx_HOT does not trigger the enabling process
unless VRDx_HOT was de-asserted long enough for the
ramp function to disable itself.
This ramp function operates independently for VRD1_HOT
and VRD2_HOT. In addition, the ramp function only applies
to the PWM(s) that are bound to one or two VRDx_HOT in-
puts. Depending on the bindings, it is possible that up to four
independent ramp functions are active at any given moment:
PWM1/VRD1
PWM1/VRD2
PWM2/VRD1
PWM2/VRD2
If a PWM is bound to both VRD1_HOT and VRD2_HOT, then
two ramp functions are active for that PWM output. In this
case the duty cycle that is used is the maximum of the two
ramp functions.
15.10.7 PROCHOT Ramp-Up/Ramp-Down
This function is very similar to the VRDx_HOT ramp-up/ramp-
down function. The PWM duty cycle ramps up in the same
fashion whenever the PROCHOT measurement exceeds the
user programmed threshold. Once a new PROCHOT mea-
surement is made that no longer exceeds the user limit, the
PWM will begin to ramp down.
Just as with the VRDx_HOT ramp function, the PROCHOT
ramp function uses independent bindings to determine which
PWM outputs should be effected by each PROCHOT input
(P1_PROCHOT or P2_PROCHOT).
If a PWM is bound to both P1_PROCHOT and P2_PRO-
CHOT, two PROCHOT ramp functions could be active at the
same time. In this case the duty cycle that is used is the max-
imum of the two ramp functions.
15.10.8 Manual PWM Override
When a PWM channel is configured for manual PWM over-
ride, software can manually control the PWM duty cycle.
There are some PWM control functions that could still cause
the duty cycle to be higher than the manual setting. See the
Section 15.10.4 Fan Control Priorities for details.
15.10.9 Fan Spin-Up Control
All of the other PWM control functions are combined to pro-
duce a final duty cycle that is actually used for the PWM
output. If this final value changes from zero to a non-zero val-
ue, the Fan Spin-Up Control function is triggered. Once trig-
gered, the Fan Spin-Up Control requests the programmed
duty cycle for a programmed period of time.
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LM94
15.11 XOR TREE TEST
An XOR tree is provided in the LM94 for Automated Test
Equipment (ATE) board level connectivity testing. This allows
the functionality of all digital inputs to be tested in a simple
manner and any pins that are non-functional or shorted to-
gether to be identified. When the test mode is enabled by
setting the ‘XEN’ bit in the XOR Test register, the part enters
XOR test mode.
The following signals are included in the XOR test tree:
Px_VIDy GPIO_x PWMx Px_PROCHOT VRDx_HOT GPIx RESET
Since the test mode is XOR tree, the order of the signals in
the tree is not important. SMBDAT and SMBCLK should not
be included in the test tree.
Example of XOR Test Tree (not showing all signals)
20112419
To properly implement the XOR TREE test on the PCB, no
pins listed in the tree should be connected directly to power
or ground. If a pin needs to be configured as a permanent low,
such as a GPI, it should be connected to ground through a
low value resister such as 10 k, to allow the ATE (Automatic
Test Equipment) to drive it high.
When generating test waveforms, a typical propagation delay
of 500 ns through the XOR tree should be allowed for.
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LM94
16.0 Registers
16.1 REGISTER WARNINGS
In most cases, reserved registers and register bits return zero when read. This should not be relied upon, since reserved registers
can be used for future expansion of the LM94 functions.
Some registers have “N/D” for their default value. This means that the power-up default of the register is not defined. In the case
of value registers, care should be taken to ensure that software does not read a value register until the associated measurement
function has acquired a measurement. This applies to temperatures, voltages, fan RPM, and PROCHOT monitoring.
16.2 REGISTER SUMMARY TABLE
Register Key
Term Description
N/D Not Defined
N/A Not Applicable
R Read Only
R/W Read or Write
RWC Read or Write to Clear
Loc
k
Register Name Address Default Description
FACTORY REGISTERS
x XOR Test 00h 00h Used to set the XOR test tree mode
SMBus Test 01h 00 SMBus read/write test register
Reserved 02h-04h N/D
REMOTE DIODE” MODE SELECT
x Transistor Mode Select 05h 00h Selects Diode Mode (default) or Transistor Mode for “Remote
Diode” measurements
VALUE REGISTER SECTION 1
Zone 1b (CPU1 Diode b) Temp 06h 00h Measured value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 1b
Zone 2b (CPU2 Diode b) Temp 07h 00h Measured value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 2b
Zone 1b (CPU1 Diode b) Filtered Temp 08h 00h Filtered value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 1b
Zone 2b (CPU2 Diode b) Fitlered Temp 09h 00h Filtered value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 2b
PWM1 8-bit Duty Cycle Value 0Ah 00h 8- bit value of the PWM1 duty cycle.
PWM2 8-bit Duty Cycle Value 0Bh 00h 8-bit value of the PWM2 duty cycle
HIGH RESOLUTION PWM OVERIDE REGISTERS
x PWM1 Duty Cycle Override (low byte) 0Ch 00h Lower byte of the high resolution PWM1 duty cycle register
xPWM1 Duty Cycle Override (high byte) 0Dh 00h Upper byte of the high resolution PWM1 duty cycle register
x PWM2 Duty Cycle Override (low byte) 0Eh 00h Lower byte of the high resolution PWM2 duty cycle register
xPWM2 Duty Cycle Override (high byte) 0Fh 00h Upper byte of the high resolution PWM2 duty cycle register
EXTENDED RESOLUTION TEMPERATURE VALUE REGISTERS
Z1a_LSB 10h 00h Zone 1a (CPU1) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, least-significant byte
Z1a_MSB 11h 00h Zone 1a (CPU1) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z1b_LSB 12h 00h Zone 1b (CPU1) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z1b_MSB 13h 00h Zone 1b (CPU1) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z2a_LSB 14h 00h Zone 2a (CPU2) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z2a_MSB 15h 00h Zone 2a (CPU2) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
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Loc
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Register Name Address Default Description
Z2b_LSB 16h 00h Zone 2b (CPU2) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z2b_MSB 17h 00h Zone 2b (CPU2) extended resolution unfiltered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z1a_F_LSB 18h 00h Zone 1a (CPU1) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, least-significant byte
Z1a_F_MSB 19h 00h Zone 1a (CPU1) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z1b_F_LSB 1Ah 00h Zone 1b (CPU1) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z1b_F_MSB 1Bh 00h Zone 1b (CPU1) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z2a_F_LSB 1Ch 00h Zone 2a (CPU2) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z2a_F_MSB 1Dh 00h Zone 2a (CPU2) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z2b_F_LSB 1Eh 00h Zone 2b (CPU2) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, least-significant-byte
Z2b_F_MSB 1Fh 00h Zone 2b (CPU2) extended resolution filtered temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z3_LSB 20h 00h Zone 3 (Internal) extended resolution temperature value register,
least-significant byte
Z3_MSB 21h 00h Zone 3 (Internal) extended resolution temperature value register,
least-significant byte
Z4_LSB 22h 00h Zone 4 (External Digital) extended resolution temperature value
register, most-significant byte
Z4_MSB 23h 00h Zone 4 (External Digital) extended resolution temperature value
register, least-significant byte
Reserved 24h-30h N/D
PI LOOP AND FAN CONTROL SETUP REGISTERS
x Temperature Source Select 31h 00h Selects the temperature source for some temperature zones.
x PWM Filter Settings 32h 00h Sets the IIR filter coefficients for the PWM outputs for low resolution
sources
x PWM1 Filter Shutoff Threshold 33h 00h PWM1 Filter Shutoff Threshold
x PWM2 Filter Shutoff Threshold 34h 00h PWM2 Filter Shutoff Threshold
x PI/LUT Fan Control Bindings 35h 30h PI/LUT fan control binding configuration
x PI Controller Minimum PWM and
Hysteresis
36h 00h PI Controller Minimum PWM and Hysteresis settings
x Zone 1 Tcontrol 37h 00h Zone 1 (CPU1) PI Controller Target Temperature (Tcontrol)
x Zone 2 Tcontrol 38h 00h Zone 2 (CPU2) PI Controller Target Temperature (Tcontrol)
x Zone 1 Toff 39h 80h Zone 1 (CPU1) PI Controller Off Temperature (Toff)
x Zone 2 Toff 3Ah 80h Zone 2 (CPU2) PI Controller Off Temperature (Toff)
x P Coefficient 3Bh 00h PI controller proportional coefficient
x I Coefficient 3Ch 00h PI controller integral coefficient
x PI Exponents 3Dh 00h PI controller coefficient exponents
DEVICE IDENTIFICATION REGISTERS
Manufacturer ID 3Eh 01h Contains manufacturer ID code
Version/Stepping 3Fh 79h Contains code for major and minor revisions
BMC ERROR STATUS REGISTERS
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LM94
Loc
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Register Name Address Default Description
B_Error Status 1 40h 00h BMC error status register 1
B_Error Status 2 41h 00h BMC error register 2
B_Error Status 3 42h 00h BMC error register 3
B_Error Status 4 43h 00h BMC error register 4
B_P1_PROCHOT Error Status 44h 00h BMC error register for P1_PROCHOT
B_P2_PROCHOT Error Status 45h 00h BMC error register for P2_PROCHOT
B_GPI Error Status 46h 00h BMC error register for GPIs
B_Fan Error Status 47h 00h BMC error register for Fans
HOST ERROR STATUS REGISTERS
H_Error Status 1 48h 00h HOST error status register 1
H_Error Status 2 49h 00h HOST error register 2
H_Error Status 3 4Ah 00h HOST error register 3
H_Error Status 4 4Bh 00h HOST error register 4
H_P1_PROCHOT Error Status 4Ch 00h HOST error register for P1_PROCHOT
H_P2_PROCHOT Error Status 4Dh 00h HOST error register for P2_PROCHOT
H_GPI Error Status 4Eh 00h HOST error register for GPIs
H_Fan Error Status 4Fh 00h HOST error register for Fans
VALUE REGISTERS SECTION 2
Zone 1a (CPU1) Temp 50h 00h Measured value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 1a
Zone 2a (CPU2) Temp 51h 00h Measured value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 2a
Zone 3 (Internal) Temp 52h 00h Measured temperature from on-chip sensor
Zone 4 (External Digital) Temp 53h 00h Measured temperature from external temperature sensor
Zone 1a (CPU1) Filtered Temp 54h 00h Filtered value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 1a
Zone 2a (CPU2) Filtered Temp 55h 00h Filtered value of remote thermal diode temperature channel 2a
AD_IN1 Voltage 56h N/D Measured value of AD_IN1
AD_IN2 Voltage 57h N/D Measured value of AD_IN2
AD_IN3 Voltage 58h N/D Measured value of AD_IN3
AD_IN4 Voltage 59h N/D Measured value of AD_IN4
AD_IN5 Voltage 5Ah N/D Measured value of AD_IN5
AD_IN6 Voltage 5Bh N/D Measured value of AD_IN6
AD_IN7 Voltage 5Ch N/D Measured value of AD_IN7
AD_IN8 Voltage 5Dh N/D Measured value of AD_IN8
AD_IN9 Voltage 5Eh N/D Measured value of AD_IN9
AD_IN10 Voltage 5Fh N/D Measured value of AD_IN10
AD_IN11 Voltage 60h N/D Measured value of AD_IN11
AD_IN12 Voltage 61h N/D Measured value of AD_IN12
AD_IN13 Voltage 62h N/D Measured value of AD_IN13
AD_IN14 Voltage 63h N/D Measured value of AD_IN14
AD_IN15 Voltage 64h N/D Measured value of AD_IN15
AD_IN16 Voltage 65h N/D Measured value of AD_IN16 (VDD 3.3V S/B)
Reserved 66h N/D
Current P1_PROCHOT 67h 00h Measured P1_PROCHOT throttle percentage
Average P1_PROCHOT 68h 00h Average P1_PROCHOT throttle percentage
Current P2_PROCHOT 69h 00h Measured P2_PROCHOT throttle percentage
Average P2_PROCHOT 6Ah 00h Average P2_PROCHOT throttle percentage
GPI State 6Bh 00h Current GPIO state
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Loc
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Register Name Address Default Description
P1_VID 6Ch 00h Current VID value of Processor 1
P2_VID 6Dh 00h Current VID value of Processor 2
FAN Tach 1 LSB 6Eh 00h Measured FAN Tach 1 LSB
FAN Tach 1 MSB 6Fh 00h Measured FAN Tach 1 MSB
FAN Tach 2 LSB 70h 00h Measured FAN Tach 2 LSB
FAN Tach 2 MSB 71h 00h Measured FAN Tach 2 MSB
FAN Tach 3 LSB 72h 00h Measured FAN Tach 3 LSB
FAN Tach 3 MSB 73h 00h Measured FAN Tach 3 MSB
FAN Tach 4 LSB 74h 00h Measured FAN Tach 4 LSB
FAN Tach 4 MSB 75h 00h Measured FAN Tach 4 MSB
Reserved 76h-77h N/D
TEMPERATURE LIMIT REGISTERS
Zone 1 (CPU1) Low Temp 78h 80h Low limit for external thermal diode temperature channel 1 (D1)
measurement
Zone 1 (CPU1) High Temp 79h 80h High limit for external thermal diode temperature channel 1 (D1)
measurement
Zone 2 (CPU2) Low Temp 7Ah 80h Low limit for external thermal diode temperature channel 2 (D2)
measurement
Zone 2 (CPU2) High Temp 7Bh 80h High limit for external thermal diode temperature channel 2 (D2)
measurement
Zone 3 (Internal) Low Temp 7Ch 80h Low limit for local temperature measurement
Zone 3 (Internal) High Temp 7Dh 80h High limit for local temperature measurement
Zone 4 (External Digital) Low Temp 7Eh 80h Low limit for external digital temperature sensor
Zone 4 (External Digital) High Temp 7Fh 80h High limit for external digital temperature sensor
x Fan Boost Temp Zone 1 80h 3Ch Zone 1 (CPU1) fan boost temperature
x Fan Boost Temp Zone 2 81h 3Ch Zone 2 (CPU2) fan boost temperature
x Fan Boost Temp Zone 3 82h 23h Zone 3 (Internal) fan boost temperature
x Fan Boost Temp Zone 4 83h 23h Zone 4 (External Digital) fan boost temperature
Zone1 and Zone 2 Hysteresis 84h 00h Zone 1 and Zone 2 hysteresis for limit comparisons
Zone 3 and Zone 4 Hysteresis 85h 00h Zone 3 and Zone 4 hysteresis for limit comparisons
Reserved 86h-8Dh N/D
ZONE 1b and 2b TEMPERATURE READING ADJUSTMENT REGISTERS
Zone 1b Temp Adjust 8Eh 00h Allows all Zone 1b temperature measurements to be adjusted by a
programmable offset.
Zone 2b Temp Adjust 8Fh 00h Allows all Zone 2b temperature measurements to be adjusted by a
programmable offset.
OTHER LIMIT REGISTERS
AD_IN1 Low Limit 90h 00h Low limit for analog input 1 measurement
AD_IN1 High Limit 91h FFh High limit for analog input 1 measurement
AD_IN2 Low Limit 92h 00h Low limit for analog input 2 measurement
AD_IN2 High Limit 93h FFh High limit for analog input 2 measurement
AD_IN3 Low Limit 94h 00h Low limit for analog input 3 measurement
AD_IN3 High Limit 95h FFh High limit for analog input 3 measurement
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Register Name Address Default Description
AD_IN4 Low Limit 96h 00h Low limit for analog input 4 measurement
AD_IN4 High Limit 97h FFh High limit for analog input 4 measurement
AD_IN5 Low Limit 98h 00h Low limit for analog input 5 measurement
AD_IN5 High Limit 99h FFh High limit for analog input 5 measurement
AD_IN6 Low Limit 9Ah 00h Low limit for analog input 6 measurement
AD_IN6 High Limit 9Bh FFh High limit for analog input 6 measurement
AD_IN7 Low Limit 9Ch 00h Low limit for analog input 7 measurement
AD_IN7 High Limit 9Dh FFh High limit for analog input 7 measurement
AD_IN8 Low Limit 9Eh 00h Low limit for analog input 8 measurement
AD_IN8 High Limit 9Fh FFh High limit for analog input 8 measurement
AD_IN9 Low Limit A0h 00h Low limit for analog input 9 measurement
AD_IN9 High Limit A1h FFh High limit for analog input 9 measurement
AD_IN10 Low Limit A2h 00h Low limit for analog input 10 measurement
AD_IN10 High Limit A3h FFh High limit for analog input 10 measurement
AD_IN11 Low Limit A4h 00h Low limit for analog input 11 measurement
AD_IN11 High Limit A5h FFh High limit for analog input 11 measurement
AD_IN12 Low Limit A6h 00h Low limit for analog input 12 measurement
AD_IN12 High Limit A7h FFh High limit for analog input 12 measurement
AD_IN13 Low Limit A8h 00h Low limit for analog input 13 measurement
AD_IN13 High Limit A9h FFh High limit for analog input 13 measurement
AD_IN14 Low Limit AAh 00h Low limit for analog input 14 measurement
AD_IN14 High Limit ABh FFh High limit for analog input 14 measurement
AD_IN15 Low Limit ACh 00h Low limit for analog input 15 measurement
AD_IN15 High Limit ADh FFh High limit for analog input 15 measurement
AD_IN16 Low Limit AEh 00h Low limit for analog input 16 measurement
AD_IN16 High Limit AFh FFh High limit for analog input 16 measurement
P1_PROCHOT User Limit B0h FFh User settable limit for P1_PROCHOT
P2_PROCHOT User Limit B1h FFh User settable limit for P2_PROCHOT
Vccp1 Limit Offsets B2h 17h VID offset values for window comparator for CPU1 Vccp (AD_IN7)
Vccp2 Limit Offsets B3h 17h VID offset values for window comparator for CPU2 Vccp (AD_IN8)
FAN Tach 1 Limit LSB B4h FCh FAN Tach 1 Limit LSB
FAN Tach 1 Limit MSB B5h FFh FAN Tach 1 Limit MSB
FAN Tach 2 Limit LSB B6h FCh FAN Tach 2 Limit LSB
FAN Tach 2 Limit MSB B7h FFh FAN Tach 2 Limit MSB
FAN Tach 3 Limit LSB B8h FCh FAN Tach 3 Limit LSB
FAN Tach 3 Limit MSB B9h FFh FAN Tach 3 Limit MSB
FAN Tach 4 Limit LSB BAh FCh FAN Tach 4 Limit LSB
FAN Tach 4 Limit MSB BBh FFh FAN Tach 4 Limit MSB
SETUP REGISTERS
Special Function Control 1 BCh 00h Controls the hysteresis for voltage limit comparisons. Also selects
filtered or unfiltered temperature usage for temperature limit
comparisons and fan control.
Special Function Control 2 BDh 00h Enables smart tach detection. Also selects 0.5°C or 1.0°C resolution
for fan control.
x GPI / VID Level Control BEh 00h Control the input threshold levels for the P1_VIDx, P2_VIDx and
GPIO_x inputs.
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LM94
Loc
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Register Name Address Default Description
x PWM Ramp Control BFh 00h Controls the ramp rate of the PWM duty cycle when VRDx_HOT is
asserted, as well as the ramp rate when PROCHOT exceeds the
user threshold.
x Fan Boost Hysteresis (Zones 1/2) C0h 44h Fan Boost Hysteresis for zones 1 and 2
x Fan Boost Hysteresis (Zones 3/4) C1h 44h Fan Boost Hysteresis for zones 3 and 4
x Zones 1/2 Spike Smoothing Control C2h 00h Configures Spike Smoothing for zones 1 and 2
x LUT 1/2 MinPWM and Hysteresis C3h 00h Controls MinPWM and hysteresis setting for LUT 1 and 2 auto-fan
control
x LUT 3/4 MinPWM and Hysteresis C4h 00h Controls MinPWM and hysteresis setting for LUT 3 and 4 auto-fan
control
GPO C5h 00h Controls the output state of the GPIO pins
PROCHOT Control C6h 00h Controls assertion of P1_PROCHOT or P2_PROCHOT
PROCHOT Time Interval C7h 11h Configures the time window over which the PROCHOT inputs are
measured
x PWM1 Control 1 C8h 00h Controls PWM control source bindings.
x PWM1 Control 2 C9h 00h Controls PWM override and output polarity
x PWM1 Control 3 CAh 00h Controls PWM spin-up duration and duty cycle
x PWM1 Control 4 CBh 00h Frequency control for PWM1.
x PWM2 Control 1 CCh 00h Controls PWM control source bindings.
x PWM2 Control 2 CDh 00h Controls PWM override and output polarity
x PWM2 Control 3 CEh 00h Controls PWM spin-up duration and duty cycle
x PWM2 Control 4 CFh 00h Frequency control for PWM2
x LUT 1 Base Temperature D0h 00h Base temperature to which look-up table offset is applied for LUT 1
x LUT 2 Base Temperature D1h 00h Base temperature to which look-up table offset is applied for LUT 2
x LUT 3 Base Temperature D2h 00h Base temperature to which look-up table offset is applied for LUT 3
x LUT 4 Base Temperature D3h 00h Base temperature to which look-up table offset is applied for LUT 4
x Step 2 Temp Offset D4h 00h Step 2 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 3 Temp Offset D5h 00h Step 3 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 4 Temp Offset D6h 00h Step 4 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 5 Temp Offset D7h 00h Step 5 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 6 Temp Offset D8h 00h Step 6 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 7 Temp Offset D9h 00h Step 7 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 8 Temp Offset DAh 00h Step 8 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 9 Temp Offset DBh 00h Step 9 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 10 Temp Offset DCh 00h Step 10 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 11 Temp Offset DDh 00h Step 11 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 12 Temp Offset DEh 00h Step 12 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
x Step 13 Temp Offset DFh 00h Step 13 LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperatures
TACH to PWM Binding E0h 00h Controls the tachometer input to PWM output binding
x Tach Boost Control E1h 3Fh Controls the fan boost function upon a tach error
x LM94 Status/Control E2h 00h Gives Master error status, ASF reset control and Max PWM control
x LM94 Configuration E3h 00h Configures various outputs and provides START bit
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LM94
Loc
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Register Name Address Default Description
SLEEP STATE CONTROL AND MASK REGISTERS
Sleep State Control E4h 03h Used to communicate the system sleep state to the LM94
S1 GPI Mask E5h FFh Sleep state S1 GPI error mask register
S1 Fan Mask E6h 0Fh Sleep state S1 fan tach error mask register
S3 GPI Mask E7h FFh Sleep state S3 GPI error mask register
S3 Fan Mask E8h 0Fh Sleep state S3 fan tach error mask register
S3 Temperature/Voltage Mask E9h 07h Sleep state S3 temperature or voltage error mask register
S4/5 GPI Mask EAh FFh Sleep state S4/5 GPI error mask register
S4/5 Temperature/Voltage Mask EBh 07h Sleep state S4/5 temperature or voltage error mask register
OTHER MASK REGISTERS
GPI Error Mask ECh FFh Error mask register for GPI faults
Miscellaneous Error Mask EDh 3Fh Error mask register for VRDx_HOT, GPI, and dynamic Vccp limit
checking.
ZONE 1a AND 2a TEMPERATURE READING ADJUSTMENT REGISTERS
Zone 1a Temp Adjust EEh 00h Allows all Zone 1a temperature measurements to be adjusted by a
programmable offset
Zone 2a Temp Adjust EFh 00h Allows all Zone 2a temperature measurements to be adjusted by a
programmable offset
BLOCK COMMANDS
Block Write Command F0h N/A SMBus Block Write Command Code
Block Read Command F1h N/A SMBus Block Write/Read Process call
Fixed Block 0 F2h N/A Fixed block code address 40h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 1 F3h N/A Fixed block code address 48h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 2 F4h N/A Fixed block code address 50h, size 6 bytes
Fixed Block 3 F5h N/A Fixed block code address 56h, size 16 bytes
Fixed Block 4 F6h N/A Fixed block code address 67h, size 4 bytes
Fixed Block 5 F7h N/A Fixed block code address 6Eh, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 6 F8h N/A Fixed block code address 78h, size 12 bytes
Fixed Block 7 F9h N/A Fixed block code address 90h, size 32 bytes
Fixed Block 8 FAh N/A Fixed block code address B4h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 9 FBh N/A Fixed block code address C8h, size 8 bytes
Fixed Block 10 FCh N/A Fixed block code address D0h, size 16 bytes
Fixed Block 11 FDh N/A Fixed block code address E5h, size 9 bytes
Reserved FEh-FFh N/A Reserved for future commands
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LM94
16.3 FACTORY REGISTERS 00h–04h
16.3.1 Register 00h XOR Test
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
00h R/W XOR Test RES XEN 00h
Bit Name R/W Default Description Sleep
Masking
0 XEN R/W 0 The LM94 incorporates an XOR tree test mode. When the test mode is enabled by setting
this bit, the part enters XOR test mode. Clearing this bit brings the part out of XOR test
mode.
N/A
7:1 RES R 0 Reserved N/A
16.3.2 Register 01h SMBus Test
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
01h R/W SMBus Test 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
This register can be used to verify that the SMBus can read and write to the device without effecting any programmed settings.
16.3.3 “REMOTE DIODE” MODE SELECT
16.3.3.1 Register 05h Remote-Diode Transistor Mode Select
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
05h R/W Transistor
Mode
Select
RES RES RES RES P2b_T_E
N
P2a_T_E
N
P1b_T_E
N
P1a_T_E
N
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 P1a_T_EN R/W If set, Processor 1 Remote-Diode “a” Transistor Mode enabled.
1 P1b_T_EN R/W If set, Processor 1 Remote-Diode “b” Transistor Mode enabled.
2 P2a_T_EN R/W If set, Processor 2 Remote-Diode “a” Transistor Mode enabled.
3 P2b_T_EN R/W If set, Processor 2 Remote-Diode “b” Transistor Mode enabled.
7:4 RES R Reserved
16.4 VALUE REGISTERS SECTION 1
16.4.1 Registers 06-07h and 50–53h Unfiltered Temperature Value Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
06h R Zone 1b (CPU1) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
07h R Zone 2b (CPU2) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
50h R Zone 1a (CPU1) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
51h R Zone 2a (CPU2) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
52h R Zone 3 (Internal) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
53h R/W Zone 4
(External Digital) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
Zones 1 and 2 are all automatically updated by the LM94. The Zone 3 (Internal) Temp and Zone 4 (External Digital) Temp registers
may be written by an external SMBus device or can be assigned to AD_IN11 and AD_IN15, respectively.
The temperature registers for zones 1 and 2 will return a value of 80h if the remote diode pins are not implemented by the board
designer or are not functioning properly.
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LM94
16.4.2 Registers 08–09h and 54–55h Filtered Temperature Value Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
08h R Zone 1b (CPU1)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
09h R Zone 2b (CPU2)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
54h R Zone 1a (CPU1)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
55h R Zone 2a (CPU2)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
These registers reflect the temperature of zones 1 and 2 after the spike smoothing filter has been applied.
The characteristics of the filtering can be adjusted by using the Zones 1/2 Spike Smoothing Control register.
16.4.3 Register 0Ah and 0Bh PWM1 and PWM2 8-bit Duty Cycle Value
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
0Ah R PWM1
Duty
Cycle
Value
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
0Bh R PWM2
Duty
Cycle
Value
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
These registers report the current duty cycle being driven on the PWM1 or PWM2 outputs. It is the upper 8 bits of the 9-bit PWM
value. It reflects the maximum duty cycle of any low-resolution or high-resolution PWM sources bound to the PWM1 or PWM2
outputs.
16.5 PWM Duty Cycle Overide Registers
16.5.1 Register 0Ch PWM1 Duty Cycle Override (low byte)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
0Ch R/W PWM1 Duty Cycle
Override (low byte)
PWM1_
DC[0]
PWM1_
EN_Hres
_Over
RES RES RES RES RES RES 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
5:0 RES R Reserved
6 PWM1_EN_Hres_Over R/W When this bit is set, high-resolution override for PWM1 is enabled. When
this bit is set, PWM1 will run at the programmed duty cycle: PWM1_DC
[8:0]/256 * 100%; values over 100h are reserved.
7 PWM1_DC[0] R/W When this bit is set, bit [0] of the override duty cycle for PWM1 is set.
If manual PWM1 override is enabled in this register, all other PWM1 bindings are disabled except for the 100% override in the
LM94 Status Control register (E2h).
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LM94
16.5.2 Register 0Dh PWM1 Duty Cycle Override (high byte)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
0Dh R/W PWM1 Duty Cycle
Override (high
byte)
PWM1_DC[8:1] 00h
These bits set the upper 8-bits of the 9-bit override duty cycle value for PWM1.
16.5.3 Register 0Eh PWM2 Duty Cycle Override (low byte)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
0Eh R/W PWM 2 Duty Cycle
Override (low byte)
PWM2_
DC[0]
PWM2_
EN_Hre
s
_Over
RES RES RES RES RES RES 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
5:0 RES R Reserved
6 PWM2_EN_Hres_Over R/W When this bit is set, high-resolution override for PWM2 is enabled. When
this bit is set, PWM2 will run at the programmed duty cycle: PWM2_DC
[8:0]/256 * 100%; values over 100h are reserved.
7 PWM2_DC[0] R/W When this bit is set, bit [0] of the override duty cycle for PWM2 is set.
If manual PWM 2 override is enabled in this register, all other PWM 2 bindings are disabled except for the 100% override in the
LM94 Status Control register (E2h).
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LM94
16.5.4 Register 0Fh PWM2 Duty Cycle Override (high byte)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
0Fh R/W PWM2 Duty Cycle
Override (high
byte)
PWM2_DC[8:1] 00h
These bits set the upper 8-bits of the 9-bit override duty cycle value for PWM2.
16.6 EXTENDED RESOLUTION VALUE REGISTERS
16.6.1 Registers 10h - 17h Zone 1 (CPU1) and Zone 2 (CPU2) Extended Resolution Unfiltered Temperature Value Registers,
Most and Least Significant Bytes
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
10h R Z1a_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
11h R Z1a_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 11h is a mirror of register Zone 1a (CPU1) Temp at address 50h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
12h R Z1b_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
13h R Z1b_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 13h is a mirror of register Zone 1b (CPU1) Temp at address 06h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
14h R Z2a_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
15h R Z2a_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 15h is a mirror of register Zone 2a (CPU2) Temp at address 51h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
16h R Z2b_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
17h R Z2b_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 17h is a mirror of register Zone 2b (CPU2) Temp at address 07h.
45 www.national.com
LM94
16.6.2 Registers 18h – 1Fh Zone 1 (CPU1) and Zone 2 (CPU2) Extended Resolution Filtered Value Registers, Most and
Least Significant Bytes
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
18h R Z1a_F_LSB 0.5 0.25 0.125 0.0625 0 0 0 0 00h
19h R Z1a_F_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 19h is a mirror of register Zone 1a (CPU1) Filtered Temp at address 54h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
1Ah R Z1b_F_LSB 0.5 0.25 0.125 0.0625 0 0 0 0 00h
1Bh R Z1b_F_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 1Bh is a mirror of register Zone 1b (CPU1) Filtered Temp at address 08h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
1Ch R Z2a_F_LSB 0.5 0.25 0.125 0.0625 0 0 0 0 00h
1Dh R Z2a_F_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 1Dh is a mirror of register Zone 2a (CPU2) Filtered Temp at address 55h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
1Eh R Z2b_F_LSB 0.5 0.25 0.125 0.0625 0 0 0 0 00h
1Fh R Z2b_F_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 1Fh is a mirror of register Zone 2b (CPU2) Filtered Temp at address 09h.
16.6.3 Registers 20h – 23h Zone 3 and Zone 4 Extended Resolution Value Registers, Most and Least Significant Bytes
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
20h R/W Z3_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
21h R/W Z3_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 21h is a mirror of register Zone 3 (Internal) Temp at address 52h.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
22h R/W Z4_LSB 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h
23h R/W Z4_MSB Sign 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 00h
Register 23h is a mirror of register Zone 4 (External Digital) Temp at address 53h.
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LM94
16.7 PI LOOP FAN CONTROL SETUP REGISTERS
16.7.1 Register 31h Internal/External Temperature Source Select
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
31h R/W Internal/ External
Temperature
Source Select
RES RES RES INT_
WR_E
Z2bE Z1bE EXT_
AD15
INT_
AD11
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 INT_ADC11 R/W When this bit is set, the Internal Temperature Register (Zone 3) will be
automatically updated with the value from the ADC_IN11 Voltage Value
register minus 128 by inverting the MSb. Subtraction of 128 or inverting
the MSb is required since the data in the temperature register is a signed
value. When this bit is cleared the Internal Temperature Register (Zone 3)
will be automatically updated with the internal temperature reading from
the LM94’s internal thermal diode. All functions related to the Internal
Temperature Register value are affected by this bit (LUTs, Temperature
Boost, etc.)
1 EXT_ADC15 R/W When this bit is set, the External Digital Temperature register (Zone 4) will
become read-only and will be automatically updated from the ADC_IN15
Voltage Value register minus 128 by inverting the MSb. Subtraction of 128
or inverting the MSb is required since the data in the temperature registers
are signed. When this bit is cleared the External Digital Temperature
register is writable and must be updated over the SMBus by software. All
functions related to the External Digital Temperature register are affected
by this bit (LUTs, Temperature Boost, etc.)
2 Z1bE R/W When this bit is set, pin 23 is enabled as a Remote 1b input. When this bit
is cleared pin 23 is set as a AD_IN1 input.
3 Z2bE R/W When this bit is set, pin 24 is enabled as a Remote 2b input. When this bit
is cleared pin 24 is set as a AD_IN2 input.
4 INT_WR_E R/W When this bit is set, the Internal Temperature Value register may be
updated by an external SMBus write. All automatic updates of the Internal
Temperature Value register will cease.
7:3 RES R Reserved
16.7.2 Register 32h PWM Filter Settings
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
32h R/W PWM_Filter RES FC_PWM2[2:0] RES FC_PWM1[2:0] 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 FC_PWM1[2:0] R/W Sets the filter coefficient for the IIR filter on PWM1 low resolution sources.
3 RES R Reserved
6:4 FC_PWM2[2:0] R/W Sets the filter coefficient for the IIR filter on PWM2 low resolution sources.
7 RES R Reserved
FC_PWM1[2:0] or FC_PWM2[2:] 95% Settling Time Interval
000 Filter bypassed
001 0.098s
010 0.237s
011 0.510s
100 1.056s
101 2.147s
47 www.national.com
LM94
FC_PWM1[2:0] or FC_PWM2[2:] 95% Settling Time Interval
110 4.328s
111 8.689s
16.7.3 Register 33h PWM1 Filter Shutoff Threshold
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
33h R/W PWM1_Filter
Shut_Thresh
PWM1_SHUT_DC[4:0] RES RES RES 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 RES R Reserved
7:3 PWM1_SHUT_DC[4:0] R/W Sets the filter shutoff threshold. The actual duty cycle threshold is 3.15%
times this value. If the PWM filter is disabled the shutdown threshold is also
disabled. The shutdown threshold allows the PWM1 output to be turned off
for duty cycles less than the programmed value.
Bit [7:3] 9-bit Threshold Corresponding Duty Cycle
0 0 0.000%
1 8 3.125%
2 16 6.25%
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
29 232 90.625%
30 240 93.750%
31 248 96.875%
16.7.4 Register 34h PWM2 Filter Shutoff Threshold
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
34h R/W PWM2_Filter
Shut_Thresh
PWM2_SHUT_DC[4:0] RES RES RES 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 RES R Reserved
7:3 PWM2_SHUT_DC[4:0] R/W Sets the filter shutoff threshold. The actual duty cycle threshold is 3.15%
times this value. If the PWM filter is disabled the shutdown threshold is also
disabled. The shutdown threshold allows the PWM1 output to be turned off
for duty cycles less than the programmed value.
Bit [7:3] 9-bit Threshold Corresponding Duty Cycle
0 0 0.000%
1 8 3.125%
2 16 6.25%
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
29 232 90.625%
30 240 93.750%
31 248 96.875%
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LM94
16.7.5 Register 35h PI/LUT Fan Control Bindings
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
35h R/W Fan Control
Bindings
LUT4
_Z2
LUT3
_Z1
LUT2
_Z2
LUT1
_Z1
PWM2
_PI
PWM1
_PI
PI_Z2 PI_Z1 30h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 PI_Z1 R/W When this bit is set, the PI controller is bound to the P1 temperature (zone
1). This also changes the available filtering options for the P1 temperature.
1 PI_Z2 R/W When this bit is set, the PI controller is bound to the P2 temperature (zone
2). This also changes the available filtering options for the P2 temperature
zone.
2 PWM1_PI R/W When this bit is set, the PWM1 output is bound to the PI controller.
3 PWM2_PI R/W When this bit is set, the PWM2 output is bound to the PI controller.
4 LUT1_Z1 R/W When this bit is set, LUT1 will use the P1 temperature (zone 1) instead of
the Internal temperature (zone 3).
5 LUT2_Z2 R/W When this bit is set, LUT2 will use the P2 temperature (zone2) instead of
the External Digital temperature (zone 4).
6 LUT3_Z1 R/W When this bit is set, LUT3 will use the P1 temperature (zone1) instead of
the Internal temperature (zone 3).
7 LUT4_Z2 R/W When this bit is set, LUT4 will use the P2 temperature (zone 2) instead of
the External Digital temperature (zone 4).
16.7.6 Register 36h PI Controller Minimum PWM and Hysteresis
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
36h R/W PI MinPWM and
Hyst
PI_MinPWM[3:0] PI_Hyst[3:0] 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 PI_Hyst[3:0] R/W Sets the hysteresis for the PI Loop fan controller in 0.5°C steps up to 7.5°
C.
7:4 PI_MinPWM[3:0] R/W Defines the minimum PWM output for the PI Loop fan controller in 6.25%
steps up to 93.75%.
PI_Hyst[3:0] Hysteresis (°C)
0h 0
1h 0.5
2h 1.0
3h 1.5
4h 2.0
5h 2.5
6h 3.0
7h 3.5
8h 4.0
9h 4.5
Ah 5.0
Bh 5.5
Ch 6.0
Dh 6.5
Eh 7.0
Fh 7.5
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LM94
PI_MinPWM[3:0] Minimum Duty Cycle
0h 0.00%
1h 6.25%
2h 12.5%
3h 18.75%
4h 25.00%
5h 31.25%
6h 37.50%
7h 43.75%
8h 50.00%
9h 56.25%
Ah 62.50%
Bh 68.75%
Ch 75.00%
Dh 81.25%
Eh 87.5%
Fh 93.75%
16.7.7 Registers 37h and 38h Zone 1 and 2 PI Controller Target Temperature (Tcontrol)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
37h R/W Zone 1 Tcontrol 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
38h R/W Zone 2 Tcontrol 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
Same format as temperature value register for Zone 1 and Zone 2. The PWM output controls the airflow over the processors and
thus the temperature of the processors is adjusted by the PI loop to maintain the hottest Zone 1 or Zone 2 temperature reading
between their respective values for Tcontrol and Tcontrol - hysteresis. Intel specifies an optimum Tcontrol temperature for some
of it's processors that can be found in the MSR register space.
16.7.8 Register 39h and 3Ah Zone 1 and 2 PI Fan Control Off Temperature (Toff)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
39h R/W Z1 Toff 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 80h
3Ah R/W Z2 Toff 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 80h
Same format as temperature value register for Zone 1 and Zone 2. When these registers are set to 80h, the Toff function is disabled.
Toff is the temperature at which the PI control loop output is forced to zero duty cycle.
16.7.9 Register 3Bh Proportional Coefficient
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
3Bh R/W P Coefficient 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
16.7.10 Register 3Ch Integral Coefficient
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
3Ch R/W I Coefficient 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
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LM94
16.7.11 Register 3Dh PI Coefficient Exponents
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
3Dh R/W PI Exponents RES RES RES RES PCE[1:0] ICE[1:0] 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
1:0 ICE[1:0] R/W PI controller integral coefficient exponent (2-bit signed value)
2:3 PCE[1:0] R/W PI controller proportional coefficient exponent (2-bit signed value)
7:4 RES R Reserved
ICE[1:0] Integral Exponent
10b -2
11b -1
00b 0
01b 1
PCE[1:0] Proportional Exponent
10b -2
11b -1
00b 0
01b 1
16.8 DEVICE IDENTIFICATION REGISTERS (3Eh-3Fh)
16.8.1 Register 3Eh Manufacturer ID
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
3Eh R Manufacturer ID 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01h
The Manufacturer ID register contains the manufacturer identification number. This number is assigned by National Semiconductor
and is a method for uniquely identifying the part manufacturer.
16.8.2 Register 3Fh Version/Stepping
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
3Fh R Version/Stepping VER[3:0] STP[3:0] 79h
01111001
The four least significant bits of the Version/Stepping register [3:0] contain the current stepping of the LM94 silicon. The four most
significant bits [7:4] reflect the LM94 version number. The LM94 has a fixed version number of 0111b wich matches the LM93,
since the LM94 is closely related to the LM93. To differentiat the LM94 from the LM93 for the first stepping of LM94 this register
reads 01111000b. For the second stepping of the LM94, this register reads 01111001b and so on. It is incrementally increased for
future versions for the silicon. The final released silicon has a stepping of 9h therefore this register reads 79h.
The register is used by application software to identify which device in the family of hardware monitoring ASICs has been imple-
mented in the given system. Based on this information, software can determine which registers to read from and write to. Application
software may use the current stepping to implement work-a-rounds for bugs found in a specific silicon stepping.
51 www.national.com
LM94
16.9 BMC ERROR STATUS REGISTERS 40h–47h
The B_Error Status Registers contain several bits that each represent a particular error event that the LM94 can monitor. The LM94
sets a given bit whenever the corresponding error event occurs. The BMC_ERR bit in the LM94 Status/Control register is also set
if any bit in the BMC Error Status registers is set. If enabled, ALERT is also asserted anytime BMC_ERR is set. The exception to
this is the fixed threshold error status bits in the PROCHOT Error Status registers. They have no influence on BMC_ERR or
ALERT.
Once a bit is set in the BMC Error Status registers, it is not automatically cleared by the LM94 if the error event goes away. Each
bit must be cleared by software. If software attempts to clear a bit while the error condition still exists, and the error is unmasked,
the bit does not clear. If the error is masked, the bit can be cleared even if the error condition still exists.
If the LM94 is in ASF mode, the BMC Error Status registers are both read-to-clear and write-one-to-clear. When not in ASF mode,
the registers are only write-one-to-clear.
Each register described in this section has a column labeled Sleep Masking. This column describes which error events are masked
in various sleep states. The sleep state of the system is communicated to the LM94 by writing to the Sleep State Control register.
If a sleep state in this column has a ‘*’ next to it, it denotes that the error event is optionally masked in that sleep mode, depending
on the Sleep State Mask registers.
16.9.1 Register 40h B_Error Status 1
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
40h RWC B_Error
Status 1 RES VRD2
_ERR
VRD1
_ERR
ZN4_
ERR
ZN3_
ERR
ZN2_
ERR
ZN1_
ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 ZN1_ERR RWC This bit is set when any zone 1 temperature has fallen outside its associated
temperature limits.
S3*, S4/5*
1 ZN2_ERR RWC This bit is set when any zone 2 temperature has fallen outside its associated
temperature limits.
S3*, S4/5*
2 ZN3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the zone 3 temperature has fallen outside the zone 3
temperature limits.
none
3 ZN4_ERR RWC This bit is set when the zone 4 temperature has fallen outside the zone 4
temperature limits.
none
4 VRD1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the VRD1_HOT input has been asserted. S3, S4/5
5 VRD2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the VRD2_HOT# input has been asserted. S3, S4/5
7:6 RES R Reserved N/A
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LM94
16.9.2 Register 41h B_Error Status 2
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
41h RWC B_Error
Status 2
ADIN8
_ERR
ADIN7
_ERR
ADIN6
_ERR
ADIN5
_ERR
ADIN4
_ERR
ADIN3
_ERR
ADIN2
_ERR
ADIN1
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 AD1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN1 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN1 Low Limit and the AD_IN1 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
1 AD2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN2 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN2 Low Limit and the AD_IN2 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
2 AD3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN3 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN3 Low Limit and the AD_IN3 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
3 AD4_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN4 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN4 Low Limit and the AD_IN4 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
4 AD5_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN5 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN5 Low Limit and the AD_IN5 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
5 AD6_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN6 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN6 Low Limit and the AD_IN6 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
6 AD7_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN7 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN7 Low Limit and the AD_IN7 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
7 AD8_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN8 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN8 Low Limit and the AD_IN8 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
16.9.3 Register 42h B_Error Status 3
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
42h RWC B_Error
Status 3
ADIN16
_ERR
ADIN15
_ERR
ADIN14
_ERR
ADIN13
_ERR
ADIN12
_ERR
ADIN11
_ERR
ADIN10
_ERR
ADIN9
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 AD9_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN9 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN9 Low Limit and the AD_IN9 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
1 AD10_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN10 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN10 Low Limit and the AD_IN10 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
2 AD11_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN11 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN11 Low Limit and the AD_IN11 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
3 AD12_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN12 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN12 Low Limit and the AD_IN12 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
4 AD13_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN13 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN13 Low Limit and the AD_IN13 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
5 AD14_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN14 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN14 Low Limit and the AD_IN14 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
6 AD15_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN15 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN15 Low Limit and the AD_IN15 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
7 AD16_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN16 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN16 Low Limit and the AD_IN16 High Limit registers.
none
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LM94
16.9.4 Register 43h B_Error Status 4
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
43h RWC B_Error
Status 4
D2a_
ERR
D1a_
ERR
DVDDP2
_ERR
DVDDP1
_ERR
GPI9
_ERR
GPI8
_ERR
D2b
_ERR
D1b
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 D1b_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE1b+ and
REMOTE1− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
1 D2b_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE2b+ and
REMOTE2− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
2 GPI8 RWC SCSI Fuse Error
This bit is set if GPI8 has been asserted. Enabled only when VID mode is set to
VRD 10.
S3, S4/5
3 GPI9 RWC SCSI Fuse Error
This bit is set if GPI9 has been asserted. Enabled only when VID mode is set to
VRD 10.
S3, S4/5
4 DVDDP1_ERR RWC Dynamic Vccp Limit Error.
This bit is set if AD_IN7 (P1_Vccp) did not match the requested voltage as
reported by P1_VID[7:0].
S3, S4/5
5 DVDDP2_ERR RWC Dynamic Vccp Limit Error.
This bit is set if AD_IN8 (P2_Vccp) did not match the requested voltage as
reported by P1_VID[7:0].
S3, S4/5
6 D1a_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE1a+ and
REMOTE1− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
7 D2a_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE2a+ and
REMOTE2− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
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LM94
16.9.5 Register 44h B_P1_PROCHOT Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
44h RWC B_P1_PROCHOT
Error Status
PH1
_ERR
TMAX T100 T75 T50 T25 T12 T0 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 T0 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has had a throttled event. This bit is set for any amount
of PROCHOT throttling >0%.
S3, S4/5
1 T12 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 0.39% but less
than 12.5%.
S3, S4/5
2 T25 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 12.5% but less
than 25%.
S3, S4/5
3 T50 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 25% but less than
50%.
S3, S4/5
4 T75 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 50% but less than
75%.
S3, S4/5
5 T100 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 75% but less than
100%.
S3, S4/5
6 TMAX RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled 100%. S3, S4/5
7 PH1_ERR RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled more than the user limit. S3, S4/5
The PH1_ERR bit is the only bit in this register that will set BMC_ ERR in the LM94 Status/Control register.
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LM94
16.9.6 Register 45h B_P2_PROCHOT Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
45h RWC B_P2_PROCHOT
Error Status
PH2
_ERR
TMAX T100 T75 T50 T25 T12 T0 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 T0 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has had a throttled event. This bit is set for any amount
of PROCHOT throttling >0%.
S3, S4/5
1 T12 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 0.0% but less
than 12.5%.
S3, S4/5
2 T25 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 12.5% but less
than 25%.
S3, S4/5
3 T50 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 25% but less than
50%.
S3, S4/5
4 T75 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 50% but less than
75%.
S3, S4/5
5 T100 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 75% but less than
100%.
S3, S4/5
6 TMAX RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled 100%. S3, S4/5
7 PH2_ERR RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled more than the user limit. S3, S4/5
The PH2_ERR bit is the only bit in this register that will set BMC_ ERR in the LM94 Status/Control register.
16.9.7 Register 46h B_GPI Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
46h RWC B_GPI
Error Status
GPI7
_ERR
GPI6
_ERR
GPI5
_ERR
GPI4
_ERR
GPI3
_ERR
GPI2
_ERR
GPI1
_ERR
GPI0
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 GPI0_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO0 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
1 GPI1_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO1 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
2 GPI2_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO2 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
3 GPI3_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO3 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
4 GPI4_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO4 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
5 GPI5_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO5 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
6 GPI6_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO6 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
7 GPI7_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO7 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
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LM94
16.9.8 Register 47h B_Fan Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
47h RWC B_Fan
Error Status RES FAN4
_ERR
FAN3
_ERR
FAN2
_ERR
FAN1
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 FAN1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 1 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 1 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
1 FAN2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 2 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 2 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
2 FAN3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 3 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 3 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
3 FAN4_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 4 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 4 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
7:4 RES R Reserved N/A
16.10 HOST ERROR STATUS REGISTERS
The Host Error Status Registers contain several bits that each represent a particular error event that the LM94 can monitor. The
LM94 sets a given bit whenever the corresponding error event occurs. The HOST_ERR bit in the LM94 Status/Control register
also sets if any bit in the Host Error Status registers is set. The exception to this is the fixed threshold error status bits in the
PROCHOT Error Status registers. They have no influence on HOST_ERR.
Once a bit is set in the Host Error Status registers, it is not automatically cleared by the LM94 if the error event goes away. Each
bit must be cleared by software. If software attempts to clear a bit while the error condition still exists, the bit does not clear.
Software must specifically write a 1 to any bits it wishes to clear in the Host Error Status registers (write-one-to-clear).
Each register described in this section has a column labeled Sleep Masking. This column describes which error events are masked
in various sleep states. The sleep state of the system is communicated to the LM94 by writing to the Sleep State Control register.
If a sleep state in this column has a ‘*’ next to it, it denotes that the error event is optionally masked in that sleep mode, depending
on the Sleep State Mask registers.
16.10.1 Register 48h H_Error Status 1
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
48h RWC H_Error
Status 1 RES VRD2
_ERR
VRD1
_ERR
ZN4_
ERR
ZN3_
ERR
ZN2_
ERR
ZN1_
ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 ZN1_ERR RWC This bit is set when any zone 1 temperature has fallen outside its associated
temperature limits.
S3*, S4/5*
1 ZN2_ERR RWC This bit is set when any zone 2 temperature has fallen outside its associated
temperature limits.
S3*, S4/5*
2 ZN3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the zone 3 temperature has fallen outside the zone 3
temperature limits.
none
3 ZN4_ERR RWC This bit is set when the zone 4 temperature has fallen outside the zone 4
temperature limits.
none
4 VRD1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the VRD1_HOT input has been asserted. S3, S4/5
5 VRD2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the VRD2_HOT# input has been asserted. S3, S4/5
7:6 RES R Reserved N/A
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LM94
16.10.2 Register 49h H_Error Status 2
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
49h RWC H_Error
Status 2
ADIN8
_ERR
ADIN7
_ERR
ADIN6
_ERR
ADIN5
_ERR
ADIN4
_ERR
ADIN3
_ERR
ADIN2
_ERR
ADIN1
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 AD1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN1 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN1 Low Limit and the AD_IN1 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
1 AD2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN2 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN2 Low Limit and the AD_IN2 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
2 AD3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN3 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN3 Low Limit and the AD_IN3 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
3 AD4_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN4 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN4 Low Limit and the AD_IN4 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
4 AD5_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN5 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN5 Low Limit and the AD_IN5 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
5 AD6_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN6 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN6 Low Limit and the AD_IN6 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
6 AD7_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN7 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN7 Low Limit and the AD_IN7 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
7 AD8_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN8 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN8 Low Limit and the AD_IN8 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
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LM94
16.10.3 Register 4Ah H_Error Status 3
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Ah RWC H_Error
Status 3
ADIN16
_ERR
ADIN15
_ERR
ADIN14
_ERR
ADIN13
_ERR
ADIN12
_ERR
ADIN11
_ERR
ADIN10
_ERR
ADIN9
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 AD9_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN9 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN9 Low Limit and the AD_IN9 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
1 AD10_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN10 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN10 Low Limit and the AD_IN10 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
2 AD11_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN11 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN11 Low Limit and the AD_IN11 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
3 AD12_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN12 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN12 Low Limit and the AD_IN12 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
4 AD13_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN13 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN13 Low Limit and the AD_IN13 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
5 AD14_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN14 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN14 Low Limit and the AD_IN14 High Limit registers.
S3*, S4/5*
6 AD15_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN15 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN15 Low Limit and the AD_IN15 High Limit registers.
S3, S4/5
7 AD16_ERR RWC This bit is set when the AD_IN16 voltage has fallen outside the range defined by
the AD_IN16 Low Limit and the AD_IN16 High Limit registers.
none
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LM94
16.10.4 Register 4Bh H_Error Status 4
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Bh RWC H_Error
Status 4
D2a_
ERR
D1a_
ERR
DVDDP2
_ERR
DVDDP1
_ERR
GPI9
_ERR
GPI8
_ERR
D2b
_ERR
D1b
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 D1b_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE1b+ and
REMOTE1− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
1 D2b_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE2b+ and
REMOTE2− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
2 GPI8 RWC SCSI Fuse Error
This bit is set if GPI8 has been asserted. Enabled only when VID mode is set to
VRD 10.
S3, S4/5
3 GPI9 RWC SCSI Fuse Error
This bit is set if GPI9 has been asserted. Enabled only when VID mode is set to
VRD 10.
S3, S4/5
4 DVDDP1_ERR RWC Dynamic Vccp Limit Error.
This bit is set if AD_IN7 (P1_Vccp) did not match the requested voltage as
reported by P1_VID[7:0].
S3, S4/5
5 DVDDP2_ERR RWC Dynamic Vccp Limit Error.
This bit is set if AD_IN8 (P2_Vccp) did not match the requested voltage as
reported by P1_VID[7:0].
S3, S4/5
6 D1a_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE1a+ and
REMOTE1− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
7 D2a_ERR RWC Diode Fault Error
This bit is set if there is an open or short circuit on the REMOTE2a+ and
REMOTE2− pins.
S3*, S4/5*
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LM94
16.10.5 Register 4Ch H_P1_PROCHOT Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Ch RWC H_P1_PROCHOT
Error Status PH1_ERR TMAX T100 T75 T50 T25 T12 T0 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 T0 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has had a throttled event. This bit is set for any amount
of PROCHOT throttling >0%.
S3, S4/5
1 T12 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 0.00% but less
than 12.5%.
S3, S4/5
2 T25 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 12.5% but less
than 25%.
S3, S4/5
3 T50 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 25% but less than
50%.
S3, S4/5
4 T75 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 50% but less than
75%.
S3, S4/5
5 T100 RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 75% but less than
100%.
S3, S4/5
6 TMAX RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled 100%. S3, S4/5
7 PH1_ERR RWC Set when P1_PROCHOT has throttled more than the user limit. S3, S4/5
The PH1_ERR bit is the only bit in this register that will set HOST_ ERR in the LM94 Status/Control register.
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LM94
16.10.6 Register 4Dh B_P2_PROCHOT Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Dh RWC H_P2_PROCHOT
Error Status PH2_ERR TMAX T100 T75 T50 T25 T12 T0 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 T0 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has had a throttled event. This bit is set for any amount
of PROCHOT throttling >0%.
S3, S4/5
1 T12 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 0.00% but less
than 12.5%.
S3, S4/5
2 T25 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 12.5% but less
than 25%.
S3, S4/5
3 T50 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 25% but less than
50%.
S3, S4/5
4 T75 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 50% but less than
75%.
S3, S4/5
5 T100 RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled greater than or equal to 75% but less than
100%.
S3, S4/5
6 TMAX RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled 100%. S3, S4/5
7 PH2_ERR RWC Set when P2_PROCHOT has throttled more than the user limit. S3, S4/5
The PH2_ERR bit is the only bit in this register that will set HOST_ ERR in the LM94 Status/Control register.
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LM94
16.10.7 Register 4Eh H_GPI Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Eh RWC H_GPI
Error Status
GPI7
_ERR
GPI6
_ERR
GPI5
_ERR
GPI4
_ERR
GPI3
_ERR
GPI2
_ERR
GPI1
_ERR
GPI0
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 GPI0_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO0 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
1 GPI1_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO1 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
2 GPI2_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO2 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
3 GPI3_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO3 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
4 GPI4_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO4 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
5 GPI5_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO5 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
6 GPI6_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO6 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
7 GPI7_ERR RWC This bit is set whenever GPIO7 is driven low (unless masked via the GPI Error
Mask register).
S1*, S3*, S4/5*
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LM94
16.10.8 Register 4Fh H_Fan Error Status
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
4Fh RWC H_Fan
Error Status RES FAN4
_ERR
FAN3
_ERR
FAN2
_ERR
FAN1
_ERR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description Sleep
Masking
0 FAN1_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 1 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 1 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
1 FAN2_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 2 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 2 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
2 FAN3_ERR RWC This bit is set when the Fan Tach 3 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 3 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
3 FAN4_ERR R This bit is set when the Fan Tach 4 value register is above the value set in the
Fan Tach 4 Limit register.
S1*, S3*, S4/5
7:4 RES R Reserved N/A
16.11 VALUE REGISTERS
16.11.1 Registers 50–53h Unfiltered Temperature Value Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
06h R Zone 1b (CPU1) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
07h R Zone 2b (CPU2) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
50h R Zone 1a (CPU1) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
51h R Zone 2a (CPU2) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
52h R Zone 3 (Internal) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
53h R/W Zone 4
(External Digital) Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
Zones 1 and 2 are all automatically updated by the LM94. The Zone 3 (Internal) Temp and Zone 4 (External Digital) Temp registers
may be written by an external SMBus device or can be assigned to AD_IN11 and AD_IN15, respectively.
The temperature registers for zones 1 and 2 will return a value of 80h if the remote diode pins are not implemented by the board
designer or are not functioning properly.
16.11.2 Registers 54–55h Filtered Temperature Value Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
08h R Zone 1b (CPU1)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
09h R Zone 2b (CPU2)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
54h R Zone 1a (CPU1)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
55h R Zone 2a (CPU2)
Filtered Temp 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
These registers reflect the temperature of zones 1 and 2 after the spike smoothing filter has been applied.
The characteristics of the filtering can be adjusted by using the Zones 1/2 Spike Smoothing Control register.
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LM94
16.11.3 Register 56–65h A/D Channel Voltage Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
56h R AD_IN1 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
57h R AD_IN2 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
58h R AD_IN3 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
59h R AD_IN4 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Ah R AD_IN5 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Bh R AD_IN6 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Ch R AD_IN7 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Dh R AD_IN8 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Eh R AD_IN9 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
5Fh R AD_IN10 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
60h R AD_IN11 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
61h R AD_IN12 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
62h R AD_IN13 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
63h R AD_IN14 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
64h R AD_IN15 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
65h R AD_IN16 Voltage 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 N/D
The voltage reading registers reflect the current voltage of the LM94 voltage monitoring inputs. Voltages are presented in the
registers at ¾ full scale for the nominal voltage. Therefore, at nominal voltage, each register reads C0h.
16.11.4 Register 67h Current P1_PROCHOT
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
67h R Current
P1_PROCHOT 76543210 00h
This is the value of the PROCHOT percentage active time for Processor 1 at the end of each PROCHOT monitoring interval as
set by the PROCHOT Time Interval register. Writing to this register does not effect the register contents, but does restart the capture
cycle for both PROCHOT channels (P1_PROCHOT and P2_PROCHOT). A register value of one represents anything greater than
0% but less than 0.39% of active time.
Register Value (Decimal) Percentage Active Time
0 0%
1 0.39%
2 0.78%
n n/256*100
255 99.60%
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LM94
16.11.5 Register 68h Average P1_PROCHOT
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
68h R Average
P1_PROCHOT 76543210 00h
This is the average percentage active time of P1_PROCHOT. It is the result of adding the contents of this register to the contents
of the Current P1_PROCHOT register and dividing the result by 2. The update occurs at the same time that the Current P1_PRO-
CHOT register gets updated. A register value of one represents anything greater than 0% but less than 0.39% of active time.
16.11.6 Register 69h Current P2_PROCHOT
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
69h R Current
P2_PROCHOT 76543210 00h
This is the value of the PROCHOT percentage active time for Processor 2 at the end of each PROCHOT monitoring interval as
set by the PROCHOT Time Interval register. Writing to this register does not effect the register contents, but does restart the capture
cycle for both PROCHOT channels (P1_PROCHOT and P2_PROCHOT). A register value of one represents anything greater than
0% but less than 0.39% of active time.
Register Value (Decimal) Percentage Active Time
0 0%
1 0.39%
2 0.78%
n n/256*100
255 99.60%
16.11.7 Register 6Ah Average P2_PROCHOT
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
6Ah R Average
P2_PROCHOT 76543210 00h
This is the average percentage active time of P2_PROCHOT. It is the result of adding the contents of this register to the contents
of the Current P2_PROCHOT register and dividing the result by 2. The update occurs at the same time that the Current P2_PRO-
CHOT register gets updated. A register value of one represents anything greater than 0% but less than 0.39% of active time.
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LM94
16.11.8 Register 6Bh Current GPI State
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
6Bh R GPI State GPI7 GPI6 GP15 GPI4 GPI3 GPI2 GPI1 GPI0 00h
Bit Name Read/Write Description
0 GPI0 R 1 if GPIO_0 input is LOW, not latched
1 GPI1 R 1 if GPIO_1 input is LOW, not latched
2 GPI2 R 1 if GPIO_2 input is LOW, not latched
3 GPI3 R 1 if GPIO_3 input is LOW, not latched
4 GPI4 R 1 if GPIO_4 input is LOW, not latched
5 GPI5 R 1 if GPIO_5 input is LOW, not latched
6 GPI6 R 1 if GPIO_6 input is LOW, not latched
7 GPI7 R 1 if GPIO_7 input is LOW, not latched
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LM94
16.11.9 Register 6Ch P1_VID
This register has four possible mappings described in the table. The mapping is determined by the VID mode as selected in the
Special Function Control 2 register at address BDh. See the Special Function Control 2 register description for further details.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
6Ch R P1_VID
RES (0) P1_VID[5:0] for VRD 10 mode (functions same as LM93) 00h
RES (0) P1_VID[6:0] for VRD 10.2 Extended mode 00h
RES (0) P1_VID[6:0] for VRD 11 , Mode 1 (most commonly used mode for VRD11) 00h
P1_VID[7:1] for VRD 11, Mode 2 RES (0) 00h
VRD 10 mode
Bit Name Read/Write Description
5:0 P1_VID[5:0] R Processor 1 VID status.
Reports the current state of the P1_VID5 through P1_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P1_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7:6 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 10.2 Extended mode
Bit Name Read/Write Description
6:0 P1_VID[6:0] R Processor 1 VID status.
Reports the current state of the P1_VID6 through P1_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P1_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 11 Mode 1
Bit Name Read/Write Description
6:0 P1_VID[6:0] R Processor 1 VID status. This mode is the recommended mode for support
of VRD11.
Reports the current state of the P1_VID6 through P1_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P1_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 11 Mode 2
Bit Name Read/Write Description
0 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
7:1 P1_VID[7:1] R Processor 1 VID status. This mode is supplied for future experimentation
and will require additional hardware in order to support both VRD11 and
VRD10 specifications.
Reports the current state of the P1_VID7 through P1_VID1 pins. This
register will only be updated if P1_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
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LM94
16.11.10 Register 6Dh P2_VID
This register has four possible mappings described in the table. The mapping is determined by the VID mode as selected in the
Special Function Control 2 register at address BDh. See the Special Function Control 2 register description for further details.
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
6Dh R P2_VID
RES (0) P2_VID[5:0] for VRD 10 mode (functions same as LM93) 00h
RES (0) P2_VID[6:0] for VRD 10.2 Extended mode 00h
RES (0) P2_VID[6:0] for VRD 11 , Mode 1 (most commonly used mode for VRD11) 00h
P2_VID[7:1] for VRD 11, Mode 2 RES (0) 00h
VRD 10 mode
Bit Name Read/Write Description
5:0 P2_VID[5:0] R Processor 2 VID status.
Reports the current state of the P2_VID5 through P2_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P2_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7:6 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 10.2 Extended mode
Bit Name Read/Write Description
6:0 P2_VID[6:0] R Processor 2 VID status.
Reports the current state of the P2_VID6 through P2_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P2_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 11 Mode 1
Bit Name Read/Write Description
6:0 P2_VID[6:0] R Processor 2 VID status. This mode is the recommended mode for support
of VRD11.
Reports the current state of the P2_VID6 through P2_VID0 pins. This
register will only be updated if P2_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
7 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
VRD 11 Mode 2
Bit Name Read/Write Description
0 RES R Reserved and will always report 0.
7:1 P2_VID[7:1] R Processor 2 VID status. This mode is supplied for future experimentation
and will require additional hardware in order to support both VRD11 and
VRD10 specifications.
Reports the current state of the P2_VID7 through P2_VID1 pins. This
register will only be updated if P2_VID signals remain stable for at least
600 ns.
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LM94
16.11.11 Register 6E–75h Fan Tachometer Readings
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
6Eh R Fan Tach 1
LSB TACH1[5:0] T1ST[1:0] 00h
6Fh R Fan Tach 1
MSB TACH1[13:6] 00h
70h R Fan Tach 2
LSB TACH2[5:0] T2ST[1:0] 00h
71h R Fan Tach 2
MSB TACH2[13:6] 00h
72h R Fan Tach 3
LSB TACH3[5:0] T3ST[1:0] 00h
73h R Fan Tach 3
MSB TACH3[13:6] 00h
74h R Fan Tach 4
LSB TACH4[5:0] T4ST[1:0] 00h
75h R Fan Tach 4
MSB TACH4[13:6] 00h
The 14-bit fan tach readings indicate the number of 22.5 kHz clock periods that occurred during two full periods of the tachometer
input signal. Most fans produce two tachometer pulses per full revolution. These registers must be updated at least once every
second.
The fan tachometer reading registers must always return an accurate fan tachometer measurement, even when a fan is disabled
or non-functional. 3FFFh indicates that the fan is stalled, not spinning fast enough to measure, or the tachometer input is not
connected to a valid signal.
If the pulses per revolution of the fan is known, the RPM can be calculated with the following equation:
RPM= 22500 cycles/sec * 60 sec/min * 2 pulses / COUNT cycles / PULSES_PER_REV
where:
PULSES_PER_REV = the number of pulses that the fan produces per revolution
COUNT = The 14-bit value read from the tach register
Bit Name Read/Write Description
1:0 T1ST[1:0], T2ST[1:0],
T3ST[1:0], T4ST[1:0]
RTwo bits for each tachometer reading that report the state of the fan control
circuitry used to acquire a reading. See table below for further clarification.
7:2 TACH1[5:0], TACH2[5:0],
TACH3[5:0], TACH4[5:0]
R Least significant bit field of tachometer reading.
7:0 TACH1[13:6], TACH2[13:6],
TACH3[13:6], TACH4[13:6]
R Most significant bit fielf of tachometer reading.
T1ST[1:0], T2ST[1:0],
T3ST[1:0], or T4ST[1:0]
State of Fan Control Circuitry
00 Normal Mode (Smart Tach Mode disabled)
01 Reserved
10 Smart Tach Mode 1, less accurate with most stable Fan RPM
11 Smart Tach Mode 2, most accurate with least stable Fan RPM
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LM94
16.12 LIMIT REGISTERS
16.12.1 Registers 78–7Fh Temperature Limit Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
78h R/W Processor 1 (Zone1)
Low Temp 76543210 80h
79h R/W Processor 1 (Zone1)
High Temp 76543210 80h
7Ah R/W Processor 2 (Zone2)
Low Temp 76543210 80h
7Bh R/W Processor 2 (Zone2)
High Temp 76543210 80h
7Ch R/W Internal (Zone3)
Low Temp 76543210 80h
7Dh R/W Internal (Zone3)
High Temp 76543210 80h
7Eh R/W External Digital (Zone4)
Low Temp 76543210 80h
7Fh R/W External Digital (Zone4)
High Temp 76543210 80h
If an external temperature input or the internal temperature sensor either exceeds the value set in the high limit register or falls
below the value set in the low limit register, the corresponding bit in the B_ and H_Error Status 1 register is set automatically by
the LM94. For example, if the temperature read from the Remote1− and Remote1+ inputs exceeds the Processor (Zone1) High
Temp register limit setting, the ZN1_ERR bit in both B_Error Status 1 and H_Error Status 1 registers is set. The temperature limits
in these registers is represented as 8 bit, 2’s complement, signed numbers in Celsius.
If any high temp limit register is set to 80h then the B_ and H_Error Status register bit for that temperature channel is masked.
16.12.2 Registers 80–83h Fan Boost Temperature Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
80h R/W Fan Boost Temp
Zone 1 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 3Ch
81h R/W Fan Boost Temp
Zone 2 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 3Ch
82h R/W Fan Boost Temp
Zone 3 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 23h
83h R/W Fan Boost Temp
Zone 4 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 23h
If any thermal zone exceeds the temperature set in the Fan Boost Limit register, both of the PWM outputs are set to 100%. The
fan boost function takes precedence over low-resolution manual override. High-resolution manual overide takes priority over the
fan boost function. This is a safety feature that attempts to cool the system if there is a potentially catastrophic thermal event. If
set to 7Fh and the fan control temperature resolution is 1°C, the feature is disabled.
Default = 60°C = 3Ch for zones 1 and 2
Default = 35°C = 23h for zones 3 and 4
The temperature has to fall the number of degrees specified in the Fan Boost Hysteresis registers, below this temperature to cause
the PWM outputs to return to normal operation. The fan boost function can be disabled by setting the associated register to 80h.
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LM94
16.12.3 Register 84h Zone1, and Zone2 Hysteresis for Limit Comparisons
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
84h R/W
Limit Comparison
Hysteresis
(Zones 1/2)
HC2
HC1
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 HC1 R/W Sets the limit comparison hysteresis for zone 1 for both
the High and Low limits. The hysteresis can be set from
0°C to 15°C and has 1°C resolution.
7:4 HC2 R/W Sets the limit comparison hysteresis for zone 2 for both
the High and Low limits. The hysteresis can be set from
0°C to 15°C and has 1°C resolution.
16.12.4 Register 85h Zone3 and Zone4 Hysteresis for Limit Comparisons
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
85h R/W
Limit Comparison
Hysteresis
(Zones 3/4)
HC4
HC3
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 HC3 R/W Sets the limit comparison hysteresis for zone 3 for both
the High and Low limits. The hysteresis can be set from
0°C to 15°C and has 1°C resolution.
7:4 HC4 R/W Sets the limit comparison hysteresis for zone 4 for both
the High and Low limits.The hysteresis can be set from
0°C to 15°C and has 1°C resolution.
16.12.5 Registers 8E–8Fh Zone 1b and Zone 2b Temperature Reading Adjustment Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
8Eh R/W
Zone 1b
Temp
Adjust
RES RES Z1b_ADJUST[5:0] 00h
8Fh R/W
Zone 2b
Temp
Adjust
RES RES Z2b_ADJUST[5:0] 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
5:0 Z1b_ADJUST[5:0] or Z2b_ADJUST[5:0] R/W 6-bit signed 2’s complement offset adjustment. This
value is added to zone 1b or zone 2b temperature
measurements as they are made. All LM94 registers and
functions behave as if the resulting temperature was the
true measured temperature. This register allows offset
adjustments from +31°C to −32°C in 1°C steps.
7:6 RES R Reserved
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LM94
16.12.6 Registers 90–AFh Voltage Limit Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
90h R/W AD_IN1 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
91h R/W AD_IN1 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
92h R/W AD_IN2 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
93h R/W AD_IN2 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
94h R/W AD_IN3 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
95h R/W AD_IN3 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
96h R/W AD_IN4 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
97h R/W AD_IN4 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
98h R/W AD_IN5 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
99h R/W AD_IN5 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
9Ah R/W AD_IN6 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
9Bh R/W AD_IN6 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
9Ch R/W AD_IN7 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
9Dh R/W AD_IN7 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
9Eh R/W AD_IN8 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
9Fh R/W AD_IN8 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
A0h R/W AD_IN9 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
A1h R/W AD_IN9 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
A2h R/W AD_IN10 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
A3h R/W AD_IN10 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
A4h R/W AD_IN11 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
A5h R/W AD_IN11 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
A6h R/W AD_IN12 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
A7h R/W AD_IN12 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
A8h R/W AD_IN13 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
A9h R/W AD_IN13 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
AAh R/W AD_IN14 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
ABh R/W AD_IN14 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
ACh R/W AD_IN15 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
ADh R/W AD_IN15 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
AEh R/W AD_IN16 Low Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h
AFh R/W AD_IN16 High Limit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FFh
FFh as the high limit acts as a mask for that voltage sensor and so prevents this channel from being able to set the associated
error status bit in the B_ or H_ Error Status registers, for both high and low limit errors.
If a voltage input either exceeds the value set in the voltage high limit register or falls below the value set in the voltage low limit
register, the corresponding bit is set automatically by the LM94 in the B_ and H_Error Status registers.
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LM94
16.12.7 Register B0–B1h PROCHOT User Limit Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
B0h R/W P1_PROCHOT
User Limit 76543210 FFh
B1h R/W P2_PROCHOT
User Limit 76543210 FFh
These registers allow a user limit to be set for the PROCHOT monitoring function. If the corresponding Current Px_PROCHOT
register exceeds this value, the PH1_ERR or PH2_ERR bit is set in the corresponding Host and BMC error status registers. A
value of FFh acts as a mask and prevents the error status bits from being set.
Register Value (Decimal) Threshold Percentage
0 0%
1 0.39%
2 0.78%
n n/256*100
255 99.60%
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LM94
16.12.8 Register B2–B3h Dynamic Vccp Limit Offset Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
B2h R/W Vccp1 Limit Offsets UPPER_OFFSET1 LOWER_OFFSET1 17h
B3h R/W Vccp2 Limit Offsets UPPER_OFFSET2 LOWER_OFFSET2 17h
These offsets are used to determine the upper and lower limits of the dynamic Vccp window comparator. These offsets are added
or subtracted from the value selected by the VID bits.
LOWER_OFFSET1 or
LOWER_OFFSET2 Lower Offset
0h 25 mV
1h 50 mV
2h 75 mV
3h 100 mV
- - - -
Ch 325 mV
Dh 350 mV
Eh 375 mV
Fh 400 mV
UPPER_OFFSET1 or
UPPER_OFFSET2
Upper Offset
0h 12.5 mV
1h 25 mV
2h 37.5 mV
3h 50 mV
Dh 175 mV
Eh 187.5 mV
Fh 200 mV
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LM94
16.12.9 Register B4–BBh Fan Tach Limit Registers
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
B4h R/W Fan Tach 1
Limit LSB TLIMIT1[5:0] RES FCh
B5h R/W Fan Tach 1
Limit MSB TLIMIT1[13:6] FFh
B6h R/W Fan Tach 2
Limit LSB TLIMIT2[5:0] RES FCh
B7h R/W Fan Tach 2
Limit MSB TLIMIT2[13:6] FFh
B8h R/W Fan Tach 3
Limit LSB TLIMIT3[5:0] RES FCh
B9h R/W Fan Tach 3
Limit MSB TLIMIT1[13:6] FFh
BAh R/W Fan Tach 4
Limit LSB TLIMIT4[5:0] RES FCh
BBh R/W Fan Tach 4
Limit MSB TLIMIT4[13:6] FFh
If a tachometer reading exceeds its limit (as defined by these registers) the corresponding bit is set in the Host and BMC Error
Status registers. The fan tachometer readings can be associated with a particular PWM output, but the tach errors are not auto-
matically masked when a PWM is at 0% or set to level that causes the fan RPM to be below the limit purposely. In order to prevent
false errors, care needs to be taken to make sure that the Fan Tach Limits are properly set. Errors are never generated for a fan
if its limit is set to 3FFFh.
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LM94
16.13 SETUP REGISTERS
16.13.1 Register BCh Special Function Control 1 (Voltage Hysteresis and Fan Control Filter Enable)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
BCh R/W Special Function
Control 1 RES FCFE2 FCFE1 LCFE2 LCFE1 VH 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 VH R/W Voltage hysteresis control. This determines the amount of hysteresis to be applied to all voltage
limit comparisons. It applies to both high and low limits. One LSB equals one A/D count, so the
actual voltage represented by one LSB depends on the voltage channel.
3 LCFE1 R/W Limit Comparison Filter Enable. Setting this bit causes limit comparisons for temperature zone 1a
and 1b to use the filtered (spike smoothed) temperature instead of the unfiltered temperature.
4 LCFE2 R/W Limit Comparison Filter Enable. Setting this bit causes limit comparisons for temperature zone 2a
and 2b to use the filtered (spike smoothed) temperature instead of the unfiltered temperature.
5 FCFE1 R/W Fan Control Filter Enable. Setting this bit causes fan control functions for zone 1a and 1b (including
fan boost) to use the filtered (spike smoothed) temperature instead of the unfiltered temperature.
This includes the PI Loop controller, LUT, and temperature fan boost functions.
6 FCFE2 R/W Fan Control Filter Enable. Setting this bit causes fan control functions for zone 2a and 2b (including
fan boost) to use the filtered (spike smoothed) temperature instead of the unfiltered temperature.
This includes the PI Loop controller, LUT, and temperature fan boost functions.
7 RES R Reserved
In order for the LCFE1, LCFE2, FCFE1 and FCFE2 bits to work correctly, the ZN1E and ZN2E bits in the Zones 1/2 Spike Smoothing
Control register (at address C2h) should be cleared.
Application Note: If hysteresis for voltage limit comparisons is non-zero, special care needs to be taken when changing the voltage
limit registers while a voltage error condition exists. If software relaxes the voltage limits in an attempt to prevent an error condition,
it may be necessary to relax the limits by an amount greater than the hysteresis value and wait several milliseconds before at-
tempting to clear the error status bit for the given voltage channel. Once the error status bit has been cleared, the desired limit(s)
can be programmed.
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LM94
16.13.2 Register BDh Special Function Control 2 (Smart Tach Mode Enable, Fan Control Temperature Resolution Control
and VID Mode Select)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
BDh R/W Special Function
Control 2 VID_MODE[1:0] LT34
_RS
LT12
_RS
STE4 STE3 STE2 STE1 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 STE1 R/W Enable Smart Tach for Tach 1
1 STE2 R/W Enable Smart Tach for Tach 2
2 STE3 R/W Enable Smart Tach for Tach 3
3 STE4 R/W Enable Smart Tach for Tach 4
4 LT12_RS R/W When this bit is set, the LUT1 and LUT2 fan controls will
use 0.5°C. The resolution of the LUT offsets and
hysteresis settings are affected by this bit. These bits
apply to the fan control offset registers, fan control
hysteresis registers, and boost hysteresis registers.
5 LT34_RS R/W When this bit is set, the LUT3 and LUT4 fan controls will
use 0.5°C. The resolution of the LUT offsets and
hysteresis settings are affected by this bit.
7:6 VID_MODE
[1:0]
R/W These bits select the VID mode which determines how
the VID code is handled by the P1_VID and P2_VID
value registers and the dynamic Vccp monitoring.
VID Mode Select Bit Description
VID_MODE[1:0] VID Mode Comments
00 VRD10 Supports the VRD10 specification from Intel and is backwards compatible
with the LM93 dynamic Vccp monitoring circuitry. This mode has a voltage
range of 0.8375V to 1.600V with 12.5mV resolution and supports 6 VID bits/
pins.
01 VRD10.2 Extended Supports the VRD10.2 Extended specification from Intel. This mode has a
voltage range of 0.83125V to 1.600V with 6.25mV resolution and supports
7 VID bits/pins.
10 VRD11 Mode 1 Supports the VRD11 specification from Intel. This mode has a voltage range
of 0.83125V to 1.600V with 6.25mV resolution and supports 7 VID bits/pins
(VID6-VID0). It assumes VID7 is 0. This is the recommended mode of
operation for support of VRD10 and VRD11 without requiring additional
hardware.
11 VRD11 Mode 2 Supports the VRD11 specification from Intel. This mode has a voltage range
of 0.0375V to 1.600V with 12.5mV resolution and supports 7 VID bits/pins
(VID7-VID1). It assumes VID0 is 0. This mode measures voltage levels
below 0.83125V for VRD11, but will require additional hardware to
simultaneously support VRD10 operation.
Application Note: Enabling Smart Tach mode is not supported while either PWM output is configured for 22.5 kHz. The behavior
of the part is undefined if this configuration is programmed. Register E0h Special Function TACH to PWM Binding must be setup
when Smart Tach modes are enabled.
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LM94
16.13.3 Register BEh GPI/VID Level Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
BEh R/W GPI/VID
Level Control
GPI7
_LVL
GPI6
_LVL
GPI5
_LVL
GPI4
_LVL
GPI9
_LVL
GPI8
_LVL
P2_VID
_LVL
P1_VID
_LVL 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 P1_VID_LVL R/W If set, P1_VIDx inputs use alternate lower VIH and VIL levels.
1 P2_VID_LVL R/W If set, P2_VIDx uses alternate lower VIH and VIL levels.
2 GPI8_LVL R/W When in VRD10 mode, if set, GPI_8 input uses alternate lower
VIH and VIL levels.
3 GPI9_LVL R/W When in VRD10 mode, if set, GPI_9 input will use alternate lower
VIH and VIL levels.
4 GPI4_LVL R/W If set, GPIO4 input will use alternate lower VIH and VIL levels
5 GPI5_LVL R/W If set, GPIO5 input will use alternate lower VIH and VIL levels
6 GPI6_LVL R/W If set, GPIO6 input will use alternate lower VIH and VIL levels
7 GPI7_LVL R/W If set, GPIO7 input will use alternate lower VIH and VIL levels
See the DC Electrical Characteristics for exact VIH and VIL levels.
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LM94
16.13.4 Register BFh PWM Ramp Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
BFh R/W PWM Ramp
Control PH_RAMP VRD_RAMP 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 VRD_RAMP R/W Sets the time delay between ramp steps for the
VRDx_HOT ramp up/ramp down PWM function.
7:4 PH_RAMP R/W Sets the time delay between ramp steps for the
Px_PROCHOT ramp up/ramp down PWM function.
If the time delay between steps is set to 0 ms, the PWM duty cycle goes immediately to 100% instead of ramping up gradually.
VRD_RAMP
or PH_RAMP
Time Delay between
Ramp Steps
0h 0 ms
1h 50 ms
2h 100 ms
3h 150 ms
4h 200 ms
5h 250 ms
6h 300 ms
7h 350 ms
8h 400 ms
9h 450 ms
Ah 500 ms
Bh 550 ms
Ch 600 ms
Dh 650 ms
Eh 700 ms
Fh 750 ms
16.13.5 Register C0h Fan Boost Hysteresis (Zones 1/2)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C0h R/W
Fan Boost
Hysteresis
(Zones 1/2)
H2
H1
44h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 H1 R/W Sets the fan boost hysteresis for Zone 1a and 1b, has 1°
C resolution.
7:4 H2 R/W Sets the fan boost hysteresis for zone 2a and 2b, has 1°
C resolution.
If the temperature zone is above fan boost temperature and then drops below the fan boost temperature, the following occurs: the
PWM output remains at 100% until the temperature goes a certain amount below the fan boost temperature. These hysteresis
registers control this amount and can be set anywhere from 0°C to 15°C (unsigned).
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LM94
16.13.6 Register C1h Fan Boost Hysteresis (Zones 3/4)
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C1h R/W
Fan Boost
Hysteresis
(Zones 3/4)
H4
H3
44h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 H3 R/W Sets the fan boost hysteresis for zone 3 and has 1°C
resolution.
7:4 H4 R/W Sets the fan boost hysteresis for zone 4 and has 1°C
resolution.
If the temperature zone is above fan boost temperature and then drops below the fan boost temperature, the following occurs: the
PWM output remains at 100% until the temperature goes a certain amount below the fan boost temperature. These hysteresis
registers control this amount and can be set anywhere from 0°C to 15°C (unsigned).
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LM94
16.13.7 Register C2h Zones 1/2 Spike Smoothing Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C2h R/W
Zones 1/2 Spike
Smoothing
Control
ZN2E
ZN2 ZN1E ZN1
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 ZN1 R/W Configures the spike smoothing characteristics for zone
1a and 1b
3 ZN1E R/W When set, the filtered temperature for zone 1a and 1b is
used for both limit checking and auto-fan control instead
of the unfiltered temperature. Even when this bit is
cleared, the filtered temperature can be read by software
from the filtered temperature register.
6:4 ZN2 R/W Configures the spike smoothing characteristics for zone
2a and 2b
7 ZN2E R/W When set, the filtered temperature for zone 2a and 2b is
used for both limit checking and auto-fan control instead
of the unfiltered temperature. Even when this bit is
cleared, the filtered temperature can be read by software
from the filtered temperature register.
If all the REMOTE1 or REMOTE2 pins are connected to a processor or chipset, instantaneous temperature spikes may be sampled
by the LM94. If these spikes are not ignored, the PWM outputs may cause the fans to turn on prematurely and produce unpleasant
noise. Also, false error events may occur. For this reason, any zone that is connected to a chipset or processor may need spike
smoothing enabled. The spike smoothing provides additional filtering above and beyond any ΣΔ A/D inherent averaging.
When spike smoothing is enabled, the temperature reading registers still reflect the current value of the temperature—not the
filtered value. Only the filtered temperature registers reflect the filtered value.
ZN1 or ZN2 Spike Smoothed Over
0h 11.8 seconds
1h 7.0 seconds
2h 4.4 seconds
3h 3.0 seconds
4h 1.6 seconds
5h 0.8 seconds
6h 0.6 seconds
7h 0.4 seconds
www.national.com 82
LM94
16.13.8 Register C3h LUT 1/2 MinPWM and Hysteresis
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C3h R/W
LUT 1/2
MinPWM and
Hysteresis
MinPWM12
LUT_FC_TH12
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 LUT_FC_TH12 R/W This field sets the amount of hysteresis (in degrees C)
that is used by the auto-fan control for LUT 1 and 2. This
should be set greater than 0 to avoid unwanted
oscillation between two steps in the look-up table. The
resolution of this field is controlled by Special Function
Control 2 register bit 4.
7:4 MinPWM12 R/W This field determines the duty cycle that the auto-fan
control requests for LUT 1 and 2 if the temperature for
the given zone falls below the programmed base
temperature for the assigned LUT. This field accepts 16
possible values 13 of which are mapped to duty cycles
according the table in the Auto-Fan Control section
Section 15.10.2 LUT Fan Control Duty Cycles.
16.13.9 Register C4h LUT 3/4 MinPWM and Hysteresis
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C4h R/W
LUT 3/4
MinPWM and
Hysteresis
MinPWM34
LUT_FC_TH34
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 LUT_FC_TH34 R/W This field sets the amount of hysteresis (in degrees C)
that is used by the auto-fan control for LUT 3 and 4. This
should be set greater than 0 to avoid unwanted
oscillation between two steps in the look-up table. The
resolution of this field is controlled by Special Function
Control 2 register bit 5.
7:4 MinPWM34 R/W This field determines the duty cycle that the auto-fan
control requests for LUT 3 and 4 if the temperature for
the given zone falls below the programmed base
temperature for the assigned LUT. This field accepts 16
possible values 13 of which are mapped to duty cycles
according the table in the Auto-Fan Control section
Section 15.10.2 LUT Fan Control Duty Cycles.
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LM94
16.13.10 Register C5h GPO
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C5h R/W GPO GPO7 GPO6 GPO5 GPO4 GPO3 GPO2 GPO1 GPO0 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 GPO0 R/W If set, GPIO_0 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_0 is being
used as an input.
1 GPO1 R/W If set, GPIO_1 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_1 is being
used as an input.
2 GPO2 R/W If set, GPIO_2 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_2 is being
used as an input.
3 GPO3 R/W If set, GPIO_3 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_3 is being
used as an input.
4 GPO4 R/W If set, GPIO_4 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_4 is being
used as an input.
5 GPO5 R/W If set, GPIO_5 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_5 is being
used as an input.
6 GPO6 R/W If set, GPIO_6 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_6 is being
used as an input.
7 GPO7 R/W If set, GPIO_7 will be pulled low. If cleared, the output is
not pulled low. This bit should be 0 if GPIO_7 is being
used as an input.
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LM94
16.13.11 Register C6h PROCHOT Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C6h R/W PROCHOT
Override
FORCE
_P1
FORCE
_P2
P2_VRD2
_DIS
P1_VRD1
_DIS
PHT_DC 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 PHT_DC R/W PROCHOT duty cycle select.
4 P1_VRD1_DIS R/W When this bit is set by software, P1_PROCHOT will not be
asserted when P1_VRD_HOT is asserted.
5 P2_VRD2_DIS R/W When this bit is set by software, P2_PROCHOT will not be
asserted when P2_VRD_HOT is asserted.
6 FORCE_P1 R/W When this is set by software, P1_PROCHOT will be asserted by
the LM94 with the duty cycle selected by PHT_DC.
7 FORCE_P2 R/W When this is set by software, P2_PROCHOT will be asserted by
the LM94 with the duty cycle selected by PHT_DC.
Note that if the P1P2_PROCHOT bit is set to short the Px_PROCHOT pins together, both Px_PROCHOT outputs will be driven
together, even if only one of the FORCE_Px bits is set.
The period of the PWM signal driven on Px_PROCHOT is 3.56 ms (80 internal 22.5 kHz clocks). The asserted time can be increased
in 5 clock increments. 5 clocks is about 220 µs and would represent 6.25% percent throttled.
Possible settings for PHT_DC:
PHT_DC Asserted Period
0h 5 clocks
1h 10 clocks
2h 15 clocks
3h 20 clocks
4h 25 clocks
5h 30 clocks
6h 35 clocks
7h 40 clocks
8h 45 clocks
9h 50 clocks
Ah 55 clocks
Bh 60 clocks
Ch 65 clocks
Dh 70 clocks
Eh 75 clocks
Fh 80 clocks
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LM94
16.13.12 Register C7h PROCHOT Time Interval
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C7h R/W
PROCHOT
Time
Interval
P2_TI
P1_TI
11h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 P1_TI R/W Sets the monitoring interval for P1_PROCHOT
7:4 P2_TI R/W Sets the monitoring interval for P2_PROCHOT
Possible settings for P1_TI and P2_TI:
P1_TI or P2_TI Monitoring Time Interval
(seconds)
0h 0.73
1h 1.46
2h 2.9
3h 5.8
4h 11.7
5h 23.3
6h 46.6
7h 93.2
8h 186
9h 372
Ah–Fh Reserved
Note that changing this value while PROCHOT measurements are running may cause the monitoring circuit to produce a erroneous
value. To avoid alerts and invalid B_Px_PROCHOT or B_Px_PROCHOT Error Status values, only change this value while the chip
is programmed for S3 or S4/5.
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LM94
16.13.13 Register C8h PWM1 Control 1
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C8h R/W PWM1
Control 1 VRD2 VRD1 PH2 PH1 LUT4 LUT3 LUT2 LUT1 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 LUT1 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to LUT 1.
1 LUT2 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to LUT 2.
2 LUT3 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to LUT 3.
3 LUT4 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to LUT 4.
4 PH1 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to P1_PROCHOT.
5 PH2 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to P2_PROCHOT.
6 VRD1 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to VRD1_HOT1.
7 VRD2 R/W If set, PWM1 will be bound to VRD1_HOT2.
This register can bind PWM1 to several different control sources. The temperature zones control the PWM duty cycle using the
table lookup function. The Px_PROCHOT and VRDx_HOT inputs control the PWM using the ramp up/ramp down functions. If
multiple control sources are bound to PWM1, the largest duty cycle being requested will be used.
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LM94
16.13.14 Register C9h PWM1 Control 2
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
C9h R/W PWM1
Control 2 OVR_DC PPL EPPL INV OVR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 OVR R/W When set, enables manual duty cycle override for
PWM1.
1 INV R/W Invert PWM1 output. When 0, 100% duty cycle
corresponds to the PWM output continuously HIGH.
When 1, 100% duty cycle corresponds to the PWM
output continuously LOW.
2 EPPL R/W Enable PROCHOT PWM1 lock. When set, this bit
causes bound PROCHOT events on PWM1 to trigger
PPL (bit [3]). When cleared, PPL never gets set.
3 PPL R/W PROCHOT PWM1 lock. When set, this bit indicates that
PWM1 is currently being held at 100% because a bound
PROCHOT event occurred while EPPL (bit [2]) was set.
This bit is cleared by writing a zero. Clearing this bit
allows the fans to return to normal operation. This bit is
not locked by the LOCK bit in the LM94 Configuration
register.
7:4 OVR_DC R/W This field sets the duty cycle that will be used by PWM1
whenever manual low resolution override mode is active.
This field accepts 16 possible values that are mapped to
duty cycles according the table in the Fan Control
section. Whenever this register is read, it returns the duty
cycle that is currently being used by PWM1 regardless
of whether override mode is active or not. The value read
may not match the last value written if another control
source is requesting a greater duty cycle. This field
always returns 0h when the PWM1 spin up cycle is
active.
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LM94
16.13.15 Register CAh PWM1 Control 3
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CAh R/W PWM1
Control 3 SU_DUR[2:0] SU_DUR[3] SU_DC 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 SU_DC R/W This field sets the duty cycle that will be used whenever
PWM1 experiences a Spin-Up cycle. This field accepts
16 possible values that are mapped to duty cycles
according the table in the Auto-Fan Control section
Section 15.10.2 LUT Fan Control Duty Cycles. Setting
this field to 0h will effectively disable Spin-Up.
4 SU_DUR[3] R/W Most significant bit that sets the Spin-up duration for
PWM1.
7:0 SU_DUR[2:0] R/W Least significant bits that set the Spin-Up duration for
PWM1 least significant bits.
Bits 7:4 configure the spin-up duration. When the duty cycle of PWM1 changes from zero to a non-zero value, the spin-up sequence
is activated for the specified amount of time. The available settings are defined according to this table:
SU_DUR[3] (Bit 4) SU_DUR[2:0] (Bits[7:5]) Spin-Up Time
0 0h Spin-up disabled
0 1h 100 ms
0 2h 250 ms
0 3h 400 ms
0 4h 700 ms
0 5h 1s
0 6h 2 s
0 7h 4 s
1 0h 6 s
1 1h 8 s
1 2h 10 s
1 3h 12 s
1 4h 14 s
1 5h 16 s
1 6h 18 s
1 7h 20 s
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LM94
16.13.16 Register CBh PWM1 Control 4
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CBh R/W PWM1 Control 4 RES RES RES RES HF_LUT
_MAP
FREQ1 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 FREQ1 R/W PWM1 frequency control. Setting this value controls the
frequency of the PWM1 output according to the table
below.
3 HF_LUT_MAP R/W Selects between two different maps for the PWM duty
cycle assignment in the LUT when the PWM frequency
is set to 22.5kHz. All 4 LUTs, VRD ramp, PROCHOT
ramp, spin-up and low-resolution overide will be affected
by this bit. When this bit is set the LUT duty cycle
assignment will increment 6.25% steps starting at 25%.
When this bit is cleared the duty cycle mapping will
match the Low Frequency table. This bit has no effect
when the PWM frequency is set to anything other than
22.5kHz and the low PWM frequency mapping will be
used.
7:4 RES R Reserved
FREQ1 Frequency of
PWM1 (Hz)
0h 22500
1h 96
2h 84
3h 72
4h 60
5h 48
6h 36
7h 12
LUT 1-4 Duty Cycle Assignment with PWM Frequency=22.5kHz as Controlled by the HF_LUT_MAP bit.
LUT Duty Cycle Assignments when HF_LUT_MAP='0' LUT Duty Cycle Assignments when HF_LUT_MAP='1'
(Low PWM Frequency Mapping)
LUT Step Duty Cycle (%) LUT Step Duty Cycle (%)
1 25 1 25
2 31.25 2 28.57
3 37.5 3 32.14
4 43.75 4 35.71
5 50 5 39.29
6 56.25 6 42.86
7 62.25 7 46.43
8 68.75 8 50
9 75 9 53.57
10 81.25 10 57.14
11 87.5 11 71.43
12 93.75 12 85.71
13 100 13 100
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LM94
16.13.17 Register CCh PWM2 Control 1
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CCh R/W PWM2
Control 1 VRD2 VRD1 PH2 PH1 LUT4 LUT3 LUT2 LUT1 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 LUT1 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to LUT 1.
1 LUT2 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to LUT 2.
2 LUT3 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to LUT 3.
3 LUT4 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to LUT 4.
4 PH1 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to P1_PROCHOT.
5 PH2 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to P2_PROCHOT.
6 VRD1 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to VRD1_HOT.
7 VRD2 R/W If set, PWM2 will be bound to VRD2_HOT.
This register can bind PWM2 to several different control sources. The temperature zones control the PWM duty cycle using the
table lookup function. The Px_PROCHOT and VRDx_HOT inputs control the PWM using the ramp up/ramp down functions. If
multiple control sources are bound to PWM2, the largest duty cycle being requested will be used.
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LM94
16.13.18 Register CDh PWM2 Control 2
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CDh R/W PWM2
Control 2 OVR_DC PPL EPPL INV OVR 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 OVR R/W When set, enables manual duty cycle override for
PWM2.
1 INV R/W Invert PWM1 output. When 0, 100% duty cycle
corresponds to the PWM output continuously HIGH.
When 1, 100% duty cycle corresponds to the PWM
output continuously LOW.
2 EPPL R/W Enable PROCHOT PWM2 lock. When set, this bit
causes bound PROCHOT events on PWM2 to trigger
PPL (bit [3]). When cleared, PPL never gets set.
3 PPL R/W PROCHOT PWM2 lock. When set, this bit indicates that
PWM2 is currently being held at 100% because a bound
PROCHOT event occurred while EPPL (bit [2]) was set.
This bit is cleared by writing a zero. Clearing this bit
allows the fans to return to normal operation. This bit is
not locked by the LOCK bit in the LM94 Configuration
register.
7:4 OVR_DC R/W This field sets the duty cycle that will be used by PWM2
whenever manual low resolution override mode is active.
This field accepts 16 possible values that are mapped to
duty cycles according the table in the Fan Control
section. Whenever this register is read, it returns the duty
cycle that is currently being used by PWM2 regardless
of whether override mode is active or not. The value read
may not match the last value written if another control
source is requesting a greater duty cycle. This field
always returns 0h when the PWM2 spin up cycle is
active.
www.national.com 92
LM94
16.13.19 Register CEh PWM2 Control 3
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CEh R/W PWM2
Control 3 SU_DUR[2:0] SU_DUR[3] SU_DC 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
3:0 SU_DC R/W This field sets the duty cycle that used whenever PWM2
experiences a Spin-Up cycle. This field accepts 16
possible values that are mapped to duty cycles
according the table in the Auto-Fan Control section
Section 15.10.2 LUT Fan Control Duty Cycles. Setting
this field to 0h effectively disables Spin-Up.
4 SU_DUR[3] R/W Most significant bit that sets the spin-up duration for
PWM2
7:5 SU_DUR[2:0] R/W Least significant bits that set the Spin-Up duration for
PWM2.
Bits 7:4 configure the spin-up duration. When the duty cycle of PWM2 changes from zero to a non-zero value, the spin-up sequence
is activated for the specified amount of time. The available settings are defined according to this table:
SU_DUR[3] (Bit 4) SU_DUR[2:0] (Bits[7:5]) Spin-Up Time
0 0h Spin-up disabled
0 1h 100 ms
0 2h 250 ms
0 3h 400 ms
0 4h 700 ms
0 5h 1s
0 6h 2 s
0 7h 4 s
1 0h 6 s
1 1h 8 s
1 2h 10 s
1 3h 12 s
1 4h 14 s
1 5h 16 s
1 6h 18 s
1 7h 20 s
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LM94
16.13.20 Register CFh PWM2 Control 4
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
CFh R/W PWM2
Control 4 RES RES RES RES HF_LUT
_MAP
FREQ2 00h
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LM94
Bit Name R/W Description
2:0 FREQ2 R/W PWM2 frequency control. Controls the frequency of the
PWM2 output in the same fashion as FREQ1 in the
PWM1 Control 4 register.
3 HF_LUT_MAP R/W Selects between two different maps for the PWM duty
cycle assignment in the LUT when the PWM frequency
is set to 22.5kHz. All 4 LUTs, VRD ramp, PROCHOT
ramp, spin-up, and low-resolution override will be
affected by this bit. When this bit is cleared the LUT duty
cycle assignment will increment 6.25% steps starting at
25%. When this bit is set the duty cycle mapping will
match the Low Frequency table. This bit has no effect
when the PWM frequency is set to anything other than
22.5kHz and the low PWM frequency mapping will be
used.
7:4 RES R Reserved
FREQ1 Frequency of
PWM1 (Hz)
0h 22500
1h 96
2h 84
3h 72
4h 60
5h 48
6h 36
7h 12
LUT 1-4 Duty Cycle Assignment with PWM Frequency=22.5kHz as Controlled by the HF_LUT_MAP bit.
LUT Duty Cycle Assignments when HF_LUT_MAP='0' LUT Duty Cycle Assignments when HF_LUT_MAP='1'
(Low PWM Frequency Mapping)
LUT Step Duty Cycle (%) LUT Step Duty Cycle (%)
1 25 1 25
2 31.25 2 28.57
3 37.5 3 32.14
4 43.75 4 35.71
5 50 5 39.29
6 56.25 6 42.86
7 62.25 7 46.43
8 68.75 8 50
9 75 9 53.57
10 81.25 10 57.14
11 87.5 11 71.43
12 93.75 12 85.71
13 100 13 100
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LM94
16.13.21 Register D0h–D3h LUT 1 to 4 Base Temperatures
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
D0h R/W LUT 1 Base
Temperature 76543210 00h
D1h R/W LUT 2 Base
Temperature 76543210 00h
D2h R/W LUT 3 Base
Temperature 76543210 00h
D3h R/W LUT 4 Base
Temperature 76543210 00h
The value in this register is used as the base in the temperature calculation for the auto fan control look-up table. These registers
use the standard temperature format (8-bit signed data). The look-up table contains the temperature offsets. The offsets are added
to the base temperature to determine the true temperature to be used for each table entry for auto fan control.
16.13.22 Register D4h–DFh Lookup Table Steps—LUT 1/2 and LUT 3/4 Offset Temperature
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
D4h R/W Step 2
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP2 LUT1/2_STEP2 00h
D5h R/W Step 3
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP3 LUT1/2_STEP3 00h
D6h R/W Step 4
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP4 LUT1/2_STEP4 00h
D7h R/W Step 5
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP5 LUT1/2_STEP5 00h
D8h R/W Step 6
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP6 LUT1/2_STEP6 00h
D9h R/W Step 7
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP7 LUT1/2_STEP7 00h
DAh R/W Step 8
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP8 LUT1/2_STEP8 00h
DBh R/W Step 9
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP9 LUT1/2_STEP9 00h
DCh R/W Step 10
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP10 LUT1/2_STEP10 00h
DDh R/W Step 11
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP11 LUT1/2_STEP11 00h
DEh R/W Step 12
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP12 LUT1/2_STEP12 00h
DFh R/W Step 13
Temp Offset LUT3/4_STEP13 LUT1/2_STEP13 00h
There are two look up tables of 13 steps (12 offsets), one for LUT 1 and 2 the other for LUT 3 and 4. Each 8-bit offset register
contains the offset temperature for LUT 1 and 2 as well as the offset temperature for LUT 3 and 4. The format for the offsets is a
4-bit unsigned value, and one LSB is either 1°C or 0.5°C. The offset resolution is controlled by LT34_RS and LT12_RS bits found
in the Special Function Control 2 register (at address BDh). Therefore, the offset range is variable as well and is either 15°C to 0°
C or 7.5°C to 0°C.
See the Section 15.10 FAN CONTROL for information on how the base temperature/lookup table should be used for controlling
the PWM output(s).
www.national.com 96
LM94
16.13.23 Register E0h Special Function TACH to PWM Binding
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E0h R/W
Special Function
TACH to PWM
Binding
T4P2
T4P1 T3P2 T3P1 T2P2 T2P1 T1P2 T1P1
00h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 T1P1 R/W If set, TACH1 is bound to PWM1.
1 T1P2 R/W If set, TACH1 is bound to PWM2.
2 T2P1 R/W If set, TACH2 is bound to PWM1.
3 T2P2 R/W If set, TACH2 is bound to PWM2.
4 T3P1 R/W If set, TACH3 is bound to PWM1.
5 T3P2 R/W If set, TACH3 is bound to PWM2.
6 T4P1 R/W If set, TACH4 is bound to PWM1.
7 T4P2 R/W If set, TACH4 is bound to PWM2.
If a TACH channel is bound to a PWM channel, TACH errors on that channel are automatically masked when the bound PWM is
at 0% duty cycle or performing spin-up. Behavior is undefined if a TACH channel is bound to both PWM outputs. This register must
be setup when Smart Tach Mode is enabled in register BDh, Special Function Control 2, and when Tach Boost is enabled in register
E1h, Tachometer Fan Boost Cotrol.
16.13.24 Register E1h Tachometer Fan Boost Control Register
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E1h R/W Tach Fan Boost Control RES TBS TBT[5:0] 3Fh
Lock Bit Name R/W Description
X5:0 TBT[5:0]] R/W TACH error fan boost enable timeout. Set to 63 (3Fh) to disable the
TACH error fan boost feature (default). Values other than 63 enable
the TACH error fan boost feature and set the timeout according to
the following table.
6 TBS R/W TACH boost status: When set, this bit indicates that the TACH error
boost has been triggered and is currently requesting 100% PWM.
If bits [5:0] are configured for an infinite timeout, and the TACH error
(s) have ceased, then writing a zero to this bit will un-trigger the
TACH boost. If TACH error boost is disabled, this bit always returns
a 0.
7 RES R Reserved
Timeout Assignments for TBT[5:0]
TBT[5:0] Timeout/Function
0 0
1 3
·
·
·
·
·
·
N N * 32 * 0.091 sec
60 175
61 178
62 Infinite setting (software must clear bit 6 of this register to reset)
63 Disabled
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LM94
16.13.25 Register E2h LM94 Status Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E2h R/W LM94 Status/
Control
BMC
_ERR
HOST
_ERR
TACH_EDGE GPI5_A
M
GPI4_AM ASF OVRID 00h
Lock Bit Name R/W Description
0 OVRID R/W If this bit is set, all PWM outputs go to 100% duty cycle.
X1 ASF R/W If this bit is set, BMC error registers support ASF, i.e.
reset on read. When not in ASF mode, a write “1” is
required to clear the bits in the BMC error status
registers.
2 GPI4_AM R/W GPI4 Auto Mask Enable
If this bit is set, an error event on GPI4 causes all other
error events to be masked.
The BMC Error Status registers do not reflect any new
error events until the GPI4_ERR bit is cleared in the
B_GPI Error Status register. The HOST Error Status
registers do not reflect any new error events until the
GPI4_ERR bit is cleared in the H_GPI Error Status
register.
If a CPU_THERMTRIP signal is connected to GPIO4,
this ensures that unwanted error events do not fire once
CPU_THERMTRIP is asserted.
3 GP15_AM R/W GPI5 Auto Mask Enable
This bit works exactly the same as GPI4_AM, but applies
to GPI5.
5:4 TACH_EDGE R/W This field determines what type of edges are used for
measuring fan tach pulses. This effects all four
tachometer inputs.
6 HOST_ERR R This bit gets set if any error bit is set in any of the Host
Error Status registers (H_).
7 BMC_ERR R This bit gets set if any error bit is set in any of the BMC
Error Status registers (B_). When this bit is set, ALERT
are asserted if enabled.
TACH_EDGE Edge Type Used for
Tachometer Measurements
0h Either rising or falling edges may
be used.
1h Rising edges only
2h Falling edges only
3h Reserved
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LM94
16.13.26 Register E3h LM94 Configuration
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E3h R/W LM94
Configuration READY RES ALERT_
COMP_EN
P1P2_
PROCHOT
ALERT
_EN
GMSK LOCK START 00h
Lock Bit Name R/W Description
x0 START R/W When this bit is 0, the LM94 operates in basic mode.
All error events are masked. The auto fan control
algorithm is disabled. Both PWMs are set to 0%. All
monitoring functions are active and the value registers
are updated.
Once this bit is set, error events are no longer globally
masked, and the auto-fan control algorithm is enabled.
Fan boost uses the programmed values.
It is expected that all limit and setup registers are set by
BIOS or application software prior to setting this bit.
X1 LOCK R/W Setting this bit locks all registers and register bits that are
indicated as lockable. Lockable registers have an “x” in
the Lock column of their description. This register is
locked once it is set. This bit can only be cleared by an
external device asserting RESET.
2 GMSK R/W Global Mask
When this bit is set by software, all error events are
masked. Setting this bit does not effect any other mask
registers or value registers.
3 ALERT_EN R/W When this bit is set, the ALERT output is enabled. If this
bit is cleared, the ALERT output is disabled.
4 P1P2_
PROCHOT
R/W In some configurations it may be required to have both
processors throttling at the same rate. When this bit is
set, the LM94 connects P1_PROCHOT to
P2_PROCHOT. If P1_PROCHOT and P2_PROCHOT
are already shorted by some other means, this bit should
NOT be set. Doing so would cause both PROCHOT
signals to be stuck low until this bit is cleared.
5 ALERT_
COMP_EN
R/W When this bit is set the ALERT output will function in the
thermal comparator mode. In the thermal comparator
mode ALERT will be asserted only for unmasked thermal
error events. ALERT will be de-assserted immediately
when the error event ceases.
6 RES R/W Reserved
7 READY R The LM94 sets this bit automatically after valid data has
been collected for all temperatures and voltages.
Software should not use any temperature or voltage
values until this bit has been set.
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LM94
16.14 SLEEP STATE CONTROL AND MASK REGISTERS
16.14.1 Register E4h Sleep State Control
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E4h R/W Sleep State
Control RES SB 03h
Bit Name R/W Description
1:0 SB R/W Sleep State Control. Setting this field tells the LM94
which sleep state the system is in. Several error events
are masked depending on the state of this field.
7:2 RES R Reserved
SB Description
00 Sleep state = S0
Do not mask errors.
01 Sleep state = S1
Mask errors according to S1 mask
registers and standard S1
masking.
10 Sleep state = S3
Mask errors according to S3 mask
registers and standard S3
masking.
11 Sleep state = S4/5
Mask errors according to S4/5
mask registers and standard S4/5
masking. This mode is activated
automatically if the RESET input is
asserted.
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LM94
16.14.2 Register E5h S1 GPI Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E5h R/W S1 GPI
Mask
GPI7_S1
_MSK
GPI6_S1
_MSK
GPI5_S1
_MSK
GPI4_S1
_MSK
GPI3_S1
_MSK
GPI2_S1
_MSK
GPI1_S1
_MSK
GPI0_S1
_MSK FFh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 GPI0_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI0 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
1 GPI1_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI1 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
2 GPI2_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI2 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
3 GPI3_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI3 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
4 GPI4_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI4 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
5 GPI5_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI5 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
6 GPI6_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI6 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
7 GPI7_S1_MSK R/W If set, GPI7 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
16.14.3 Register E6h S1 Tach Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E6h R/W S1 Tach
Mask RES TACH4_S1
_MSK
TACH3_S1
_MSK
TACH2_S1
_MSK
TACH1_S1
_MSK 0Fh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 TACH1_S1_MSK R/W If set, Tach1 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
1 TACH2_S1_MSK R/W If set, Tach2 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
2 TACH3_S1_MSK R/W If set, Tach3 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
3 TACH4_S1_MSK R/W If set, Tach4 errors are masked in S1 sleep state.
7:4 RES R Reserved
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LM94
16.14.4 Register E7h S3 GPI Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E7h R/W S3 GPI
Mask
GPI7_S3
_MSK
GPI6_S3
_MSK
GPI5_S3
_MSK
GPI4_S3
_MSK
GPI3_S3
_MSK
GPI2_S3
_MSK
GPI1_S3
_MSK
GPI0_S3
_MSK FFh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 GPI0_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI0 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
1 GPI1_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI1 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
2 GPI2_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI2 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
3 GPI3_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI3 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
4 GPI4_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI4 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
5 GPI5_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI5 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
6 GPI6_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI6 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
7 GPI7_S3_MSK R/W If set, GPI7 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
16.14.5 Register E8h S3 Tach Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E8h R/W S3 Tach
Mask RES TACH4_S3
_MSK
TACH3_S3
_MSK
TACH2_S3
_MSK
TACH1_S3
_MSK 0Fh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 TACH1_S3_MSK R/W If set, Tach1 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
1 TACH2_S3_MSK R/W If set, Tach2 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
2 TACH3_S3_MSK R/W If set, Tach3 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
3 TACH4_S3_MSK R/W If set, Tach4 errors are masked in S3 sleep state.
7:4 RES R Reserved
16.14.6 Register E9h S3 Temperature/Voltage Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
E9h R/W S3 Voltage
Mask RES TEMP_
S3_MSK
AIN14_S3
_MSK
AIN13_S3
_MSK
AIN12_S3
_MSK 07h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 AIN12_S3_MS
K
R/W If set, AIN12 errors as masked in S3 sleep state.
1 AIN13_S3_MS
K
R/W If set, AIN13 errors as masked in S3 sleep state.
2 AIN14_S3_MS
K
R/W If set, AIN14 errors as masked in S3 sleep state.
3 TEMP_S3_MS
K
R/W If set, temperature errors and diode fault errors for zones
1 and 2 are masked in S3 sleep state.
7:3 RES R Reserved
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LM94
16.14.7 Register EAh S4/5 GPI Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
EAh R/W S4/5 GPI
Mask
GPI7
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI6
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI5
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI4
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI3
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI2
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI1
_S4/5
_MSK
GPI0
_S4/5
_MSK
FFh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 GPI0_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI0 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
1 GPI1_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI1 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
2 GPI2_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI2 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
3 GPI3_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI3 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
4 GPI4_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI4 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
5 GPI5_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI5 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
6 GPI6_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI6 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
7 GPI7_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, GPI7 errors are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
16.14.8 Register EBh S4/5 Temperature/Voltage Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
EBh R/W S4/5 Voltage
Mask RES TEMP_
S4/5_MSK
AIN14_S4/5
_MSK
AIN13_S4/5
_MSK
AIN12_S4/5
_MSK 07h
Bit Name R/W Description
0 AIN12_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, AIN12 errors as masked in S4/5 sleep state.
1 AIN13_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, AIN13 errors as masked in S4/5 sleep state.
2 AIN14_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, AIN14 errors as masked in S4/5 sleep state.
3 TEMP_S4/5_MSK R/W If set, temperature errors and diode fault errors for zones
1 and 2 are masked in S4/5 sleep state.
7:3 RES R Reserved
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LM94
16.15 OTHER MASK REGISTERS
16.15.1 Register ECh GPI Error Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
ECh R/W GPI Error
Mask
GPI7
_MSK
GPI6
_MSK
GPI5
_MSK
GPI4
_MSK
GPI3
_MSK
GPI2
_MSK
GPI1
_MSK
GPI0
_MSK FFh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 GPI0_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI0 error events are masked.
1 GPI1_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI1 error events are masked.
2 GPI2_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI2 error events are masked.
3 GPI3_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI3 error events are masked.
4 GPI4_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI4 error events are masked.
5 GPI5_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI5 error events are masked.
6 GPI6_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI6 error events are masked.
7 GPI7_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI7 error events are masked.
These bits mask the corresponding bits in the B_ and H_GPI Error Status Registers. They do not effect the GPI State register.
16.15.2 Register EDh Miscellaneous Error Mask
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
EDh R/W Miscellaneous
Error Mask RES DVccp2
_MSK
DVccp1
_MSK
SCSI2
_MSK
SCSI1
_MSK
VRD2
_MSK
VRD1
_MSK 3Fh
Bit Name R/W Description
0 VRD1_MSK R/W When this bit is set, VRD1_HOT error events are masked.
1 VRD2_MSK R/W When this bit is set, VRD2_HOT error events are masked.
2 SCSI1_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI8 error events are masked.
3 SCSI2_MSK R/W When this bit is set, GPI9 error events are masked.
4 DVccp1_MSK R/W When this bit is set, dynamic Vccp limit error events for AD_IN7
(CPU1) are masked.
5 DVccp2_MSK R/W When this bit is set, dynamic Vccp limit error events for AD_IN8
(CPU2) are masked.
7:6 RES R Reserved
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16.15.3 Register EE and EFh Zone 1a and Zone 2a Adjustment Register
Register
Address
Read/
Write
Register
Name Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Default
Value
EEh R/W Zone 1a
Adjust RES RES Z1a_ADJUST[5:0] 00h
EFh R/W Zone 2a
Adjust RES RES Z2a_ADJUST[5:0] 00h
Bit Name R/W Description
5:0 Z1a_ADJUST[5:0] or
Z2a_ADJUST[5:0]
R/W 6-bit signed 2’s complement offset adjustment. This value is added to all zone 1a
and 2a temperature measurements as they are made. All LM94 registers and
functions behave as if the resulting temperature was the true measured
temperature. This register allows offset adjustments from +31°C to −32°C in 1°C
steps. The format is sign two's complement.
7:6 RES R Reserved
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LM94
17.0 Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note
1, Note 2)
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/
Distributors for availability and specifications.
Positive Supply Voltage (VDD)6.0V
Voltage on Any Digital Input or
Output Pin −0.3V to 6.0V
Voltage on +5V Input −0.3V to +6.667V
Voltage at Positive Remote
Diode Inputs, AD_IN1, AD_IN2,
AD_IN3, and AD_IN15 Inputs −0.3V to (VDD + 0.05V)
Voltage at Other Analog Voltage
Inputs −0.3V to +6.0V
Input Current at Thermal Diode
Negative Inputs ±1 mA
Input Current at any pin (Note 3) ±10mA
Package Input Current (Note 3) ±100 mA
Maximum Junction Temperature
(Note 9)
(TJMAX)150 °C
ESD Susceptibility (Note 4)
Human Body Model 3 kV
Machine Model 300V
Charged Device Model 750V
Storage Temperature −65°C to +150°C
For soldering specifications,
see product folder at www.national.com and
www.national.com/ms/MS/MS-SOLDERING.pdf
18.0 Operating Ratings (Note 1, Note 2)
TMIN TA TMAX
Operating Temperature Range 0°C TA +85°C
Nominal Supply Voltage 3.3V
Supply Voltage Range (VDD) +3.0V to +3.6V
VID0-VID5 −0.05V to +5.5V
Digital Input Voltage Range −0.05V to
(VDD + 0.05V)
Package Thermal Resistance
(Note 6)
79°C/W
19.0 DC Electrical Characteristics
The following limits apply for +3.0 VDC to +3.6 VDC, unless otherwise noted. Bold face limits apply for TA = TJ over TMIN to
TMAX of the operating range; all other limits TA = TJ = 25°C unless otherwise noted. TA is the ambient temperature of the LM94;
TJ is the junction temperature of the LM94; TD is the junction temperature of the thermal diode.
Symbol Parameter Conditions Typical
(Note 9)
Limits
(Note 10)
Units
(Limits)
POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS
Power Supply Current Converting, Interface and
Fans Inactive, Peak Current 22.75 mA (max)
Converting, Interface and
Fans Inactive, Average
Current
1.6 mA
Power-On Reset Threshold Voltage 21.6 V (min)
2.7 V (max)
TEMPERATURE-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS
Local Temperature Accuracy Over Full Range 0°C TA 85°C ±2 ±3 °C (max)
TA = +55°C ±1 ±2.5 °C (max)
Local Temperature Resolution 1 °C
Remote Thermal Diode Temperature Accuracy Over
Full Range; targeted for a typical Pentium processor
on 90 nm or 65 nm process(Note 8)
0°C TA 85°C
and 0°C TD 100°C ±3 °C (max)
0°C TA 85°C
and TD =70°C ±2.5 °C (max)
Remote Thermal Diode Temperature Accuracy;
targeted for a typical Pentium processor on 90nm or
65nm process (Note 8)
0°C TA 85°C
and 25°C TD 70°C ±1 °C
Remote Temperature Resolution 1 °C
Thermal Diode Source Current High Level 172 230 µA (max)
Low Level 10.75 µA
Thermal Diode Current Ratio 16
TCTotal Monitoring Cycle Time 100 ms (max)
ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL VOLTAGE MEASUREMENT CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS
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LM94
Symbol Parameter Conditions Typical
(Note 9)
Limits
(Note 10)
Units
(Limits)
TUE Total Unadjusted Error (Note 12) ±2 % of
FS (max)
DNL Differential Non-Linearity ±1 LSB
PSS Power Supply (VDD) Sensitivity ±1 %/V (of
FS)
TCTotal Monitoring Cycle Time 100 ms (max)
Input Resistance for Inputs with Dividers 200 140 kΩ (min)
AD_IN1- AD_IN3 and AD_IN15 Analog Input
Leakage Current (Note 13)
60 nA (max)
REFERENCE OUTPUT (VREF) CHARACTERISTICS
Tolerance ±1 % (max)
VREF Output Voltage (Note 14) 2.500 2.525
2.475
V (max)
V (min)
Load Regulation ISOURCE = −2 mA
ISINK = 2 mA 0.1 %
DIGITAL OUTPUTS: PWM1, PWM2
IOL Maximum Current Sink 8mA (min)
VOL Output Low Voltage IOUT = 8.0 mA 0.4 V (max)
DIGITAL OUTPUTS: ALL
VOL Output Low Voltage (Note excessive current flow
causes self-heating and degrades the internal
temperature accuracy.)
IOUT = 4.0 mA 0.4 V (min)
IOUT = 6 mA 0.55 V (min)
IOH High Level Output Leakage Current VOUT = VDD 0.1 10 µA (max)
IOTMAX Maximum Total Sink Current for all Digital Outputs
Combined
32 mA (max)
CODigital Output Capacitance 20 pF
DIGITAL INPUTS: ALL
VIH Input High Voltage Except Address Select 2.1 V (min)
VIL Input Low Voltage Except Address Select 0.8 V (max)
VIH Input High Voltage for Address Select 90% VDD V (min)
VIM Input Mid Voltage for Address Select 43% VDD
57% VDD
V (min)
V (max)
VIL Input Low Voltage for Address Select 10% VDD V (max)
VHYST DC Hysteresis 0.3 V
IIH Input High Current VIN = VDD −10 µA (min)
IIL Input Low Current VIN = 0V 10 µA (max)
CIN Digital Input Capacitance 20 pF
DIGITAL INPUTS: P1_VIDx, P2_VIDx, GPI_9, GPI_8, GPIO_7, GPIO_6, GPIO_5, GPIO_4 (When respective bit set in Register
BEh GPI/VID Level Control)
VIH Alternate Input High Voltage (AGTL+ Compatible) 0.8 V (min)
VIL Alternate Input Low Voltage (AGTL+ Compatible) 0.4 V (max)
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LM94
20.0 AC Electrical Characteristics
The following limits apply for +3.0 VDC to +3.6 VDC, unless otherwise noted. Bold face limits apply for TA = TJ = TMIN to TMAX of
the operating range; all other limits TA = TJ = 25°C unless otherwise noted.
Symbol Parameter Conditions Typical
(Note 9)
Limits
(Note 10)
Units
(Limits)
FAN RPM-TO-DIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS
Counter Resolution 14 bits
Number of fan tach pulses count is based
on
2 pulses
Counter Frequency 22.5 kHz
Accuracy ±6 % (max)
PWM OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Frequency Tolerances ±6 % (max)
Duty-Cycle Tolerance ±2 ±6 % (max)
RESET INPUT/OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS
Output Pulse Width
Upon Power Up
250
330
ms (min)
ms (max)
Minimum Input Pulse Width 10 µs (min)
Reset Output Fall Time 1.6V to 0.4V Logic Levels 1µs (max)
SMBus TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
fSMBCLK SMBCLK (Clock) Clock Frequency 10
100
kHz (min)
kHz (max)
tBUF SMBus Free Time between Stop and
Start Conditions
4.7 µs (min)
tHD;STA Hold time after (Repeated) Start
Condition. After this period, the first clock
is generated.
4.0 µs (min)
tSU;STA Repeated Start Condition Setup Time 4.7 µs (min)
tSU;STO Stop Condition Setup Time 4.0 µs (min)
tSU;DAT Data Input Setup Time to SMBCLK High 250 ns (min)
tHD;DAT Data Output Hold Time after SMBCLK
Low
300
1075
ns (min)
ns (max)
tLOW SMBCLK Low Period 4.7
50
µs (min)
µs (max)
tHIGH SMBCLK High Period 4.0
50
µs (min)
µs (max)
tRRise Time 1µs (max)
tFFall Time 300 ns (max)
tTIMEOUT Timeout
SMBDAT or SMBCLK low
time required to
reset the Serial Bus
Interface to the Idle State
31
25
35
ms
ms (min)
ms (max)
tPOR Time in which a device must be
operational after power-on reset
VDD > +2.8V 500 ms (max)
CLCapacitance Load on SMBCLK and
SMBDAT
400 pF (max)
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20112403
Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is
functional, but do not guarantee specific performance limits. For guaranteed specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The guaranteed
specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test
conditions.
Note 2: All voltages are measured with respect to GND, unless otherwise noted.
Note 3: When the input voltage (VIN) at any pin exceeds the power supplies (VIN < (GND or AGND) or VIN > VDD, except for analog voltage inputs), the current
at that pin should be limited to 10 mA. The 100 mA maximum package input current rating limits the number of pins that can safely exceed the power supplies
with an input current of 10 mA to ten. Parasitic components and/or ESD protection circuitry are shown below for the LM94’s pins. Care should be taken not to
forward bias the parasitic diode, D1, present on pins D+ and D− as shown in circuits C and D. Doing so by more than 50 mV may corrupt temperature
measurements. D1 and the ESD Clamp are connected between V+ (VDD, AD_IN16) and GND as shown in circuit B. SNP stands for snap-back device.
Symbol Pin # Circuit All Input Circuits
GPIO_0/TACH1 1 A
GPIO_1/TACH2 2 A
GPIO_2/TACH3 3 A
GPIO_3/TACH4 4 A
GPIO_4 / P1_THERMTRIP 5 A
GPIO_5 / P2_THERMTRIP 6 A
GPIO_6 7 A
GPIO_7 8 A
VRD1_HOT 9 A
VRD2_HOT 10 A
SCSI_TERM1 11 A
SCSI_TERM2 12 A
SMBDAT 13 A
SMBCLK 14 A
ALERT/XtestOut 15 A
RESET 16 A
AGND 17 B (Internally
shorted to GND
pin.)
VREF 18 A
REMOTE1– 19 C
REMOTE1+ 20 D
REMOTE2– 21 C
REMOTE+ 22 D
AD_IN1 23 D
AD_IN2 24 D
AD_IN3 25 D
AD_IN4 26 E
AD_IN5 27 E
AD_IN6 28 E
AD_IN7 29 E
AD_IN8 30 E
AD_IN9 31 E
AD_IN10 32 E
AD_IN11 33 E
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LM94
Symbol Pin # Circuit All Input Circuits
AD_IN12 34 E
AD_IN13 35 E
AD_IN14 36 E
AD_IN15 37 D
ADDR_SEL 38 A
AD_IN16/VDD (V+) 39 B
GND 40 B (Internally
shorted to AGND.)
PWM1 41 A
PWM2 42 A
P1_VID0 43 A
P1_VID1 44 A
P1_VID2 45 A
P1_VID3 46 A
P1_VID4 47 A
P1_VID5 48 A
P1_PROCHOT 49 A
P2_PROCHOT 50 A
P2_VID0 51 A
P2_VID1 52 A
P2_VID2 53 A
P2_VID3 54 A
P2_VID4 55 A
P2_VID5 56 A
Note 4: Human body model, 100 pF discharged through a 1.5 k resistor. Machine model, 200 pF discharged directly into each pin. Charged device model (CDM)
simulates a pin slowly acquiring charge (such as from a device sliding down the feeder in an automated assembler) then rapidly being discharged.
Note 5: Reflow temperature profiles are different for lead-free and non lead-free packages.
Note 6: The maximum power dissipation must be de-rated at elevated temperatures and is dictated by TJMAX, θJA and the ambient temperature, TA. The maximum
allowable power dissipation at any temperature is PD MAX= (TJMAX − TA) / θJA. The θJAfor the LM94 when mounted to 1 oz. copper foil PCB the θJA with different
air flow is listed in the following table.
Air Flow Junction to Ambient Thermal Resistance, θJA
0 m/s 79 °C/W
1.14 m/s (225 LFPM) 62 °C/W
2.54 m/s (500 LFPM) 52 °C/W
Note 7: See the URL "http://www.national.com/packaging/" for other recommendations and methods of soldering surface mount devices.
Note 8: At the time of first pubication of this specification (Jan 2006), this specification applies to either Pentium or Xeon Processors on 90nm or 65nm process
when TruTherm is selected. When TruTherm is deselected this specification applies to an MMBT3904. This specification does include the error caused by the
variability of the diode ideality and series resistance parameters.
Note 9: Typical parameters are at TJ = TA = 25 °C and represent most likely parametric norm.
Note 10: Limits are guaranteed to National's AOQL (Average Outgoing Quality Level).
Note 11: TUE (Total Unadjusted Error) includes Offset, Gain and Linearity errors of the ADC.
Note 12: Total Monitoring Cycle Time includes all temperature and voltage conversions.
Note 13: Leakage current approximately doubles every 20 °C.
Note 14: A total digital I/O current of 40 mA can cause 6 mV of offset in Vref.
Note 15: Timing specifications are tested at the TTL logic levels, VIL = 0.4V for a falling edge and VIH = 2.4V for a rising edge. TRI-STATE output voltage is forced
to 1.4V.
www.national.com 110
LM94
21.0 Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted
56-Lead Molded TSSOP Package,
JEDEC Registration Number MO-153 Variation EE,
Order Number LM94CIMT or LM94CIMTX,
NS Package Number MTD56
111 www.national.com
LM94
Notes
LM94 TruTherm™ Hardware Monitor with PI Loop Fan Control for Server Management
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