2 Mark Q&A CS2252 - Microprocessors
and Microcontrollers
UNIT I
THE 8085 AND 8086
MICROPROCESSORS
PART A (2 MARKS)
1. What is Microprocessor? Give the power supply
& clock frequency of 8085
A microprocessor is a multipurpose, programmable
logic device that reads binary instructions from a storage device called memory
accepts binary data as input and processes data according to those instructions
and provides result as output. The power supply of 8085 is +5V and clock
frequency in 3MHz.
2. List few applications of microprocessor-based
system.
It is used:
i. For measurements, display and control of current,
voltage,
temperature, pressure, etc.
ii. For traffic control and industrial tool control.
iii. For speed control of machines.
3. What are the functions of an accumulator?
The accumulator is the register associated with the
ALU operations and sometimes I/O
operations. It is an integral part of ALU. It holds
one of data to be processed by ALU. It also
temporarily stores the result of the operation
performed by the ALU.
4. List the 16 – bit registers of 8085 microprocessor.
Stack pointer (SP) and Program counter (PC).
5. List the allowed register pairs of 8085.
• B-C register pair
• D-E register pair
• H-L register pair
6. Mention the purpose of SID and SOD lines
SID (Serial input data line):
It is an input line through which the microprocessor
accepts serial data.
SOD (Serial output data line):
It is an output line through which the
microprocessor sends output serial data.
7. What is the function of IO/M signal in the 8085?
It is a status signal. It is used to differentiate
between memory locations and I/O operations.When this signal is low (IO/M = 0)
it denotes the memory related operations. When this signal is high (IO/M = 1)
it denotes an I/O operation.
8. List out the five categories of the 8085
instructions. Give examples of the instructions
for each group.
• Data transfer group – MOV, MVI, LXI.
• Arithmetic group
– ADD, SUB, INR.
• Logical group –ANA, XRA, CMP.
• Branch group – JMP, JNZ, CALL.
• Stack I/O and Machine control group – PUSH, POP,
IN, HLT.
9. Explain the difference between a JMP instruction
and CALL instruction.
A JMP instruction permanently changes the program
counter. A CALL instruction leaves
information on the stack so that the original
program execution sequence can be resumed.
10. What is the difference between the shift and
rotate instructions?
A rotate instruction is a closed loop instruction.
That is, the data moved out at one end is put back in at the other end. The
shift instruction loses the data that is moved out of the last bit
locations.
11. What is meant by Wait State?
This state is used by slow peripheral devices. The
peripheral devices can transfer the data to or from the microprocessor by using
READY input line. The microprocessor remains in wait state as long as READY
line is low. During the wait state, the contents of the address, address/data
and control buses are held constant.
12. List the four instructions which control the
interrupt structure of the 8085
microprocessor.
• DI (Disable Interrupts)
• EI (Enable Interrupts)
• RIM (Read Interrupt Masks)
• SIM (Set Interrupt Masks)
13. What is the signal classification of 8085?
All the signals of 8085 can be classified into 6
groups
• Address bus
• Data bus
• Control and status signals
• Power supply and frequency signals
• Externally initiated signals
• Serial I/O ports
14. What are operations performed on data in 8085
The various operations performed are
• Store 8-bit data
• Perform arithmetic and logical operations
• Test for conditions
• Sequence the execution of instructions
• Store data temporarily during execution in the
defined R/W memory locations called the
Stack
15. Steps involved
to fetch a byte in 8085
i. The PC places the 16-bit memory address on the
address bus
ii. The control unit sends the control signal RD to
enable the memory chip
iii. The byte from the memory location is placed on
the data bus
iv. The byte is placed in the instruction decoder of
the microprocessor and the task is carried out according to the instruction
16. What are the interrupts of 8085 ?
The 8085 has 5 interrupt signals; they are INTR,
RST7.5, RST6.5, RST5.5 and TRAP
17. What is an instruction?
An instruction is a binary pattern entered through
an input device to command the
microprocessor to perform that specific function
18. What is the use of ALE
The ALE is used to latch the lower order address so
that it can be available in T2 and T3 and used for identifying the memory
address. During T1 the ALE goes high, the latch is transparent ie, the output
changes according to the input data, so the output of the latch is the lower
order address. When ALE goes low the lower order address is latched until the
next ALE.
19. Explain the signals HOLD, READY and SID
HOLD indicates that a peripheral such as DMA
controller is requesting the use of address bus, data bus and control bus.
READY is used to delay the microprocessor read or write cycles until a slow
responding peripheral is ready to send or accept data. SID is used to accept
serial data bit by bit
20. What is the use of addressing modes, mention the
different types
The various formats of specifying the operands are
called addressing modes, it is used to access the operands or data. The
different types are as follows
• Immediate addressing
• Register addressing
• Direct addressing
• Indirect addressing
• Implicit addressing
UNIT II
8086 SOFTWARE ASPECTS
PART A (2 MARKS)
1. What are the functions of bus interface unit
(BIU) in 8086?
(a) Fetch instructions from memory.
(b) Fetch data from memory and I/O ports.
(c) Write data to memory and I/O ports.
(d) To communicate
with outside world.
(e) Provide external bus operations and bus control
signals
2. Explain ALIGN & ASSUME
The ALIGN directive forces the assembler to align
the next segment at an address divisible by specified divisor. The format is
ALIGN number where number can be 2, 4, 8 or 16.
Example: ALIGN 8.
The ASSUME directive assigns a logical segment to a
physical segment at any given time. It tells the assembler what address will be
in the segment registers at execution time.
Example: ASSUME CS: code, DS: data, SS: stack
3. Explain PTR & GROUP
A program may contain several segments of the same
type. The GROUP directive collects them under a single name so they can reside
in a single segment, usually a data segment. The format is,
Name GROUP Seg-name, Seg-name PTR is used to assign
a specific type to a variable or a label. It is also used to override the
declared type of a variable.
4. What is assembler?
The assembler translates the assembly language
program text which is given as input to the assembler to their binary
equivalents known as object code. The time required to translate the
assembly code to object code is called access time.
The assembler checks for syntax errors &
displays them before giving the object code.
5. State the significance of LOCK signal in 8086?
If 8086 is working at maximum mode, there are
multiprocessors are present. If the system bus is given to a processor then the
LOCK signal is made low. That means the system bus is busy and it cannot be
given of any other processors. After the use of the system bus again the LOCK
signal is made high. That means it is ready to give the system bus to any
processor.
6. Explain SEGMENT & ENDS
An assembly program in .EXE format consists of one
or more segments. The starts of these segments are defined by SEGMENT and the
end of the segment is indicated by ENDS directive.
Format Name SEGMENT Name ENDS
7. Explain TITLE & TYPE
The TITLE directive helps to control the format of a
listing of an assembled program. It causes a title for the program to print on
line 2 of each page of the program listing. Maximum 60
characters are allowed. Format TITLE text. TYPE
operator tells the assembler to determine the
type of specified variable in bytes. For bytes the
assembler gives a value 1, for word 2 & double
word 4.
8. What are procedures?
Procedures are a
group of instructions stored as a separate program in memory and it is called
from the main program whenever required. The type of procedure depends on where
the
procedures are stored in memory. If it is in the
same code segment as that of the main program
then it is a near procedure otherwise it is a far
procedure.
9. How single stepping can be done in 8086?
By setting the Trace Flag (TF) the 8086 goes to
single-step mode. In this mode, after the
execution of each instruction s 8086 generates an
internal interrupt and by writing some interrupt
service routine we can display the content of desired
registers and memory locations. So it is
useful for debugging the program.
10. What is a recursive procedure?
A recursive procedure is a procedure, which calls
itself. Recursive procedures are used to work with complex data structures
called trees. If the procedure is called with N=3, then the N is
decremented by 1 after each procedure CALL and the
procedure is called until N=0.
11. What are Macros?
Macro is a group of instruction. The macro assembler
generates the code in the program each time where the macro is called. Macros
are defined by MACRO & ENDM directives. Creating macro is similar to
creating new opcodes that can be used in the program
INIT MACRO
MOV AX, data
MOV DS
MOV ES, AX
ENDM
12. How do 8086 interrupts occur?
An 8086 interrupt can come from any of the following
three sources
• External signals
• Special instructions in the program
• Condition produced by instruction
13. What are the 8086 interrupt types?
Dedicated interrupts
• Type 0: Divide by zero interrupt
• Type 1: Single step interrupt
• Type 2:Non maskable interrupt
• Type 3: Breakpoint
• Type 4: Overflow interrupt
Software interrupts
• Type 0-255
14. What is interrupt service routine?
Interrupt means to break the sequence of operation.
While the CPU is executing a program an interrupt breaks the normal sequence of
execution of instructions & diverts its
execution to some
other program. This program to which the control is transferred is called the
interrupt service routine.
15.Define BIOS
The IBM PC has in its ROM a collection of routines,
each of which performs some specific function such as reading a character from
keyboard, writing character to CRT. This collection of routines is referred to
as Basic Input Output System or BIOS.
16. What is the purpose of segment registers in
8086?
There are 4 segment registers present in 8086. They
are
1. Code Segment (CS) register
2. Data Segment (DS) register
3. Stack Segment (SS) register
4. Extra Segment (ES) register
The code segment register gives the address of the
current code segment. ie. It will points out
here the instructions, to be executed, are stored in
the memory.
The data segment register points out where the
operands are stored in the memory.
The stack segment registers points out the address
of the current stack, which is used to store the
temporary results.
If the amount of data used is more the Extra segment
register points out where the large amount
of data is stored in the memory.
17. Define pipelining?
In 8086, to speedup the execution of program, the
instructions fetching and execution of
instructions are overlapped each other. This
technique is known as pipelining. In pipelining,
when the n th instruction is executed, the n+1 th
instruction is fetched and thus the processing
speed is increased.
18. Discuss the function of instruction queue in
8086?
In 8086, a 6-byte instruction queue is presented at
the Bus Interface Unit (BIU). It is used to prefetch and store at the maximum
of 6 bytes of instruction code from the memory. Due to this, overlapping
instruction fetch with instruction execution increases the processing speed.
19. What are the conditional and control flags
available in status register of 8086?
Conditional Flags:
CF - Carry Flag
PF - Parity Flag
AF - Auxiliary Carry Flag
ZF - Zero Flag SF - Sign Flag
OF - Overflow Flag
Control Flags:
TF – Single step Trap Flag
IF – Interrupt Enable Flag
DF – String Direction Flag
20. List the various addressing modes present in
8086?
There are 12
addressing modes present in 8086. They are,
(a) Register and immediate addressing modes
_ Register addressing modes
_ Immediate addressing mode
(b) Memory addressing modes.
_ Direct addressing modes
_ Register indirect addressing modes
_ Based addressing modes
_ Indexed addressing modes
_ Based Indexed addressing modes
_ String addressing modes
(c) I/O addressing modes
_ Direct addressing mode
_ Indirect addressing mode
(d) Relative addressing mode
(e) Implied addressing mode
UNIT III
MULTIPROCESSOR CONFIGURATIONS
PART A (2 MARKS)
1. What are the advantages of multiprocessor system?
• High level performance can be attained when
parallel processing.
• Robustness can be improved by isolating system
functions.
2. What are the problems occurred in multiprocessor
system?
1. Bus contention
2. Interprocess communication
3. Resource sharing
3. What is Coprocessor?
The coprocessor is a processor which specially
designed for processor to work under the
control of the processor and support special
processing capabilities. Example : 8087 which has
numeric processing capability and works under 8086.
4. What are the basic multiprocessor configurations?
1. Coprocessor configuration
2. Closely Coupled configuration
3. Loosely coupled
configuration
5. Compare closely coupled and loosely coupled
configurations.
Closely coupled
1. Single CPU is used
2. It has local bus only
3. No system memory or IO
4. No bus arbitration logic required
Loosely coupled
1. Multiple CPU modules are used
2. It has local as well system bus
3. It has system memory and IO, shared
among CPU modules
4. Bus arbitration logic required
6. What is mean by loosely coupled multiprocessor
system?
In loosely coupled multiprocessor system, each
processor has a set of Input/output
devices and a large memory, where it accesses most
of the instructions and data.
7. Write the advantages of loosely coupled system
over tightly coupled systems?
1. More number of CPUs can be added in a loosely coupled
system to improve the
system performance
2. The system structure is modular and hence easy to
maintain and troubleshoot.
3. A fault in a single module does not lead to a
complete system breakdown.
8. What are the schemes for establishing priority in
order to resolve bus arbitration
problem?
There are three basic bus access control and
arbitration schemes
1. Daisy Chaining
2. Independent Request
3. Polling
9. What are the advantages of daisy chaining method?
1. It requires less number of control lines.
2. It is simple and cheap.
10. What are the disadvantages of daisy chaining
method?
1. Propagation delay
2. The priority of master is fixed by its physical
location.
11. Give the instruction set of 8087?
1. Data Transfer Instructions
2. Arithmetic Instructions
3. Comparison Instructions.
4. Transcendental Operations.
5. Constant
Operations.
6. Coprocessor Control Operations.
12. What are the features of 8087?
It can operate on the data of integer, decimal and
real types with lengths ranging from 2
to 10 bytes.
It is high performance numeric data processor. It
can multiply two 16-bit real numbersin
about 27us and calculate square root in about 36us.
It is multi-bus compatible.
13. What are the three memory reference options in
8087 instruction?
1. Not reference memory.
2. Load an operand word from memory into 8087.
3. Store an operand word from 8087 to memory.
14. What are the status bits of 8087.
S2 S1 S0
15. Write a short note on data register in 8087.
1. It has 8 data register.
2. Each register is 8 bit and accessed as a stack
3. A PUSH operation decrements the TOP of the stack
by one and loads the value on the
top register.
4. A POP register stores the value from the current
TOP register and increments TOP by
one.
16. Write a short note on status register in 8087.
1. Status register is 16 bit register.
2. It indicates various errors, stores condition
code for certain instruction and indicates
the BUSY status.
17. List the data types of 8087.
• Word integer
• Short integer
• Long integer
• Packed BCD
• Short real
• Long real
• Temporary real
18. List the instruction of 8087.
• Data transfer instructions
• Arithmetic instructions
• Compare instructions
• Transcendental instructions
• Load constant
instructions
• Processor control instructions
19. What are the features of 8089 I/O processor?
• An IOP can fetch and execute its own instruction.
• IOP can transfer data from an 8 bit source to 16
bit destination and vice versa.
• Communication between IOP and CPU is through
memory based control blocks.
• CPU defines tasks in the control blocks to locate
a program seguence, called a
channel program.
20. What is the main advantage of polling method?
The priority can be dynamically changed by altering
the polling sequence stored in the
controller.
UNIT IV
I/O INTERFACING
PART A (2 MARKS)
1. What are the basic modes of operation of 8255?
There are two basic modes of operation of 8255, viz.
1. I/O mode.
2. BSR mode.
In I/O mode, the 8255 ports work as programmable I/O
ports, while In BSR mode only port C (PC0-PC7) can be used to set or reset its
individual port bits. Under the IO mode of operation, further there are three
modes of operation of 8 255, So as to support different types of
applications, viz. mode 0, mode 1 and mode 2.
Mode 0 - Basic I/O mode
Mode 1 - Strobed I/O mode
Mode 2 - Strobed bi-directional I/O
2. Write the features of mode 0 in 8255?
1. Two 8-bit ports (port A and port B) and two 4-bit
ports (port C upper and lower) are available.
The two 4-bit ports can be combined used as a third
8-bit port.
2. Any port can be used as an input or output port.
3. Output ports are latched. Input ports are not
latched.
4. A maximum of
four ports are available so that overall 16 I/O configurations are possible.
3. What are the signals used in input control signal
& output control signal?
Input control signal
STB (Strobe input)
IBF (Input buffer full)
INTR (Interrupt request)
Output control signal
OBF (Output buffer full)
ACK (Acknowledge input)
INTR (Interrupt request)
4. What are the modes of operations used in 8253?
Each of the three counters of 8253 can be operated
in one of the following six modes of
operation.
1. Mode 0 (Interrupt on terminal count)
2. Mode 1 (Programmable monoshot)
3. Mode 2 (Rate generator)
4. Mode 3 (Square wave generator)
5. Mode 4 (Software triggered strobe)
6. Mode 5 (Hardware triggered strobe)
5. What are the different types of write operations
used in 8253?
There are two types of write operations in 8253
(1) Writing a control word register
(2) Writing a count value into a count register
The control word register accepts data from the data
buffer and initializes the counters, as
required. The control word register contents are
used for
(a) Initializing the operating modes (mode 0-mode4)
(b) Selection of counters (counter 0- counter 2)
(c) Choosing binary /BCD counters
(d) Loading of the counter registers.
The mode control register is a write only register
and the CPU cannot read its contents.
6. Give the different types of command words used in
8259a?
The command words of 8259A are classified in two
groups
1. Initialization command words (ICWs)
2. Operation command words (OCWs)
7. Give the operating modes of 8259a?
(a) Fully Nested Mode
(b) End of Interrupt (EOI)
(c) Automatic Rotation
(d) Automatic EOI Mode
(e) Specific Rotation
(f) Special Mask
Mode
(g) Edge and level Triggered Mode
(h) Reading 8259 Status
(i) Poll command
(j) Special Fully Nested Mode
(k) Buffered mode
(l) Cascade mode
8. Define scan counter?
The scan counter has two modes to scan the key
matrix and refresh the display. In the encoded mode, the counter provides
binary count that is to be externally decoded to provide the scan lines for
keyboard and display. In the decoded scan mode, the counter internally decodes
the least significant 2 bits and provides a decoded 1 out of 4 scan on
SL0-SL3.The keyboard and display both are in the same mode at a time.
9. What is the output modes used in 8279?
8279 provides two output modes for selecting the
display options.
1. Display Scan
In this mode, 8279 provides 8 or 16
character-multiplexed displays those can be organized as dual 4-bit or single
8-bit display units.
2. Display Entry
8279 allows options for data entry on the displays.
The display data is entered for display from the right side or from the left
side.
10. What are the modes used in keyboard modes?
1. Scanned Keyboard mode with 2 Key Lockout.
2. Scanned Keyboard with N-key Rollover.
3. Scanned Keyboard special Error Mode.
4. Sensor Matrix Mode.
11. What are the modes used in display modes?
1. Left Entry mode
In the left entry mode, the data is entered from the
left side of the display unit.
2. Right Entry Mode
In the right entry mode, the first entry to be
displayed is entered on the rightmost display.
12. What is the use of modem control unit in 8251?
The modem control unit handles the modem handshake
signals to coordinate the communication between the modem and the USART.
13. What is the use of 8251 chip?
Intel’s 8251A is a universal synchronous
asynchronous receiver and transmitter compatible with Intel’s Processors. This
may be programmed to operate in any of the serial communication modes built
into it. This chip converts the parallel data into a serial stream of bits
suitable for serial transmission. It is also able to receive a serial stream of
bits and converts it into parallel data bytes to be read by a microprocessor.
14. What are the different types of methods used for
data transmission?
The data
transmission between two points involves unidirectional or bi-directional
transmission of meaningful digital data through a medium. There are basically
there modes of data transmission
(a) Simplex
(b) Duplex
(c) Half Duplex
15. What are the various programmed data transfer
methods?
i) Synchronous data transfer
ii) Asynchronous data transfer
iii) Interrupt driven data transfer
16. What is synchronous data transfer?
It is a data method which is used when the I/O
device and the microprocessor match in speed. To transfer a data to or from the
device, the user program issues a suitable instruction addressing the device.
The data transfer is completed at the end of the execution of this instruction.
17. What is asynchronous data transfer?
It is a data transfer method which is used when the
speed of an I/O device does not match with the speed of the microprocessor.
Asynchronous data transfer is also called as Handshaking.
18. Give the register organization of 8257?
The 8257 perform the DMA operation over four
independent DMA channels. Each of the four channels of 8257 has a pair of two
16-bit registers. DMA address register and terminal count register. Also, there
are two common registers for all the channels; namely, mode set registers and
status register. Thus there are a total of ten registers. The CPU selects one
of these ten registers using address lines A0- A3.
19. What is the function of DMA address register?
Each DMA channel has one DMA address register. The
function of this register is to store the address of the starting memory
location, which will be accessed by the DMA channel. Thus the starting address
of the memory block that will be accessed by the device is first loaded in the
DMA address register of the channel. Naturally, the device that wants to
transfer data over a DMA channel, will access the block of memory with the
starting address stored in the DMA
Address Register.
20. What is the use of terminal count register?
Each of the four DMA channels of 8257 has one
terminal count register. This 16-bit register is used for ascertaining that the
data transfer through a DMA channel ceases or stops after the required number
of DMA cycles.
21. What is memory mapping?
The assignment of memory addresses to various
registers in a memory chip is called as memory
mapping.
22. What is I/O
mapping?
The assignment of addresses to various I/O devices
in the memory chip is called as I/O mapping.
23. What is Key bouncing?
Mechanical switches are used as keys in most of the
keyboards. When a key is pressed the contact bounce back and forth and settle
down only after a small time delay (about 20ms). Even though a key is actuated
once, it will appear to have been actuated several times. This problem is
called Key Bouncing.
24. What is the use of stepper motor?
A stepper motor is a device used to obtain an
accurate position control of rotating shafts. A stepper motor employs rotation
of its shaft in terms of steps, rather than continuous rotation as in case of
AC or DC motor.
UNIT V
MICROCONTROLLERS
PART A (2 MARKS)
1. What is mean by microcontroller?
A device which contains the microprocessor with
integrated peripherals like memory, serial ports, parallel ports,
timer/counter, interrupt controller, data acquisition interfaces like ADC, DAC
is called microcontroller.
2. List the features of 8051 microcontroller?
The features are
*single_supply +5 volt operation using HMOS
technology.
*4096 bytes program memory on chip(not on 8031)
*128 data memory on chip.
*Four register banks.
*Two multiple mode,16-bit timer/counter.
*Extensive Boolean processing capabilities.
*64 KB external RAM size
*32 bi-directional individually addressable I/O
lines.
*8 bit CPU optimized for control applications.
3. What are the
addressing modes supported by 8051?
• Register addressing
• Direct byte addressing
• Register indirect
• Immediate
• Register specific
• index
4. State the function of RS1 and RS0 bits in the
flag register of Intel 8051 microcontroller?
RS1 RS0 Bank Selection
0 0 Bank 0
0 1 Bank 1
1 0 Bank 2
1 1 Bank 3
5. Explain the function of the PSEN pin of 8051.
PSEN: PSEN stands for program store enable. In 8051
based system in which an external ROM holds the program code, this pin is
connected to the OE pin of the ROM.
6. Explain the function of the EA pin of 8051.
EA: EA stands for external access. When the EA pin
is connected to Vcc, program fetched to addresses 0000H through 0FFFH are
directed to the internal ROM and program fetches to addresses 1000H through
FFFFH are directed to external ROM/EPROM. When the EA pin is grounded, all
addresses fetched by program are directed to the external ROM/EPROM.
7. Explain the 16-bit registers DPTR of 8051.
DPTR: DPTR stands for data pointer. DPTR consists of
a high byte (DPH) and a low byte (DPL). Its function is to hold a 16-bit
address. It may be manipulated as a 16-bit data register or as two independent
8-bit registers. It serves as a base register in indirect jumps, lookup table
instructions and external data transfer.
8. Explain the function of the SP of 8051.
SP: SP stands for stack pointer. SP is a 8- bit wide
register. It is incremented before data is stored during PUSH and CALL
instructions. The stack array can reside anywhere in on-chip RAM. The stack
pointer is initialised to 07H after a reset. This causes the stack to begin at
location 08H.
9. Name the special functions registers available in
8051.
• Accumulator
• B Register
• Program Status Word.
• Stack Pointer.
• Data Pointer.
• Port 0
• Port 1
• Port 2
• Port 3
• Interrupt priority control register.
• Interrupt enable control register.
10. Explain the register IE format of 8051. EA
|
–
|
ET2
|
ES
|
ET1
|
EX1
|
ET0
|
EX0
|