HL4.OCT–RM–Texas Instruments
Software and IC facilitate board-level scan testability
 Chip talks to four-wire scan bus and to host computer; C source code
 compiles to test program
 A dedicated scan-test control chip, along with compilable software and
 data files for individual testable chips, reduces the investment necessary
 to make a system scan-testable. The 74ACT8990 test-bus controller (TBC)
 operates under control of a host microprocessor, connected by a 16-bit
 data bus and 5-bit address bus (see diagram). Timing of the host interface
 is independent of the scan clock. On the test-bus side, the required JTAG
 signals–test clock (TCK), test-mode select (TDS), test-data input (TDI),
 and test-data output (TDO)–all connect directly. Six separate TMS signals
 allow the chip to control up to six separate scan loops, with a common
 test clock. Portable C code for scan-test operation, called Scan Engine,
 is under development. The code uses Serial Vector format, an emerging
 standard already used by Teradyne's Victory software, and TI's ASSET
 diagnostic tool. Files of binary data for all JTAG-compliant TI chips can
 be downloaded from TI's bulletin board. Similar information should be
 forthcoming from other vendors of scannable chips, including Plessey
 Semiconductors, VLSI Technology, Advanced Micro Devices, AT&T, Brooktree,
 Fujitsu Microelectronics, Honeywell, I-Cube, Integrated Device Technology,
 Intel, Motorola, National Semiconductor, Siemens, Toshiba America, and
 TRW. (74ACT8990, 44-pin PLCC, $18 ea/1,000–available now.) Texas
 Instruments Inc. Dallas, TX Semiconductor Group (SC-92067)
 214-995-6611, ext. 3990 
CAPTION:
 The 74ACT8990 automates many of the functions of the JTAG scan-test
 standard.
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