|  | IMPORTANT NOTE - read before defining CFG_USE_OSCCLK in your board | 
|  | config file!!! | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | WARNING: Wrong settings of this parameter have the potential to | 
|  | damage hardware by running the MBX's CPU at frequencies that exceed | 
|  | it's rating and/or overdriving the it's SPLL! | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | Ramblings: | 
|  | 1) Motorola offered 12 different variants of the MBX, 6 823s and 6 860s. | 
|  | 2) Of these 12 variants, only 2 were entry level boards. | 
|  | 3) I believe that the 2 entry level boards were the only ones that | 
|  | used OSCM clocking. I can't be completely certain of this at this | 
|  | point. | 
|  | 4) Motorola never offered an MBX that ran faster than 50Mhz. | 
|  | 5) The 10, non-entry level boards, ran at 40Mhz. | 
|  | 6) The EXTCLK input has a minimum clock of 15Mhz for the 823/860. | 
|  | 7) Motorola no longer sells MBXs. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Based on this information, I can surmise that the default power-on | 
|  | reset clocking was one of the following three options. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Multiplier       SPLL Options | 
|  | ------------------------------------ | 
|  | 513              OSCM is SPLL input | 
|  | 5                OSCM is SPLL input | 
|  | 1                EXTCLK is SPLL input | 
|  |  | 
|  | The forth option: | 
|  |  | 
|  | 5                EXTCLK is SPLL input | 
|  |  | 
|  | is not possible on MBXs. This is because the minimum EXTCLK input | 
|  | frequency is 15Mhz. 5 * 15Mhz = 75 Mhz. There was no variant that ran | 
|  | above 50 Mhz. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The board I have borrowed definitely uses a multiplier of 1 for | 
|  | EXTCLK and runs at 40Mhz. I even went so far as to put a scope on it. | 
|  |  | 
|  | One of the two default OSCM modes are most likely what was used on | 
|  | the entry level boards to cheapen them by eliminating the external | 
|  | crystal oscillator. | 
|  |  | 
|  | To add insult to injury, the stupid 860 PLPRCR register retains it's | 
|  | multiplication factor through hard resets. You can't clear it out | 
|  | because it is battery backed and once it is set wrong, it stays | 
|  | wrong. The only way to reset it, so that it takes on it's default | 
|  | multiplier is to disconnect all power including external, batteries, | 
|  | as well discharging caps on the board. This precludes the fact that | 
|  | your 860 may be quite DEAD by this time! | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you don't setup the multiplication factor for boards that use the | 
|  | OSCM input, they won't run correctly, but at least they won't be | 
|  | dead. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Addtionally, there is no good way to determine the clock input source | 
|  | from CPU register data. The only way to deal with this is either hard | 
|  | code it, determine the correct value with some rather NASTY timing | 
|  | loops, or try to grok it from external data sources. Motorola | 
|  | firmware opts for the NASTY timing loops, but needs to configure the | 
|  | serial ports to do so. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | You may have a legitimate need to define CFG_USE_OSCCLK if your | 
|  | MBX8xx board is using the OSCM clocking mode. | 
|  |  | 
|  | You better know what you are doing here. |