USART Control and Status Register 0 A
Name:
UCSR0A
Offset:
0x0E
Reset:
0x20
Access:
-
Bit76543210
RXC0TXC0UDRE0FE0DOR0UPE0U2X0MPCM0
AccessRR/WRRRRR/WR/W
Reset00100000

Bit 7 – RXC0: USART Receive Complete

USART Receive Complete

This flag bit is set when there are unread data in the receive buffer and cleared when the receive buffer is empty (i.e., does not contain any unread data). If the Receiver is disabled, the receive buffer will be flushed and consequently the RXC0 bit will become zero. The RXC0 Flag can be used to generate a Receive Complete interrupt (see description of the RXCIE0 bit).

Bit 6 – TXC0: USART Transmit Complete

USART Transmit Complete

This flag bit is set when the entire frame in the Transmit Shift Register has been shifted out and there are no new data currently present in the transmit buffer (UDR0). The TXC0 Flag bit is automatically cleared when a transmit complete interrupt is executed, or it can be cleared by writing a one to its bit location. The TXC0 Flag can generate a Transmit Complete interrupt (see description of the TXCIE0 bit).

Bit 5 – UDRE0: USART Data Register Empty

USART Data Register Empty

The UDRE0 Flag indicates if the transmit buffer (UDR0) is ready to receive new data. If UDRE0 is one, the buffer is empty, and therefore ready to be written. The UDRE0 Flag can generate a Data Register Empty interrupt (see description of the UDRIE0 bit). UDRE0 is set after a reset to indicate that the Transmitter is ready.

Bit 4 – FE0: Frame Error

Frame Error

This bit is set if the next character in the receive buffer had a Frame Error when received. I.e., when the first stop bit of the next character in the receive buffer is zero. This bit is valid until the receive buffer (UDR0) is read. The FEn bit is zero when the stop bit of received data is one. Always set this bit to zero when writing to UCSR0A.

This bit is reserved in Master SPI Mode (MSPIM).

Bit 3 – DOR0: Data OverRun

Data OverRun

The Data OverRun (DORn) Flag indicates data loss due to a receiver buffer full condition. A Data OverRun occurs when the receive buffer is full (two characters), a new character is waiting in the Receive Shift Register, and a new start bit is detected.

If this bit is set, one or more serial frames were lost between the last frame read from UDRn, and the next frame read from UDRn. For compatibility with future devices, always write this bit to zero when writing to UCSRnA. This bit is cleared when the frame received was successfully moved from the Shift Register to the receive buffer.

This bit is reserved in Master SPI Mode (MSPIM).

Bit 2 – UPE0: USART Parity Error

USART Parity Error

This bit is set if the next character in the receive buffer had a Parity Error when received and the Parity Checking was enabled at that point (UPM0 = 1). This bit is valid until the receive buffer (UDR0) is read. Always set this bit to zero when writing to UCSR0A.

This bit is reserved in Master SPI Mode (MSPIM).

Bit 1 – U2X0: Double the USART Transmission Speed

Double the USART Transmission Speed

This bit only has effect for the asynchronous operation. Write this bit to zero when using synchronous operation.

Writing this bit to one will reduce the divisor of the baud rate divider from 16 to 8 effectively doubling the transfer rate for asynchronous communication.

This bit is reserved in Master SPI Mode (MSPIM).

Bit 0 – MPCM0: Multi-processor Communication Mode

Multi-processor Communication Mode

This bit enables the Multi-processor Communication mode. When the MPCMn bit is written to one, all the incoming frames received by the USART Receiver that do not contain address information will be ignored. The Transmitter is unaffected by the MPCM0 setting.

This bit is reserved in Master SPI Mode (MSPIM).