TI1 LM3S2730-IBZ50-A2 Stellarisâ® lm3s2730 microcontroller Datasheet

TE X AS I NS TRUM E NTS - P RO DUCTION D ATA
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
D ATA SHE E T
D S -LM3S 2730 - 1 2 7 4 6 . 2 5 1 5
S P M S 053H
C o p yri g h t © 2 0 07-2012
Te xa s In stru me n ts In co rporated
Copyright
Copyright © 2007-2012 Texas Instruments Incorporated All rights reserved. Stellaris and StellarisWare® are registered trademarks of Texas Instruments
Incorporated. ARM and Thumb are registered trademarks and Cortex is a trademark of ARM Limited. Other names and brands may be claimed as the
property of others.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to specifications per the terms of Texas Instruments standard
warranty. Production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas Instruments semiconductor
products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
Texas Instruments Incorporated
108 Wild Basin, Suite 350
Austin, TX 78746
http://www.ti.com/stellaris
http://www-k.ext.ti.com/sc/technical-support/product-information-centers.htm
2
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table of Contents
Revision History ............................................................................................................................. 21
About This Document .................................................................................................................... 26
Audience ..............................................................................................................................................
About This Manual ................................................................................................................................
Related Documents ...............................................................................................................................
Documentation Conventions ..................................................................................................................
26
26
26
27
1
Architectural Overview .......................................................................................... 29
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.4.1
1.4.2
1.4.3
1.4.4
1.4.5
1.4.6
1.4.7
1.4.8
Product Features ..........................................................................................................
Target Applications ........................................................................................................
High-Level Block Diagram .............................................................................................
Functional Overview ......................................................................................................
ARM Cortex™-M3 .........................................................................................................
Motor Control Peripherals ..............................................................................................
Analog Peripherals ........................................................................................................
Serial Communications Peripherals ................................................................................
System Peripherals .......................................................................................................
Memory Peripherals ......................................................................................................
Additional Features .......................................................................................................
Hardware Details ..........................................................................................................
29
34
35
37
37
38
38
38
40
40
41
41
2
The Cortex-M3 Processor ...................................................................................... 42
2.1
2.2
2.2.1
2.2.2
2.2.3
2.2.4
2.3
2.3.1
2.3.2
2.3.3
2.3.4
2.3.5
2.3.6
2.4
2.4.1
2.4.2
2.4.3
2.4.4
2.4.5
2.4.6
2.4.7
2.5
2.5.1
2.5.2
2.5.3
Block Diagram .............................................................................................................. 43
Overview ...................................................................................................................... 44
System-Level Interface .................................................................................................. 44
Integrated Configurable Debug ...................................................................................... 44
Trace Port Interface Unit (TPIU) ..................................................................................... 45
Cortex-M3 System Component Details ........................................................................... 45
Programming Model ...................................................................................................... 46
Processor Mode and Privilege Levels for Software Execution ........................................... 46
Stacks .......................................................................................................................... 46
Register Map ................................................................................................................ 47
Register Descriptions .................................................................................................... 48
Exceptions and Interrupts .............................................................................................. 61
Data Types ................................................................................................................... 61
Memory Model .............................................................................................................. 61
Memory Regions, Types and Attributes ........................................................................... 62
Memory System Ordering of Memory Accesses .............................................................. 63
Behavior of Memory Accesses ....................................................................................... 63
Software Ordering of Memory Accesses ......................................................................... 64
Bit-Banding ................................................................................................................... 65
Data Storage ................................................................................................................ 67
Synchronization Primitives ............................................................................................. 68
Exception Model ........................................................................................................... 69
Exception States ........................................................................................................... 70
Exception Types ............................................................................................................ 70
Exception Handlers ....................................................................................................... 73
June 18, 2012
3
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
2.5.4
2.5.5
2.5.6
2.5.7
2.6
2.6.1
2.6.2
2.6.3
2.6.4
2.7
2.7.1
2.7.2
2.8
Vector Table .................................................................................................................. 73
Exception Priorities ....................................................................................................... 74
Interrupt Priority Grouping .............................................................................................. 74
Exception Entry and Return ........................................................................................... 74
Fault Handling .............................................................................................................. 76
Fault Types ................................................................................................................... 77
Fault Escalation and Hard Faults .................................................................................... 77
Fault Status Registers and Fault Address Registers ........................................................ 78
Lockup ......................................................................................................................... 78
Power Management ...................................................................................................... 79
Entering Sleep Modes ................................................................................................... 79
Wake Up from Sleep Mode ............................................................................................ 79
Instruction Set Summary ............................................................................................... 80
3
Cortex-M3 Peripherals ........................................................................................... 84
3.1
3.1.1
3.1.2
3.1.3
3.1.4
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
Functional Description ................................................................................................... 84
System Timer (SysTick) ................................................................................................. 84
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) .................................................................... 85
System Control Block (SCB) .......................................................................................... 87
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) ....................................................................................... 87
Register Map ................................................................................................................ 92
System Timer (SysTick) Register Descriptions ................................................................ 94
NVIC Register Descriptions ........................................................................................... 98
System Control Block (SCB) Register Descriptions ........................................................ 111
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) Register Descriptions .................................................... 138
4
JTAG Interface ...................................................................................................... 148
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.3.1
4.3.2
4.3.3
4.3.4
4.4
4.5
4.5.1
4.5.2
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
JTAG Interface Pins .....................................................................................................
JTAG TAP Controller ...................................................................................................
Shift Registers ............................................................................................................
Operational Considerations ..........................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
Instruction Register (IR) ...............................................................................................
Data Registers ............................................................................................................
149
149
150
150
152
153
153
156
156
156
159
5
System Control ..................................................................................................... 161
5.1
5.2
5.2.1
5.2.2
5.2.3
5.2.4
5.2.5
5.3
5.4
5.5
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
Device Identification ....................................................................................................
Reset Control ..............................................................................................................
Power Control .............................................................................................................
Clock Control ..............................................................................................................
System Control ...........................................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
4
161
161
162
162
166
167
171
172
172
173
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
6
Internal Memory ................................................................................................... 219
6.1
6.2
6.2.1
6.2.2
6.3
6.3.1
6.3.2
6.4
6.5
6.6
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................ 219
Functional Description ................................................................................................. 219
SRAM Memory ............................................................................................................ 219
Flash Memory ............................................................................................................. 220
Flash Memory Initialization and Configuration ............................................................... 221
Flash Programming ..................................................................................................... 221
Nonvolatile Register Programming ............................................................................... 222
Register Map .............................................................................................................. 223
Flash Register Descriptions (Flash Control Offset) ......................................................... 224
Flash Register Descriptions (System Control Offset) ...................................................... 232
7
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs) ........................................................... 245
7.1
7.2
7.2.1
7.2.2
7.2.3
7.2.4
7.2.5
7.2.6
7.3
7.4
7.5
Signal Description ....................................................................................................... 245
Functional Description ................................................................................................. 252
Data Control ............................................................................................................... 253
Interrupt Control .......................................................................................................... 254
Mode Control .............................................................................................................. 255
Commit Control ........................................................................................................... 255
Pad Control ................................................................................................................. 255
Identification ............................................................................................................... 255
Initialization and Configuration ..................................................................................... 255
Register Map .............................................................................................................. 256
Register Descriptions .................................................................................................. 258
8
General-Purpose Timers ...................................................................................... 293
8.1
8.2
8.3
8.3.1
8.3.2
8.3.3
8.4
8.4.1
8.4.2
8.4.3
8.4.4
8.4.5
8.4.6
8.5
8.6
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
GPTM Reset Conditions ..............................................................................................
32-Bit Timer Operating Modes ......................................................................................
16-Bit Timer Operating Modes ......................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
32-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode ...........................................................................
32-Bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) Mode .............................................................................
16-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode ...........................................................................
16-Bit Input Edge Count Mode .....................................................................................
16-Bit Input Edge Timing Mode ....................................................................................
16-Bit PWM Mode .......................................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
293
294
295
295
295
297
300
300
301
301
302
302
303
303
304
9
Watchdog Timer ................................................................................................... 329
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
330
330
331
331
332
10
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs) ............................. 353
10.1
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................ 354
June 18, 2012
5
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
10.2
10.3
10.3.1
10.3.2
10.3.3
10.3.4
10.3.5
10.3.6
10.3.7
10.3.8
10.4
10.5
10.6
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
Transmit/Receive Logic ...............................................................................................
Baud-Rate Generation .................................................................................................
Data Transmission ......................................................................................................
Serial IR (SIR) .............................................................................................................
FIFO Operation ...........................................................................................................
Interrupts ....................................................................................................................
Loopback Operation ....................................................................................................
IrDA SIR block ............................................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
354
355
355
355
356
357
358
358
359
359
359
360
361
11
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) .................................................................... 395
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.3.1
11.3.2
11.3.3
11.3.4
11.4
11.5
11.6
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
Bit Rate Generation .....................................................................................................
FIFO Operation ...........................................................................................................
Interrupts ....................................................................................................................
Frame Formats ...........................................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
12
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module ............................................................. 433
395
395
396
396
397
397
397
405
406
407
12.1
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................ 434
12.2
Signal Description ....................................................................................................... 434
12.3
Functional Description ................................................................................................. 435
12.3.1 Initialization ................................................................................................................. 436
12.3.2 Operation ................................................................................................................... 436
12.3.3 Transmitting Message Objects ..................................................................................... 437
12.3.4 Configuring a Transmit Message Object ........................................................................ 437
12.3.5 Updating a Transmit Message Object ........................................................................... 439
12.3.6 Accepting Received Message Objects .......................................................................... 439
12.3.7 Receiving a Data Frame .............................................................................................. 439
12.3.8 Receiving a Remote Frame .......................................................................................... 440
12.3.9 Receive/Transmit Priority ............................................................................................. 440
12.3.10 Configuring a Receive Message Object ........................................................................ 441
12.3.11 Handling of Received Message Objects ........................................................................ 442
12.3.12 Handling of Interrupts .................................................................................................. 445
12.3.13 Test Mode ................................................................................................................... 445
12.3.14 Bit Timing Configuration Error Considerations ............................................................... 447
12.3.15 Bit Time and Bit Rate ................................................................................................... 447
12.3.16 Calculating the Bit Timing Parameters .......................................................................... 449
12.4
Register Map .............................................................................................................. 452
12.5
CAN Register Descriptions .......................................................................................... 454
13
Analog Comparators ............................................................................................ 480
13.1
Block Diagram ............................................................................................................ 480
6
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
13.2
13.3
13.3.1
13.4
13.5
13.6
Signal Description .......................................................................................................
Functional Description .................................................................................................
Internal Reference Programming ..................................................................................
Initialization and Configuration .....................................................................................
Register Map ..............................................................................................................
Register Descriptions ..................................................................................................
481
481
482
483
483
484
14
Pin Diagram .......................................................................................................... 492
15
Signal Tables ........................................................................................................ 494
15.1
15.1.1
15.1.2
15.1.3
15.1.4
15.2
15.2.1
15.2.2
15.2.3
15.2.4
15.3
100-Pin LQFP Package Pin Tables ............................................................................... 494
Signals by Pin Number ................................................................................................ 494
Signals by Signal Name ............................................................................................... 498
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO ........................................................................... 501
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions .............................................................................. 503
108-Ball BGA Package Pin Tables ................................................................................ 505
Signals by Pin Number ................................................................................................ 505
Signals by Signal Name ............................................................................................... 508
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO ........................................................................... 512
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions .............................................................................. 514
Connections for Unused Signals ................................................................................... 515
16
Operating Characteristics ................................................................................... 517
17
Electrical Characteristics .................................................................................... 518
17.1
17.1.1
17.1.2
17.1.3
17.1.4
17.1.5
17.1.6
17.2
17.2.1
17.2.2
17.2.3
17.2.4
17.2.5
17.2.6
17.2.7
17.2.8
DC Characteristics ...................................................................................................... 518
Maximum Ratings ....................................................................................................... 518
Recommended DC Operating Conditions ...................................................................... 518
On-Chip Low Drop-Out (LDO) Regulator Characteristics ................................................ 519
GPIO Module Characteristics ....................................................................................... 519
Power Specifications ................................................................................................... 519
Flash Memory Characteristics ...................................................................................... 520
AC Characteristics ....................................................................................................... 521
Load Conditions .......................................................................................................... 521
Clocks ........................................................................................................................ 521
JTAG and Boundary Scan ............................................................................................ 522
Reset ......................................................................................................................... 524
Sleep Modes ............................................................................................................... 526
General-Purpose I/O (GPIO) ........................................................................................ 526
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) ............................................................................... 526
Analog Comparator ..................................................................................................... 528
A
Serial Flash Loader .............................................................................................. 529
A.1
A.2
A.2.1
A.2.2
A.3
A.3.1
A.3.2
A.3.3
A.4
Serial Flash Loader .....................................................................................................
Interfaces ...................................................................................................................
UART .........................................................................................................................
SSI .............................................................................................................................
Packet Handling ..........................................................................................................
Packet Format ............................................................................................................
Sending Packets .........................................................................................................
Receiving Packets .......................................................................................................
Commands .................................................................................................................
June 18, 2012
529
529
529
529
530
530
530
530
531
7
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
A.4.1
A.4.2
A.4.3
A.4.4
A.4.5
A.4.6
COMMAND_PING (0X20) ............................................................................................
COMMAND_GET_STATUS (0x23) ...............................................................................
COMMAND_DOWNLOAD (0x21) .................................................................................
COMMAND_SEND_DATA (0x24) .................................................................................
COMMAND_RUN (0x22) .............................................................................................
COMMAND_RESET (0x25) .........................................................................................
531
531
531
532
532
532
B
Register Quick Reference ................................................................................... 534
C
Ordering and Contact Information ..................................................................... 552
C.1
C.2
C.3
C.4
Ordering Information .................................................................................................... 552
Part Markings .............................................................................................................. 552
Kits ............................................................................................................................. 553
Support Information ..................................................................................................... 553
D
Package Information ............................................................................................ 554
D.1
D.1.1
D.1.2
D.1.3
D.2
D.2.1
D.2.2
D.2.3
100-Pin LQFP Package ...............................................................................................
Package Dimensions ...................................................................................................
Tray Dimensions .........................................................................................................
Tape and Reel Dimensions ..........................................................................................
108-Ball BGA Package ................................................................................................
Package Dimensions ...................................................................................................
Tray Dimensions .........................................................................................................
Tape and Reel Dimensions ..........................................................................................
8
554
554
556
556
558
558
560
561
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
List of Figures
Figure 1-1.
Figure 2-1.
Figure 2-2.
Figure 2-3.
Figure 2-4.
Figure 2-5.
Figure 2-6.
Figure 2-7.
Figure 3-1.
Figure 4-1.
Figure 4-2.
Figure 4-3.
Figure 4-4.
Figure 4-5.
Figure 5-1.
Figure 5-2.
Figure 5-3.
Figure 5-4.
Figure 5-5.
Figure 6-1.
Figure 7-1.
Figure 7-2.
Figure 7-3.
Figure 8-1.
Figure 8-2.
Figure 8-3.
Figure 8-4.
Figure 9-1.
Figure 10-1.
Figure 10-2.
Figure 10-3.
Figure 11-1.
Figure 11-2.
Figure 11-3.
Figure 11-4.
Figure 11-5.
Figure 11-6.
Figure 11-7.
Figure 11-8.
Figure 11-9.
Figure 11-10.
Figure 11-11.
Figure 11-12.
Figure 12-1.
Figure 12-2.
Figure 12-3.
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller High-Level Block Diagram ............................... 36
CPU Block Diagram ............................................................................................. 44
TPIU Block Diagram ............................................................................................ 45
Cortex-M3 Register Set ........................................................................................ 47
Bit-Band Mapping ................................................................................................ 67
Data Storage ....................................................................................................... 68
Vector Table ........................................................................................................ 73
Exception Stack Frame ........................................................................................ 75
SRD Use Example ............................................................................................... 90
JTAG Module Block Diagram .............................................................................. 149
Test Access Port State Machine ......................................................................... 153
IDCODE Register Format ................................................................................... 159
BYPASS Register Format ................................................................................... 159
Boundary Scan Register Format ......................................................................... 160
Basic RST Configuration .................................................................................... 163
External Circuitry to Extend Power-On Reset ....................................................... 164
Reset Circuit Controlled by Switch ...................................................................... 164
Power Architecture ............................................................................................ 166
Main Clock Tree ................................................................................................ 168
Flash Block Diagram .......................................................................................... 219
GPIO Port Block Diagram ................................................................................... 253
GPIODATA Write Example ................................................................................. 254
GPIODATA Read Example ................................................................................. 254
GPTM Module Block Diagram ............................................................................ 294
16-Bit Input Edge Count Mode Example .............................................................. 298
16-Bit Input Edge Time Mode Example ............................................................... 299
16-Bit PWM Mode Example ................................................................................ 300
WDT Module Block Diagram .............................................................................. 330
UART Module Block Diagram ............................................................................. 354
UART Character Frame ..................................................................................... 355
IrDA Data Modulation ......................................................................................... 357
SSI Module Block Diagram ................................................................................. 395
TI Synchronous Serial Frame Format (Single Transfer) ........................................ 398
TI Synchronous Serial Frame Format (Continuous Transfer) ................................ 399
Freescale SPI Format (Single Transfer) with SPO=0 and SPH=0 .......................... 399
Freescale SPI Format (Continuous Transfer) with SPO=0 and SPH=0 .................. 400
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=0 and SPH=1 ......................................... 401
Freescale SPI Frame Format (Single Transfer) with SPO=1 and SPH=0 ............... 401
Freescale SPI Frame Format (Continuous Transfer) with SPO=1 and SPH=0 ........ 402
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=1 and SPH=1 ......................................... 403
MICROWIRE Frame Format (Single Frame) ........................................................ 403
MICROWIRE Frame Format (Continuous Transfer) ............................................. 404
MICROWIRE Frame Format, SSIFss Input Setup and Hold Requirements ............ 405
CAN Controller Block Diagram ............................................................................ 434
CAN Data/Remote Frame .................................................................................. 435
Message Objects in a FIFO Buffer ...................................................................... 444
June 18, 2012
9
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
Figure 12-4.
Figure 13-1.
Figure 13-2.
Figure 13-3.
Figure 14-1.
Figure 14-2.
Figure 17-1.
Figure 17-2.
Figure 17-3.
Figure 17-4.
Figure 17-5.
Figure 17-6.
Figure 17-7.
Figure 17-8.
Figure 17-9.
Figure 17-10.
CAN Bit Time .................................................................................................... 448
Analog Comparator Module Block Diagram ......................................................... 480
Structure of Comparator Unit .............................................................................. 482
Comparator Internal Reference Structure ............................................................ 482
100-Pin LQFP Package Pin Diagram .................................................................. 492
108-Ball BGA Package Pin Diagram (Top View) ................................................... 493
Load Conditions ................................................................................................ 521
JTAG Test Clock Input Timing ............................................................................. 523
JTAG Test Access Port (TAP) Timing .................................................................. 523
JTAG TRST Timing ............................................................................................ 524
External Reset Timing (RST) .............................................................................. 524
Power-On Reset Timing ..................................................................................... 525
Brown-Out Reset Timing .................................................................................... 525
Software Reset Timing ....................................................................................... 525
Watchdog Reset Timing ..................................................................................... 525
SSI Timing for TI Frame Format (FRF=01), Single Transfer Timing
Measurement .................................................................................................... 527
Figure 17-11. SSI Timing for MICROWIRE Frame Format (FRF=10), Single Transfer ................. 527
Figure 17-12. SSI Timing for SPI Frame Format (FRF=00), with SPH=1 ..................................... 528
Figure D-1. Stellaris LM3S2730 100-Pin LQFP Package Dimensions ..................................... 554
Figure D-2. 100-Pin LQFP Tray Dimensions .......................................................................... 556
Figure D-3. 100-Pin LQFP Tape and Reel Dimensions ........................................................... 557
Figure D-4. Stellaris LM3S2730 108-Ball BGA Package Dimensions ...................................... 558
Figure D-5. 108-Ball BGA Tray Dimensions ........................................................................... 560
Figure D-6. 108-Ball BGA Tape and Reel Dimensions ............................................................ 561
10
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
List of Tables
Table 1.
Table 2.
Table 2-1.
Table 2-2.
Table 2-3.
Table 2-4.
Table 2-5.
Table 2-6.
Table 2-7.
Table 2-8.
Table 2-9.
Table 2-10.
Table 2-11.
Table 2-12.
Table 2-13.
Table 3-1.
Table 3-2.
Table 3-3.
Table 3-4.
Table 3-5.
Table 3-6.
Table 3-7.
Table 3-8.
Table 3-9.
Table 4-1.
Table 4-2.
Table 4-3.
Table 4-4.
Table 5-1.
Table 5-2.
Table 5-3.
Table 5-4.
Table 5-5.
Table 5-6.
Table 5-7.
Table 5-8.
Table 6-1.
Table 6-2.
Table 6-3.
Table 7-1.
Table 7-2.
Table 7-3.
Table 7-4.
Table 7-5.
Table 7-6.
Table 7-7.
Revision History .................................................................................................. 21
Documentation Conventions ................................................................................ 27
Summary of Processor Mode, Privilege Level, and Stack Use ................................ 47
Processor Register Map ....................................................................................... 48
PSR Register Combinations ................................................................................. 53
Memory Map ....................................................................................................... 61
Memory Access Behavior ..................................................................................... 63
SRAM Memory Bit-Banding Regions .................................................................... 65
Peripheral Memory Bit-Banding Regions ............................................................... 65
Exception Types .................................................................................................. 71
Interrupts ............................................................................................................ 72
Exception Return Behavior ................................................................................... 76
Faults ................................................................................................................. 77
Fault Status and Fault Address Registers .............................................................. 78
Cortex-M3 Instruction Summary ........................................................................... 80
Core Peripheral Register Regions ......................................................................... 84
Memory Attributes Summary ................................................................................ 87
TEX, S, C, and B Bit Field Encoding ..................................................................... 90
Cache Policy for Memory Attribute Encoding ......................................................... 91
AP Bit Field Encoding .......................................................................................... 91
Memory Region Attributes for Stellaris Microcontrollers .......................................... 91
Peripherals Register Map ..................................................................................... 92
Interrupt Priority Levels ...................................................................................... 117
Example SIZE Field Values ................................................................................ 145
JTAG_SWD_SWO Signals (100LQFP) ................................................................ 149
JTAG_SWD_SWO Signals (108BGA) ................................................................. 150
JTAG Port Pins Reset State ............................................................................... 150
JTAG Instruction Register Commands ................................................................. 157
System Control & Clocks Signals (100LQFP) ...................................................... 161
System Control & Clocks Signals (108BGA) ........................................................ 161
Reset Sources ................................................................................................... 162
Clock Source Options ........................................................................................ 167
Possible System Clock Frequencies Using the SYSDIV Field ............................... 169
Examples of Possible System Clock Frequencies Using the SYSDIV2 Field .......... 169
System Control Register Map ............................................................................. 173
RCC2 Fields that Override RCC fields ................................................................. 186
Flash Protection Policy Combinations ................................................................. 220
User-Programmable Flash Memory Resident Registers ....................................... 223
Flash Register Map ............................................................................................ 223
GPIO Pins With Non-Zero Reset Values .............................................................. 246
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (100LQFP) ................................................... 246
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (108BGA) ..................................................... 247
GPIO Signals (100LQFP) ................................................................................... 249
GPIO Signals (108BGA) ..................................................................................... 250
GPIO Pad Configuration Examples ..................................................................... 256
GPIO Interrupt Configuration Example ................................................................ 256
June 18, 2012
11
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
Table 7-8.
Table 8-1.
Table 8-2.
Table 8-3.
Table 8-4.
Table 8-5.
Table 9-1.
Table 10-1.
Table 10-2.
Table 10-3.
Table 11-1.
Table 11-2.
Table 11-3.
Table 12-1.
Table 12-2.
Table 12-3.
Table 12-4.
Table 12-5.
Table 13-1.
Table 13-2.
Table 13-3.
Table 13-4.
Table 15-1.
Table 15-2.
Table 15-3.
Table 15-4.
Table 15-5.
Table 15-6.
Table 15-7.
Table 15-8.
Table 15-9.
Table 15-10.
Table 16-1.
Table 16-2.
Table 16-3.
Table 17-1.
Table 17-2.
Table 17-3.
Table 17-4.
Table 17-5.
Table 17-6.
Table 17-7.
Table 17-8.
Table 17-9.
Table 17-10.
Table 17-11.
Table 17-12.
Table 17-13.
GPIO Register Map ........................................................................................... 257
Available CCP Pins ............................................................................................ 294
General-Purpose Timers Signals (100LQFP) ....................................................... 294
General-Purpose Timers Signals (108BGA) ......................................................... 295
16-Bit Timer With Prescaler Configurations ......................................................... 297
Timers Register Map .......................................................................................... 304
Watchdog Timer Register Map ............................................................................ 331
UART Signals (100LQFP) .................................................................................. 354
UART Signals (108BGA) .................................................................................... 355
UART Register Map ........................................................................................... 360
SSI Signals (100LQFP) ...................................................................................... 396
SSI Signals (108BGA) ........................................................................................ 396
SSI Register Map .............................................................................................. 406
Controller Area Network Signals (100LQFP) ........................................................ 435
Controller Area Network Signals (108BGA) ......................................................... 435
CAN Protocol Ranges ........................................................................................ 448
CANBIT Register Values .................................................................................... 448
CAN Register Map ............................................................................................. 452
Analog Comparators Signals (100LQFP) ............................................................. 481
Analog Comparators Signals (108BGA) .............................................................. 481
Internal Reference Voltage and ACREFCTL Field Values ..................................... 482
Analog Comparators Register Map ..................................................................... 484
Signals by Pin Number ....................................................................................... 494
Signals by Signal Name ..................................................................................... 498
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO ................................................................. 501
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions ..................................................................... 503
Signals by Pin Number ....................................................................................... 505
Signals by Signal Name ..................................................................................... 508
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO ................................................................. 512
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions ..................................................................... 514
Connections for Unused Signals (100-pin LQFP) ................................................. 516
Connections for Unused Signals, 108-pin BGA .................................................... 516
Temperature Characteristics ............................................................................... 517
Thermal Characteristics ..................................................................................... 517
ESD Absolute Maximum Ratings ........................................................................ 517
Maximum Ratings .............................................................................................. 518
Recommended DC Operating Conditions ............................................................ 518
LDO Regulator Characteristics ........................................................................... 519
GPIO Module DC Characteristics ........................................................................ 519
Detailed Power Specifications ............................................................................ 520
Flash Memory Characteristics ............................................................................ 520
Phase Locked Loop (PLL) Characteristics ........................................................... 521
Actual PLL Frequency ........................................................................................ 521
Clock Characteristics ......................................................................................... 522
Crystal Characteristics ....................................................................................... 522
JTAG Characteristics ......................................................................................... 522
Reset Characteristics ......................................................................................... 524
Sleep Modes AC Characteristics ......................................................................... 526
12
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 17-14.
Table 17-15.
Table 17-16.
Table 17-17.
Table C-1.
GPIO Characteristics .........................................................................................
SSI Characteristics ............................................................................................
Analog Comparator Characteristics .....................................................................
Analog Comparator Voltage Reference Characteristics ........................................
Part Ordering Information ...................................................................................
June 18, 2012
526
526
528
528
552
13
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
List of Registers
The Cortex-M3 Processor ............................................................................................................. 42
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
Cortex General-Purpose Register 0 (R0) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 1 (R1) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 2 (R2) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 3 (R3) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 4 (R4) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 5 (R5) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 6 (R6) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 7 (R7) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 8 (R8) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 9 (R9) ........................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 10 (R10) ....................................................................... 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 11 (R11) ........................................................................ 49
Cortex General-Purpose Register 12 (R12) ....................................................................... 49
Stack Pointer (SP) ........................................................................................................... 50
Link Register (LR) ............................................................................................................ 51
Program Counter (PC) ..................................................................................................... 52
Program Status Register (PSR) ........................................................................................ 53
Priority Mask Register (PRIMASK) .................................................................................... 57
Fault Mask Register (FAULTMASK) .................................................................................. 58
Base Priority Mask Register (BASEPRI) ............................................................................ 59
Control Register (CONTROL) ........................................................................................... 60
Cortex-M3 Peripherals ................................................................................................................... 84
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
Register 22:
SysTick Control and Status Register (STCTRL), offset 0x010 ............................................. 95
SysTick Reload Value Register (STRELOAD), offset 0x014 ................................................ 97
SysTick Current Value Register (STCURRENT), offset 0x018 ............................................. 98
Interrupt 0-31 Set Enable (EN0), offset 0x100 .................................................................... 99
Interrupt 32-43 Set Enable (EN1), offset 0x104 ................................................................ 100
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Enable (DIS0), offset 0x180 .............................................................. 101
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Enable (DIS1), offset 0x184 ............................................................ 102
Interrupt 0-31 Set Pending (PEND0), offset 0x200 ........................................................... 103
Interrupt 32-43 Set Pending (PEND1), offset 0x204 ......................................................... 104
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Pending (UNPEND0), offset 0x280 ................................................... 105
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Pending (UNPEND1), offset 0x284 .................................................. 106
Interrupt 0-31 Active Bit (ACTIVE0), offset 0x300 ............................................................. 107
Interrupt 32-43 Active Bit (ACTIVE1), offset 0x304 ........................................................... 108
Interrupt 0-3 Priority (PRI0), offset 0x400 ......................................................................... 109
Interrupt 4-7 Priority (PRI1), offset 0x404 ......................................................................... 109
Interrupt 8-11 Priority (PRI2), offset 0x408 ....................................................................... 109
Interrupt 12-15 Priority (PRI3), offset 0x40C .................................................................... 109
Interrupt 16-19 Priority (PRI4), offset 0x410 ..................................................................... 109
Interrupt 20-23 Priority (PRI5), offset 0x414 ..................................................................... 109
Interrupt 24-27 Priority (PRI6), offset 0x418 ..................................................................... 109
Interrupt 28-31 Priority (PRI7), offset 0x41C .................................................................... 109
Interrupt 32-35 Priority (PRI8), offset 0x420 ..................................................................... 109
14
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 23:
Register 24:
Register 25:
Register 26:
Register 27:
Register 28:
Register 29:
Register 30:
Register 31:
Register 32:
Register 33:
Register 34:
Register 35:
Register 36:
Register 37:
Register 38:
Register 39:
Register 40:
Register 41:
Register 42:
Register 43:
Register 44:
Register 45:
Register 46:
Register 47:
Register 48:
Register 49:
Register 50:
Interrupt 36-39 Priority (PRI9), offset 0x424 ..................................................................... 109
Interrupt 40-43 Priority (PRI10), offset 0x428 ................................................................... 109
Software Trigger Interrupt (SWTRIG), offset 0xF00 .......................................................... 111
CPU ID Base (CPUID), offset 0xD00 ............................................................................... 112
Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL), offset 0xD04 ........................................................ 113
Vector Table Offset (VTABLE), offset 0xD08 .................................................................... 116
Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT), offset 0xD0C ......................................... 117
System Control (SYSCTRL), offset 0xD10 ....................................................................... 119
Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL), offset 0xD14 ....................................................... 121
System Handler Priority 1 (SYSPRI1), offset 0xD18 ......................................................... 123
System Handler Priority 2 (SYSPRI2), offset 0xD1C ........................................................ 124
System Handler Priority 3 (SYSPRI3), offset 0xD20 ......................................................... 125
System Handler Control and State (SYSHNDCTRL), offset 0xD24 .................................... 126
Configurable Fault Status (FAULTSTAT), offset 0xD28 ..................................................... 130
Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT), offset 0xD2C .............................................................. 136
Memory Management Fault Address (MMADDR), offset 0xD34 ........................................ 137
Bus Fault Address (FAULTADDR), offset 0xD38 .............................................................. 138
MPU Type (MPUTYPE), offset 0xD90 ............................................................................. 139
MPU Control (MPUCTRL), offset 0xD94 .......................................................................... 140
MPU Region Number (MPUNUMBER), offset 0xD98 ....................................................... 142
MPU Region Base Address (MPUBASE), offset 0xD9C ................................................... 143
MPU Region Base Address Alias 1 (MPUBASE1), offset 0xDA4 ....................................... 143
MPU Region Base Address Alias 2 (MPUBASE2), offset 0xDAC ...................................... 143
MPU Region Base Address Alias 3 (MPUBASE3), offset 0xDB4 ....................................... 143
MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR), offset 0xDA0 ............................................... 145
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 1 (MPUATTR1), offset 0xDA8 .................................. 145
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 2 (MPUATTR2), offset 0xDB0 .................................. 145
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 3 (MPUATTR3), offset 0xDB8 .................................. 145
System Control ............................................................................................................................ 161
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Device Identification 0 (DID0), offset 0x000 ..................................................................... 174
Brown-Out Reset Control (PBORCTL), offset 0x030 ........................................................ 176
LDO Power Control (LDOPCTL), offset 0x034 ................................................................. 177
Raw Interrupt Status (RIS), offset 0x050 .......................................................................... 178
Interrupt Mask Control (IMC), offset 0x054 ...................................................................... 179
Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (MISC), offset 0x058 .................................................. 180
Reset Cause (RESC), offset 0x05C ................................................................................ 181
Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC), offset 0x060 ......................................................... 182
XTAL to PLL Translation (PLLCFG), offset 0x064 ............................................................. 185
Run-Mode Clock Configuration 2 (RCC2), offset 0x070 .................................................... 186
Deep Sleep Clock Configuration (DSLPCLKCFG), offset 0x144 ........................................ 188
Device Identification 1 (DID1), offset 0x004 ..................................................................... 189
Device Capabilities 0 (DC0), offset 0x008 ........................................................................ 191
Device Capabilities 1 (DC1), offset 0x010 ........................................................................ 192
Device Capabilities 2 (DC2), offset 0x014 ........................................................................ 194
Device Capabilities 3 (DC3), offset 0x018 ........................................................................ 196
Device Capabilities 4 (DC4), offset 0x01C ....................................................................... 198
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (RCGC0), offset 0x100 ................................... 199
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (SCGC0), offset 0x110 ................................. 200
June 18, 2012
15
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
Register 20:
Register 21:
Register 22:
Register 23:
Register 24:
Register 25:
Register 26:
Register 27:
Register 28:
Register 29:
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (DCGC0), offset 0x120 ....................... 202
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (RCGC1), offset 0x104 ................................... 204
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (SCGC1), offset 0x114 ................................. 206
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (DCGC1), offset 0x124 ....................... 208
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (RCGC2), offset 0x108 ................................... 210
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (SCGC2), offset 0x118 ................................. 212
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (DCGC2), offset 0x128 ....................... 214
Software Reset Control 0 (SRCR0), offset 0x040 ............................................................. 216
Software Reset Control 1 (SRCR1), offset 0x044 ............................................................. 217
Software Reset Control 2 (SRCR2), offset 0x048 ............................................................. 218
Internal Memory ........................................................................................................................... 219
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Flash Memory Address (FMA), offset 0x000 .................................................................... 225
Flash Memory Data (FMD), offset 0x004 ......................................................................... 226
Flash Memory Control (FMC), offset 0x008 ..................................................................... 227
Flash Controller Raw Interrupt Status (FCRIS), offset 0x00C ............................................ 229
Flash Controller Interrupt Mask (FCIM), offset 0x010 ........................................................ 230
Flash Controller Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (FCMISC), offset 0x014 ..................... 231
USec Reload (USECRL), offset 0x140 ............................................................................ 233
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 0 (FMPRE0), offset 0x130 and 0x200 ................... 234
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 0 (FMPPE0), offset 0x134 and 0x400 ............... 235
User Debug (USER_DBG), offset 0x1D0 ......................................................................... 236
User Register 0 (USER_REG0), offset 0x1E0 .................................................................. 237
User Register 1 (USER_REG1), offset 0x1E4 .................................................................. 238
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 1 (FMPRE1), offset 0x204 .................................... 239
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 2 (FMPRE2), offset 0x208 .................................... 240
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 3 (FMPRE3), offset 0x20C ................................... 241
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 1 (FMPPE1), offset 0x404 ............................... 242
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 2 (FMPPE2), offset 0x408 ............................... 243
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 3 (FMPPE3), offset 0x40C ............................... 244
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs) ................................................................................... 245
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
GPIO Data (GPIODATA), offset 0x000 ............................................................................ 259
GPIO Direction (GPIODIR), offset 0x400 ......................................................................... 260
GPIO Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS), offset 0x404 .................................................................. 261
GPIO Interrupt Both Edges (GPIOIBE), offset 0x408 ........................................................ 262
GPIO Interrupt Event (GPIOIEV), offset 0x40C ................................................................ 263
GPIO Interrupt Mask (GPIOIM), offset 0x410 ................................................................... 264
GPIO Raw Interrupt Status (GPIORIS), offset 0x414 ........................................................ 265
GPIO Masked Interrupt Status (GPIOMIS), offset 0x418 ................................................... 266
GPIO Interrupt Clear (GPIOICR), offset 0x41C ................................................................ 267
GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL), offset 0x420 ............................................ 268
GPIO 2-mA Drive Select (GPIODR2R), offset 0x500 ........................................................ 270
GPIO 4-mA Drive Select (GPIODR4R), offset 0x504 ........................................................ 271
GPIO 8-mA Drive Select (GPIODR8R), offset 0x508 ........................................................ 272
GPIO Open Drain Select (GPIOODR), offset 0x50C ......................................................... 273
GPIO Pull-Up Select (GPIOPUR), offset 0x510 ................................................................ 274
GPIO Pull-Down Select (GPIOPDR), offset 0x514 ........................................................... 275
GPIO Slew Rate Control Select (GPIOSLR), offset 0x518 ................................................ 276
GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN), offset 0x51C ................................................................ 277
16
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
Register 22:
Register 23:
Register 24:
Register 25:
Register 26:
Register 27:
Register 28:
Register 29:
Register 30:
Register 31:
Register 32:
GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK), offset 0x520 ............................................................................ 278
GPIO Commit (GPIOCR), offset 0x524 ............................................................................ 279
GPIO Peripheral Identification 4 (GPIOPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0 ....................................... 281
GPIO Peripheral Identification 5 (GPIOPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4 ....................................... 282
GPIO Peripheral Identification 6 (GPIOPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8 ....................................... 283
GPIO Peripheral Identification 7 (GPIOPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC ...................................... 284
GPIO Peripheral Identification 0 (GPIOPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0 ....................................... 285
GPIO Peripheral Identification 1 (GPIOPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4 ....................................... 286
GPIO Peripheral Identification 2 (GPIOPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8 ....................................... 287
GPIO Peripheral Identification 3 (GPIOPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC ...................................... 288
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 0 (GPIOPCellID0), offset 0xFF0 .......................................... 289
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 1 (GPIOPCellID1), offset 0xFF4 .......................................... 290
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 2 (GPIOPCellID2), offset 0xFF8 .......................................... 291
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 3 (GPIOPCellID3), offset 0xFFC ......................................... 292
General-Purpose Timers ............................................................................................................. 293
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG), offset 0x000 .............................................................. 305
GPTM TimerA Mode (GPTMTAMR), offset 0x004 ............................................................ 306
GPTM TimerB Mode (GPTMTBMR), offset 0x008 ............................................................ 308
GPTM Control (GPTMCTL), offset 0x00C ........................................................................ 310
GPTM Interrupt Mask (GPTMIMR), offset 0x018 .............................................................. 313
GPTM Raw Interrupt Status (GPTMRIS), offset 0x01C ..................................................... 315
GPTM Masked Interrupt Status (GPTMMIS), offset 0x020 ................................................ 316
GPTM Interrupt Clear (GPTMICR), offset 0x024 .............................................................. 317
GPTM TimerA Interval Load (GPTMTAILR), offset 0x028 ................................................. 319
GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR), offset 0x02C ................................................ 320
GPTM TimerA Match (GPTMTAMATCHR), offset 0x030 ................................................... 321
GPTM TimerB Match (GPTMTBMATCHR), offset 0x034 .................................................. 322
GPTM TimerA Prescale (GPTMTAPR), offset 0x038 ........................................................ 323
GPTM TimerB Prescale (GPTMTBPR), offset 0x03C ....................................................... 324
GPTM TimerA Prescale Match (GPTMTAPMR), offset 0x040 ........................................... 325
GPTM TimerB Prescale Match (GPTMTBPMR), offset 0x044 ........................................... 326
GPTM TimerA (GPTMTAR), offset 0x048 ........................................................................ 327
GPTM TimerB (GPTMTBR), offset 0x04C ....................................................................... 328
Watchdog Timer ........................................................................................................................... 329
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Watchdog Load (WDTLOAD), offset 0x000 ...................................................................... 333
Watchdog Value (WDTVALUE), offset 0x004 ................................................................... 334
Watchdog Control (WDTCTL), offset 0x008 ..................................................................... 335
Watchdog Interrupt Clear (WDTICR), offset 0x00C .......................................................... 336
Watchdog Raw Interrupt Status (WDTRIS), offset 0x010 .................................................. 337
Watchdog Masked Interrupt Status (WDTMIS), offset 0x014 ............................................. 338
Watchdog Test (WDTTEST), offset 0x418 ....................................................................... 339
Watchdog Lock (WDTLOCK), offset 0xC00 ..................................................................... 340
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 4 (WDTPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0 ................................. 341
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 5 (WDTPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4 ................................. 342
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 6 (WDTPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8 ................................. 343
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 7 (WDTPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC ................................ 344
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 0 (WDTPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0 ................................. 345
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 1 (WDTPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4 ................................. 346
June 18, 2012
17
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 2 (WDTPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8 .................................
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 3 (WDTPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC .................................
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 0 (WDTPCellID0), offset 0xFF0 ....................................
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 1 (WDTPCellID1), offset 0xFF4 ....................................
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 2 (WDTPCellID2), offset 0xFF8 ....................................
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 3 (WDTPCellID3 ), offset 0xFFC ..................................
347
348
349
350
351
352
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs) ..................................................... 353
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
Register 22:
Register 23:
Register 24:
Register 25:
UART Data (UARTDR), offset 0x000 ............................................................................... 362
UART Receive Status/Error Clear (UARTRSR/UARTECR), offset 0x004 ........................... 364
UART Flag (UARTFR), offset 0x018 ................................................................................ 366
UART IrDA Low-Power Register (UARTILPR), offset 0x020 ............................................. 368
UART Integer Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTIBRD), offset 0x024 ............................................ 369
UART Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTFBRD), offset 0x028 ....................................... 370
UART Line Control (UARTLCRH), offset 0x02C ............................................................... 371
UART Control (UARTCTL), offset 0x030 ......................................................................... 373
UART Interrupt FIFO Level Select (UARTIFLS), offset 0x034 ........................................... 375
UART Interrupt Mask (UARTIM), offset 0x038 ................................................................. 377
UART Raw Interrupt Status (UARTRIS), offset 0x03C ...................................................... 379
UART Masked Interrupt Status (UARTMIS), offset 0x040 ................................................. 380
UART Interrupt Clear (UARTICR), offset 0x044 ............................................................... 381
UART Peripheral Identification 4 (UARTPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0 ..................................... 383
UART Peripheral Identification 5 (UARTPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4 ..................................... 384
UART Peripheral Identification 6 (UARTPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8 ..................................... 385
UART Peripheral Identification 7 (UARTPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC ..................................... 386
UART Peripheral Identification 0 (UARTPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0 ...................................... 387
UART Peripheral Identification 1 (UARTPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4 ...................................... 388
UART Peripheral Identification 2 (UARTPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8 ...................................... 389
UART Peripheral Identification 3 (UARTPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC ..................................... 390
UART PrimeCell Identification 0 (UARTPCellID0), offset 0xFF0 ........................................ 391
UART PrimeCell Identification 1 (UARTPCellID1), offset 0xFF4 ........................................ 392
UART PrimeCell Identification 2 (UARTPCellID2), offset 0xFF8 ........................................ 393
UART PrimeCell Identification 3 (UARTPCellID3), offset 0xFFC ........................................ 394
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) ............................................................................................ 395
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
SSI Control 0 (SSICR0), offset 0x000 .............................................................................. 408
SSI Control 1 (SSICR1), offset 0x004 .............................................................................. 410
SSI Data (SSIDR), offset 0x008 ...................................................................................... 412
SSI Status (SSISR), offset 0x00C ................................................................................... 413
SSI Clock Prescale (SSICPSR), offset 0x010 .................................................................. 415
SSI Interrupt Mask (SSIIM), offset 0x014 ......................................................................... 416
SSI Raw Interrupt Status (SSIRIS), offset 0x018 .............................................................. 418
SSI Masked Interrupt Status (SSIMIS), offset 0x01C ........................................................ 419
SSI Interrupt Clear (SSIICR), offset 0x020 ....................................................................... 420
SSI Peripheral Identification 4 (SSIPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0 ............................................. 421
SSI Peripheral Identification 5 (SSIPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4 ............................................. 422
SSI Peripheral Identification 6 (SSIPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8 ............................................. 423
SSI Peripheral Identification 7 (SSIPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC ............................................ 424
SSI Peripheral Identification 0 (SSIPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0 ............................................. 425
SSI Peripheral Identification 1 (SSIPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4 ............................................. 426
18
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
SSI Peripheral Identification 2 (SSIPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8 .............................................
SSI Peripheral Identification 3 (SSIPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC ............................................
SSI PrimeCell Identification 0 (SSIPCellID0), offset 0xFF0 ...............................................
SSI PrimeCell Identification 1 (SSIPCellID1), offset 0xFF4 ...............................................
SSI PrimeCell Identification 2 (SSIPCellID2), offset 0xFF8 ...............................................
SSI PrimeCell Identification 3 (SSIPCellID3), offset 0xFFC ...............................................
427
428
429
430
431
432
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module ..................................................................................... 433
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Register 9:
Register 10:
Register 11:
Register 12:
Register 13:
Register 14:
Register 15:
Register 16:
Register 17:
Register 18:
Register 19:
Register 20:
Register 21:
Register 22:
Register 23:
Register 24:
Register 25:
Register 26:
Register 27:
Register 28:
Register 29:
Register 30:
Register 31:
Register 32:
Register 33:
Register 34:
Register 35:
Register 36:
Register 37:
CAN Control (CANCTL), offset 0x000 ............................................................................. 455
CAN Status (CANSTS), offset 0x004 ............................................................................... 457
CAN Error Counter (CANERR), offset 0x008 ................................................................... 459
CAN Bit Timing (CANBIT), offset 0x00C .......................................................................... 460
CAN Interrupt (CANINT), offset 0x010 ............................................................................. 461
CAN Test (CANTST), offset 0x014 .................................................................................. 462
CAN Baud Rate Prescaler Extension (CANBRPE), offset 0x018 ....................................... 464
CAN IF1 Command Request (CANIF1CRQ), offset 0x020 ................................................ 465
CAN IF2 Command Request (CANIF2CRQ), offset 0x080 ................................................ 465
CAN IF1 Command Mask (CANIF1CMSK), offset 0x024 .................................................. 466
CAN IF2 Command Mask (CANIF2CMSK), offset 0x084 .................................................. 466
CAN IF1 Mask 1 (CANIF1MSK1), offset 0x028 ................................................................ 468
CAN IF2 Mask 1 (CANIF2MSK1), offset 0x088 ................................................................ 468
CAN IF1 Mask 2 (CANIF1MSK2), offset 0x02C ................................................................ 469
CAN IF2 Mask 2 (CANIF2MSK2), offset 0x08C ................................................................ 469
CAN IF1 Arbitration 1 (CANIF1ARB1), offset 0x030 ......................................................... 470
CAN IF2 Arbitration 1 (CANIF2ARB1), offset 0x090 ......................................................... 470
CAN IF1 Arbitration 2 (CANIF1ARB2), offset 0x034 ......................................................... 471
CAN IF2 Arbitration 2 (CANIF2ARB2), offset 0x094 ......................................................... 471
CAN IF1 Message Control (CANIF1MCTL), offset 0x038 .................................................. 473
CAN IF2 Message Control (CANIF2MCTL), offset 0x098 .................................................. 473
CAN IF1 Data A1 (CANIF1DA1), offset 0x03C ................................................................. 475
CAN IF1 Data A2 (CANIF1DA2), offset 0x040 ................................................................. 475
CAN IF1 Data B1 (CANIF1DB1), offset 0x044 ................................................................. 475
CAN IF1 Data B2 (CANIF1DB2), offset 0x048 ................................................................. 475
CAN IF2 Data A1 (CANIF2DA1), offset 0x09C ................................................................. 475
CAN IF2 Data A2 (CANIF2DA2), offset 0x0A0 ................................................................. 475
CAN IF2 Data B1 (CANIF2DB1), offset 0x0A4 ................................................................. 475
CAN IF2 Data B2 (CANIF2DB2), offset 0x0A8 ................................................................. 475
CAN Transmission Request 1 (CANTXRQ1), offset 0x100 ................................................ 476
CAN Transmission Request 2 (CANTXRQ2), offset 0x104 ................................................ 476
CAN New Data 1 (CANNWDA1), offset 0x120 ................................................................. 477
CAN New Data 2 (CANNWDA2), offset 0x124 ................................................................. 477
CAN Message 1 Interrupt Pending (CANMSG1INT), offset 0x140 ..................................... 478
CAN Message 2 Interrupt Pending (CANMSG2INT), offset 0x144 ..................................... 478
CAN Message 1 Valid (CANMSG1VAL), offset 0x160 ....................................................... 479
CAN Message 2 Valid (CANMSG2VAL), offset 0x164 ....................................................... 479
Analog Comparators ................................................................................................................... 480
Register 1:
Register 2:
Register 3:
Analog Comparator Masked Interrupt Status (ACMIS), offset 0x000 .................................. 485
Analog Comparator Raw Interrupt Status (ACRIS), offset 0x004 ....................................... 486
Analog Comparator Interrupt Enable (ACINTEN), offset 0x008 ......................................... 487
June 18, 2012
19
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Table of Contents
Register 4:
Register 5:
Register 6:
Register 7:
Register 8:
Analog Comparator Reference Voltage Control (ACREFCTL), offset 0x010 .......................
Analog Comparator Status 0 (ACSTAT0), offset 0x020 .....................................................
Analog Comparator Status 1 (ACSTAT1), offset 0x040 .....................................................
Analog Comparator Control 0 (ACCTL0), offset 0x024 .....................................................
Analog Comparator Control 1 (ACCTL1), offset 0x044 .....................................................
20
488
489
489
490
490
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Revision History
The revision history table notes changes made between the indicated revisions of the LM3S2730
data sheet.
Table 1. Revision History
Date
June 2012
November 2011
Revision
Description
12746.2515 ■
11108
Removed extended temperature package.
■
Minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
Added module-specific pin tables to each chapter in the new Signal Description sections.
■
In Timer chapter, clarified that in 16-Bit Input Edge Time Mode, the timer is capable of capturing
three types of events: rising edge, falling edge, or both.
■
In UART chapter, clarified interrupt behavior.
■
In SSI chapter, corrected SSIClk in the figure "Synchronous Serial Frame Format (Single Transfer)".
■
In Signal Tables chapter:
–
■
January 2011
9102
Corrected pin numbers in table "Connections for Unused Signals" (other pin tables were correct).
In Electrical Characteristics chapter:
–
Added parameter "Input voltage for a GPIO configured as an analog input" to the "Maximum
Ratings" table.
–
Corrected Nom values for parameters "TCK clock Low time" and "TCK clock High time" in "JTAG
Characteristics" table.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
In Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT) register, changed bit name from SYSRESETREQ
to SYSRESREQ.
■
Added DEBUG (Debug Priority) bit field to System Handler Priority 3 (SYSPRI3) register.
■
Added "Reset Sources" table to System Control chapter.
■
Corrected GPIOAMSEL bit field in GPIO Analog Mode Select (GPIOAMSEL) register to be four-bits
wide, bits[7:4].
■
Removed mention of false-start bit detection in the UART chapter. This feature is not supported.
■
Added note that specific module clocks must be enabled before that module's registers can be
programmed. There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the module clock is enabled before
any of that module's registers are accessed.
■
Added GNDPHY and VCCPHY to Connections for Unused Signals tables.
■
Added specification for maximum input voltage on a non-power pin when the microcontroller is
unpowered (VNON parameter in Maximum Ratings table).
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
June 18, 2012
21
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Revision History
Table 1. Revision History (continued)
Date
Revision
September 2010
7787
June 2010
April 2010
7393
7007
Description
■
Reorganized ARM Cortex-M3 Processor Core, Memory Map and Interrupts chapters, creating two
new chapters, The Cortex-M3 Processor and Cortex-M3 Peripherals. Much additional content was
added, including all the Cortex-M3 registers.
■
Changed register names to be consistent with StellarisWare names: the Cortex-M3 Interrupt
Control and Status (ICSR) register to the Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL) register, and
the Cortex-M3 Interrupt Set Enable (SETNA) register to the Interrupt 0-31 Set Enable (EN0)
register.
■
Added clarification of instruction execution during Flash operations.
■
Modified Figure 7-1 on page 253 to clarify operation of the GPIO inputs when used as an alternate
function.
■
Corrected GPIOAMSEL bit field in GPIO Analog Mode Select (GPIOAMSEL) register to be eight-bits
wide, bits[7:0].
■
Added caution not to apply a Low value to PB7 when debugging; a Low value on the pin causes
the JTAG controller to be reset, resulting in a loss of JTAG communication.
■
In General-Purpose Timers chapter, clarified operation of the 32-bit RTC mode.
■
In Electrical Characteristics chapter:
– Added ILKG parameter (GPIO input leakage current) to Table 17-4 on page 519.
– Corrected values for tCLKRF parameter (SSIClk rise/fall time) in Table 17-15 on page 526.
■
Added dimensions for Tray and Tape and Reel shipping mediums.
■
Corrected base address for SRAM in architectural overview chapter.
■
Clarified system clock operation, adding content to “Clock Control” on page 167.
■
Clarified CAN bit timing examples.
■
In Signal Tables chapter, added table "Connections for Unused Signals."
■
In "Thermal Characteristics" table, corrected thermal resistance value from 34 to 32.
■
In "Reset Characteristics" table, corrected value for supply voltage (VDD) rise time.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
Added caution note to the I2C Master Timer Period (I2CMTPR) register description and changed
field width to 7 bits.
■
Removed erroneous text about restoring the Flash Protection registers.
■
Added note about RST signal routing.
■
Clarified the function of the TnSTALL bit in the GPTMCTL register.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
®
22
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 1. Revision History (continued)
Date
Revision
January 2010
6712
Description
■
In "System Control" section, clarified Debug Access Port operation after Sleep modes.
■
Clarified wording on Flash memory access errors.
■
Added section on Flash interrupts.
■
Clarified operation of SSI transmit FIFO.
■
Made these changes to the Operating Characteristics chapter:
■
October 2009
6462
–
Added storage temperature ratings to "Temperature Characteristics" table
–
Added "ESD Absolute Maximum Ratings" table
Made these changes to the Electrical Characteristics chapter:
–
In "Flash Memory Characteristics" table, corrected Mass erase time
–
Added sleep and deep-sleep wake-up times ("Sleep Modes AC Characteristics" table)
–
In "Reset Characteristics" table, corrected units for supply voltage (VDD) rise time
■
Deleted reset value for 16-bit mode from GPTMTAILR, GPTMTAMATCHR, and GPTMTAR registers
because the module resets in 32-bit mode.
■
Clarified CAN bit timing and corrected examples.
■
Made these changes to the Electrical Characteristics chapter:
–
Removed VSIH and VSIL parameters from Operating Conditions table.
–
Added table showing actual PLL frequency depending on input crystal.
–
Changed the name of the tHIB_REG_WRITE parameter to tHIB_REG_ACCESS.
–
Changed SSI set up and hold times to be expressed in system clocks, not ns.
July 2009
5920
Corrected ordering numbers.
July 2009
5902
■
Clarified Power-on reset and RST pin operation; added new diagrams.
■
Clarified explanation of nonvolatile register programming in Internal Memory chapter.
■
Added explanation of reset value to FMPRE0/1/2/3, FMPPE0/1/2/3, USER_DBG, and USER_REG0/1
registers.
■
Changed buffer type for WAKE pin to TTL and HIB pin to OD.
■
In ADC characteristics table, changed Max value for GAIN parameter from ±1 to ±3 and added EIR
(Internal voltage reference error) parameter.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
Added JTAG/SWD clarification (see “Communication with JTAG/SWD” on page 155).
■
Added clarification that the PLL operates at 400 MHz, but is divided by two prior to the application
of the output divisor.
■
Added "GPIO Module DC Characteristics" table (see Table 17-4 on page 519).
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
April 2009
5367
June 18, 2012
23
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Revision History
Table 1. Revision History (continued)
Date
Revision
January 2009
4660
November 2008
October 2008
August 2008
4283
4149
3447
Description
■
Corrected bit type for RELOAD bit field in SysTick Reload Value register; changed to R/W.
■
Clarification added as to what happens when the SSI in slave mode is required to transmit but there
is no data in the TX FIFO.
■
Corrected bit timing examples in CAN chapter.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
Revised High-Level Block Diagram.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections were made.
■
Corrected values for DSOSCSRC bit field in Deep Sleep Clock Configuration (DSLPCLKCFG)
register.
■
The FMA value for the FMPRE3 register was incorrect in the Flash Resident Registers table in the
Internal Memory chapter. The correct value is 0x0000.0006.
■
In the CAN chapter, major improvements were made including a rewrite of the conceptual information
and the addition of new figures to clarify how to use the Controller Area Network (CAN) module.
■
Incorrect Comparator Operating Modes tables were removed from the Analog Comparators chapter.
■
Added note on clearing interrupts to Interrupts chapter.
■
Added Power Architecture diagram to System Control chapter.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
July 2008
3108
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
May 2008
2972
■
As noted in the PCN, the option to provide VDD25 power from external sources was removed. Use
the LDO output as the source of VDD25 input.
■
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
■
The ΘJA value was changed from 55.3 to 34 in the "Thermal Characteristics" table in the Operating
Characteristics chapter.
■
Bit 31 of the DC3 register was incorrectly described in prior versions of the data sheet. A reset of
1 indicates that an even CCP pin is present and can be used as a 32-KHz input clock.
■
Values for IDD_HIBERNATE were added to the "Detailed Power Specifications" table in the "Electrical
Characteristics" chapter.
■
The "Hibernation Module DC Electricals" table was added to the "Electrical Characteristics" chapter.
■
The maximum value on Core supply voltage (VDD25) in the "Maximum Ratings" table in the "Electrical
Characteristics" chapter was changed from 4 to 3.
■
The operational frequency of the internal 30-kHz oscillator clock source is 30 kHz ± 50% (prior data
sheets incorrectly noted it as 30 kHz ± 30%).
■
A value of 0x3 in bits 5:4 of the MISC register (OSCSRC) indicates the 30-KHz internal oscillator is
the input source for the oscillator. Prior data sheets incorrectly noted 0x3 as a reserved value.
■
The reset for bits 6:4 of the RCC2 register (OSCSRC2) is 0x1 (IOSC). Prior data sheets incorrectly
noted the reset was 0x0 (MOSC).
■
A note on high-current applications was added to the GPIO chapter:
April 2008
2881
24
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 1. Revision History (continued)
Date
Revision
Description
For special high-current applications, the GPIO output buffers may be used with the following
restrictions. With the GPIO pins configured as 8-mA output drivers, a total of four GPIO outputs may
be used to sink current loads up to 18 mA each. At 18-mA sink current loading, the VOL value is
specified as 1.2 V. The high-current GPIO package pins must be selected such that there are only
a maximum of two per side of the physical package or BGA pin group with the total number of
high-current GPIO outputs not exceeding four for the entire package.
■
A note on Schmitt inputs was added to the GPIO chapter:
Pins configured as digital inputs are Schmitt-triggered.
■
The Buffer type on the WAKE pin changed from OD to - in the Signal Tables.
■
The "Differential Sampling Range" figures in the ADC chapter were clarified.
■
The last revision of the data sheet (revision 2550) introduced two errors that have now been corrected:
■
March 2008
2550
–
The LQFP pin diagrams and pin tables were missing the comparator positive and negative input
pins.
–
The base address was listed incorrectly in the FMPRE0 and FMPPE0 register bit diagrams.
Additional minor data sheet clarifications and corrections.
Started tracking revision history.
June 18, 2012
25
Texas Instruments-Production Data
About This Document
About This Document
This data sheet provides reference information for the LM3S2730 microcontroller, describing the
functional blocks of the system-on-chip (SoC) device designed around the ARM® Cortex™-M3
core.
Audience
This manual is intended for system software developers, hardware designers, and application
developers.
About This Manual
This document is organized into sections that correspond to each major feature.
Related Documents
®
The following related documents are available on the Stellaris web site at www.ti.com/stellaris:
■ Stellaris® Errata
■ ARM® Cortex™-M3 Errata
■ Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual
■ Stellaris® Graphics Library User's Guide
■ Stellaris® Peripheral Driver Library User's Guide
The following related documents are also referenced:
■ ARM® Debug Interface V5 Architecture Specification
■ ARM® Embedded Trace Macrocell Architecture Specification
■ IEEE Standard 1149.1-Test Access Port and Boundary-Scan Architecture
This documentation list was current as of publication date. Please check the web site for additional
documentation, including application notes and white papers.
26
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Documentation Conventions
This document uses the conventions shown in Table 2 on page 27.
Table 2. Documentation Conventions
Notation
Meaning
General Register Notation
REGISTER
APB registers are indicated in uppercase bold. For example, PBORCTL is the Power-On and
Brown-Out Reset Control register. If a register name contains a lowercase n, it represents more
than one register. For example, SRCRn represents any (or all) of the three Software Reset Control
registers: SRCR0, SRCR1 , and SRCR2.
bit
A single bit in a register.
bit field
Two or more consecutive and related bits.
offset 0xnnn
A hexadecimal increment to a register's address, relative to that module's base address as specified
in Table 2-4 on page 61.
Register N
Registers are numbered consecutively throughout the document to aid in referencing them. The
register number has no meaning to software.
reserved
Register bits marked reserved are reserved for future use. In most cases, reserved bits are set to
0; however, user software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide software
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be preserved across a
read-modify-write operation.
yy:xx
The range of register bits inclusive from xx to yy. For example, 31:15 means bits 15 through 31 in
that register.
Register Bit/Field
Types
This value in the register bit diagram indicates whether software running on the controller can
change the value of the bit field.
RC
Software can read this field. The bit or field is cleared by hardware after reading the bit/field.
RO
Software can read this field. Always write the chip reset value.
R/W
Software can read or write this field.
R/WC
Software can read or write this field. Writing to it with any value clears the register.
R/W1C
Software can read or write this field. A write of a 0 to a W1C bit does not affect the bit value in the
register. A write of a 1 clears the value of the bit in the register; the remaining bits remain unchanged.
This register type is primarily used for clearing interrupt status bits where the read operation
provides the interrupt status and the write of the read value clears only the interrupts being reported
at the time the register was read.
R/W1S
Software can read or write a 1 to this field. A write of a 0 to a R/W1S bit does not affect the bit
value in the register.
W1C
Software can write this field. A write of a 0 to a W1C bit does not affect the bit value in the register.
A write of a 1 clears the value of the bit in the register; the remaining bits remain unchanged. A
read of the register returns no meaningful data.
This register is typically used to clear the corresponding bit in an interrupt register.
WO
Only a write by software is valid; a read of the register returns no meaningful data.
Register Bit/Field
Reset Value
This value in the register bit diagram shows the bit/field value after any reset, unless noted.
0
Bit cleared to 0 on chip reset.
1
Bit set to 1 on chip reset.
-
Nondeterministic.
Pin/Signal Notation
[]
Pin alternate function; a pin defaults to the signal without the brackets.
pin
Refers to the physical connection on the package.
signal
Refers to the electrical signal encoding of a pin.
June 18, 2012
27
Texas Instruments-Production Data
About This Document
Table 2. Documentation Conventions (continued)
Notation
Meaning
assert a signal
Change the value of the signal from the logically False state to the logically True state. For active
High signals, the asserted signal value is 1 (High); for active Low signals, the asserted signal value
is 0 (Low). The active polarity (High or Low) is defined by the signal name (see SIGNAL and SIGNAL
below).
deassert a signal
Change the value of the signal from the logically True state to the logically False state.
SIGNAL
Signal names are in uppercase and in the Courier font. An overbar on a signal name indicates that
it is active Low. To assert SIGNAL is to drive it Low; to deassert SIGNAL is to drive it High.
SIGNAL
Signal names are in uppercase and in the Courier font. An active High signal has no overbar. To
assert SIGNAL is to drive it High; to deassert SIGNAL is to drive it Low.
Numbers
X
An uppercase X indicates any of several values is allowed, where X can be any legal pattern. For
example, a binary value of 0X00 can be either 0100 or 0000, a hex value of 0xX is 0x0 or 0x1, and
so on.
0x
Hexadecimal numbers have a prefix of 0x. For example, 0x00FF is the hexadecimal number FF.
All other numbers within register tables are assumed to be binary. Within conceptual information,
binary numbers are indicated with a b suffix, for example, 1011b, and decimal numbers are written
without a prefix or suffix.
28
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
1
Architectural Overview
®
The Stellaris family of microcontrollers—the first ARM® Cortex™-M3 based controllers—brings
high-performance 32-bit computing to cost-sensitive embedded microcontroller applications. These
pioneering parts deliver customers 32-bit performance at a cost equivalent to legacy 8- and 16-bit
devices, all in a package with a small footprint.
The Stellaris family offers efficient performance and extensive integration, favorably positioning the
device into cost-conscious applications requiring significant control-processing and connectivity
capabilities. The Stellaris LM3S2000 series, designed for Controller Area Network (CAN) applications,
extends the Stellaris family with Bosch CAN networking technology, the golden standard in short-haul
industrial networks. The Stellaris LM3S2000 series also marks the first integration of CAN capabilities
with the revolutionary Cortex-M3 core.
The LM3S2730 microcontroller is targeted for industrial applications, including remote monitoring,
electronic point-of-sale machines, test and measurement equipment, network appliances and
switches, factory automation, HVAC and building control, gaming equipment, motion control, medical
instrumentation, and fire and security.
In addition, the LM3S2730 microcontroller offers the advantages of ARM's widely available
development tools, System-on-Chip (SoC) infrastructure IP applications, and a large user community.
Additionally, the microcontroller uses ARM's Thumb®-compatible Thumb-2 instruction set to reduce
memory requirements and, thereby, cost. Finally, the LM3S2730 microcontroller is code-compatible
to all members of the extensive Stellaris family; providing flexibility to fit our customers' precise
needs.
Texas Instruments offers a complete solution to get to market quickly, with evaluation and
development boards, white papers and application notes, an easy-to-use peripheral driver library,
and a strong support, sales, and distributor network. See “Ordering and Contact
Information” on page 552 for ordering information for Stellaris family devices.
1.1
Product Features
The LM3S2730 microcontroller includes the following product features:
■ 32-Bit RISC Performance
– 32-bit ARM® Cortex™-M3 v7M architecture optimized for small-footprint embedded
applications
– System timer (SysTick), providing a simple, 24-bit clear-on-write, decrementing, wrap-on-zero
counter with a flexible control mechanism
– Thumb®-compatible Thumb-2-only instruction set processor core for high code density
– 50-MHz operation
– Hardware-division and single-cycle-multiplication
– Integrated Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) providing deterministic interrupt
handling
– 22 interrupts with eight priority levels
June 18, 2012
29
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
– Memory protection unit (MPU), providing a privileged mode for protected operating system
functionality
– Unaligned data access, enabling data to be efficiently packed into memory
– Atomic bit manipulation (bit-banding), delivering maximum memory utilization and streamlined
peripheral control
■ ARM® Cortex™-M3 Processor Core
– Compact core.
– Thumb-2 instruction set, delivering the high-performance expected of an ARM core in the
memory size usually associated with 8- and 16-bit devices; typically in the range of a few
kilobytes of memory for microcontroller class applications.
– Rapid application execution through Harvard architecture characterized by separate buses
for instruction and data.
– Exceptional interrupt handling, by implementing the register manipulations required for handling
an interrupt in hardware.
– Deterministic, fast interrupt processing: always 12 cycles, or just 6 cycles with tail-chaining
– Memory protection unit (MPU) to provide a privileged mode of operation for complex
applications.
– Migration from the ARM7™ processor family for better performance and power efficiency.
– Full-featured debug solution
•
Serial Wire JTAG Debug Port (SWJ-DP)
•
Flash Patch and Breakpoint (FPB) unit for implementing breakpoints
•
Data Watchpoint and Trigger (DWT) unit for implementing watchpoints, trigger resources,
and system profiling
•
Instrumentation Trace Macrocell (ITM) for support of printf style debugging
•
Trace Port Interface Unit (TPIU) for bridging to a Trace Port Analyzer
– Optimized for single-cycle flash usage
– Three sleep modes with clock gating for low power
– Single-cycle multiply instruction and hardware divide
– Atomic operations
– ARM Thumb2 mixed 16-/32-bit instruction set
– 1.25 DMIPS/MHz
■ JTAG
30
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
– IEEE 1149.1-1990 compatible Test Access Port (TAP) controller
– Four-bit Instruction Register (IR) chain for storing JTAG instructions
– IEEE standard instructions: BYPASS, IDCODE, SAMPLE/PRELOAD, EXTEST and INTEST
– ARM additional instructions: APACC, DPACC and ABORT
– Integrated ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD)
■ Internal Memory
– 128 KB single-cycle flash
•
User-managed flash block protection on a 2-KB block basis
•
User-managed flash data programming
•
User-defined and managed flash-protection block
– 64 KB single-cycle SRAM
■ GPIOs
– 37-60 GPIOs, depending on configuration
– 5-V-tolerant in input configuration
– Fast toggle capable of a change every two clock cycles
– Programmable control for GPIO interrupts
•
Interrupt generation masking
•
Edge-triggered on rising, falling, or both
•
Level-sensitive on High or Low values
– Bit masking in both read and write operations through address lines
– Pins configured as digital inputs are Schmitt-triggered.
– Programmable control for GPIO pad configuration
•
Weak pull-up or pull-down resistors
•
2-mA, 4-mA, and 8-mA pad drive for digital communication; up to four pads can be
configured with an 18-mA pad drive for high-current applications
•
Slew rate control for the 8-mA drive
•
Open drain enables
•
Digital input enables
■ General-Purpose Timers
June 18, 2012
31
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
– Three General-Purpose Timer Modules (GPTM), each of which provides two 16-bit
timers/counters. Each GPTM can be configured to operate independently:
•
As a single 32-bit timer
•
As one 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) to event capture
•
For Pulse Width Modulation (PWM)
– 32-bit Timer modes
•
Programmable one-shot timer
•
Programmable periodic timer
•
Real-Time Clock when using an external 32.768-KHz clock as the input
•
User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts CPU Halt flag during debug
– 16-bit Timer modes
•
General-purpose timer function with an 8-bit prescaler (for one-shot and periodic modes
only)
•
Programmable one-shot timer
•
Programmable periodic timer
•
User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts CPU Halt flag during debug
– 16-bit Input Capture modes
•
Input edge count capture
•
Input edge time capture
– 16-bit PWM mode
•
Simple PWM mode with software-programmable output inversion of the PWM signal
■ ARM FiRM-compliant Watchdog Timer
– 32-bit down counter with a programmable load register
– Separate watchdog clock with an enable
– Programmable interrupt generation logic with interrupt masking
– Lock register protection from runaway software
– Reset generation logic with an enable/disable
– User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts the CPU Halt flag during debug
■ UART
– Fully programmable 16C550-type UART with IrDA support
32
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
– Separate 16x8 transmit (TX) and receive (RX) FIFOs to reduce CPU interrupt service loading
– Programmable baud-rate generator allowing speeds up to 3.125 Mbps
– Programmable FIFO length, including 1-byte deep operation providing conventional
double-buffered interface
– FIFO trigger levels of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, and 7/8
– Standard asynchronous communication bits for start, stop, and parity
– Line-break generation and detection
– Fully programmable serial interface characteristics
•
5, 6, 7, or 8 data bits
•
Even, odd, stick, or no-parity bit generation/detection
•
1 or 2 stop bit generation
– IrDA serial-IR (SIR) encoder/decoder providing
•
Programmable use of IrDA Serial Infrared (SIR) or UART input/output
•
Support of IrDA SIR encoder/decoder functions for data rates up to 115.2 Kbps half-duplex
•
Support of normal 3/16 and low-power (1.41-2.23 μs) bit durations
•
Programmable internal clock generator enabling division of reference clock by 1 to 256
for low-power mode bit duration
■ Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
– Master or slave operation
– Programmable clock bit rate and prescale
– Separate transmit and receive FIFOs, 16 bits wide, 8 locations deep
– Programmable interface operation for Freescale SPI, MICROWIRE, or Texas Instruments
synchronous serial interfaces
– Programmable data frame size from 4 to 16 bits
– Internal loopback test mode for diagnostic/debug testing
■ Controller Area Network (CAN)
– CAN protocol version 2.0 part A/B
– Bit rates up to 1 Mbps
– 32 message objects with individual identifier masks
– Maskable interrupt
June 18, 2012
33
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
– Disable Automatic Retransmission mode for Time-Triggered CAN (TTCAN) applications
– Programmable Loopback mode for self-test operation
– Programmable FIFO mode enables storage of multiple message objects
– Gluelessly attaches to an external CAN interface through the CANnTX and CANnRX signals
■ Analog Comparators
– Two independent integrated analog comparators
– Configurable for output to drive an output pin or generate an interrupt
– Compare external pin input to external pin input or to internal programmable voltage reference
– Compare a test voltage against any one of these voltages
•
An individual external reference voltage
•
A shared single external reference voltage
•
A shared internal reference voltage
■ Power
– On-chip Low Drop-Out (LDO) voltage regulator, with programmable output user-adjustable
from 2.25 V to 2.75 V
– Low-power options on controller: Sleep and Deep-sleep modes
– Low-power options for peripherals: software controls shutdown of individual peripherals
– 3.3-V supply brown-out detection and reporting via interrupt or reset
■ Flexible Reset Sources
– Power-on reset (POR)
– Reset pin assertion
– Brown-out (BOR) detector alerts to system power drops
– Software reset
– Watchdog timer reset
– Internal low drop-out (LDO) regulator output goes unregulated
■ Industrial temperature 100-pin RoHS-compliant LQFP package
■ Industrial-range 108-ball RoHS-compliant BGA package
1.2
Target Applications
■ Remote monitoring
34
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ Electronic point-of-sale (POS) machines
■ Test and measurement equipment
■ Network appliances and switches
■ Factory automation
■ HVAC and building control
■ Gaming equipment
■ Motion control
■ Medical instrumentation
■ Fire and security
■ Power and energy
■ Transportation
1.3
High-Level Block Diagram
Figure 1-1 on page 36 depicts the features on the Stellaris LM3S2730 microcontroller.
June 18, 2012
35
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
Figure 1-1. Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller High-Level Block Diagram
JTAG/SWD
ARM®
Cortex™-M3
(50MHz)
System
Control and
Clocks
(w/ Precis. Osc.)
DCode bus
NVIC
Flash
(128KB)
MPU
ICode bus
System Bus
LM3S2730
Bus Matrix
SRAM
(64KB)
SYSTEM PERIPHERALS
SSI
(1)
Watchdog
Timer
(1)
Advanced Peripheral Bus (APB)
GeneralPurpose
Timer (3)
GPIOs
(37-60)
SERIAL PERIPHERALS
UART
(1)
CAN
Controller
(1)
ANALOG PERIPHERALS
Analog
Comparator
(2)
36
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
1.4
Functional Overview
The following sections provide an overview of the features of the LM3S2730 microcontroller. The
page number in parenthesis indicates where that feature is discussed in detail. Ordering and support
information can be found in “Ordering and Contact Information” on page 552.
1.4.1
ARM Cortex™-M3
1.4.1.1
Processor Core (see page 42)
All members of the Stellaris product family, including the LM3S2730 microcontroller, are designed
around an ARM Cortex™-M3 processor core. The ARM Cortex-M3 processor provides the core for
a high-performance, low-cost platform that meets the needs of minimal memory implementation,
reduced pin count, and low-power consumption, while delivering outstanding computational
performance and exceptional system response to interrupts.
1.4.1.2
Memory Map (see page 61)
A memory map lists the location of instructions and data in memory. The memory map for the
LM3S2730 controller can be found in Table 2-4 on page 61. Register addresses are given as a
hexadecimal increment, relative to the module's base address as shown in the memory map.
1.4.1.3
System Timer (SysTick) (see page 84)
Cortex-M3 includes an integrated system timer, SysTick. SysTick provides a simple, 24-bit
clear-on-write, decrementing, wrap-on-zero counter with a flexible control mechanism. The counter
can be used in several different ways, for example:
■ An RTOS tick timer which fires at a programmable rate (for example, 100 Hz) and invokes a
SysTick routine.
■ A high-speed alarm timer using the system clock.
■ A variable rate alarm or signal timer—the duration is range-dependent on the reference clock
used and the dynamic range of the counter.
■ A simple counter. Software can use this to measure time to completion and time used.
■ An internal clock source control based on missing/meeting durations. The COUNTFLAG bit-field
in the control and status register can be used to determine if an action completed within a set
duration, as part of a dynamic clock management control loop.
1.4.1.4
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) (see page 85)
The LM3S2730 controller includes the ARM Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) on the
ARM® Cortex™-M3 core. The NVIC and Cortex-M3 prioritize and handle all exceptions. All exceptions
are handled in Handler Mode. The processor state is automatically stored to the stack on an
exception, and automatically restored from the stack at the end of the Interrupt Service Routine
(ISR). The vector is fetched in parallel to the state saving, which enables efficient interrupt entry.
The processor supports tail-chaining, which enables back-to-back interrupts to be performed without
the overhead of state saving and restoration. Software can set eight priority levels on 7 exceptions
(system handlers) and 22 interrupts.
June 18, 2012
37
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
1.4.1.5
System Control Block (SCB) (see page 87)
The SCB provides system implementation information and system control, including configuration,
control, and reporting of system exceptions.
1.4.1.6
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) (see page 87)
The MPU supports the standard ARMv7 Protected Memory System Architecture (PMSA) model.
The MPU provides full support for protection regions, overlapping protection regions, access
permissions, and exporting memory attributes to the system.
1.4.2
Motor Control Peripherals
To enhance motor control, the LM3S2730 controller features Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) outputs.
1.4.2.1
PWM
Pulse width modulation (PWM) is a powerful technique for digitally encoding analog signal levels.
High-resolution counters are used to generate a square wave, and the duty cycle of the square
wave is modulated to encode an analog signal. Typical applications include switching power supplies
and motor control.
On the LM3S2730, PWM motion control functionality can be achieved through:
■ The motion control features of the general-purpose timers using the CCP pins
CCP Pins (see page 299)
The General-Purpose Timer Module's CCP (Capture Compare PWM) pins are software programmable
to support a simple PWM mode with a software-programmable output inversion of the PWM signal.
1.4.3
Analog Peripherals
For support of analog signals, the LM3S2730 microcontroller offers two analog comparators.
1.4.3.1
Analog Comparators (see page 480)
An analog comparator is a peripheral that compares two analog voltages, and provides a logical
output that signals the comparison result.
The LM3S2730 microcontroller provides two independent integrated analog comparators that can
be configured to drive an output or generate an interrupt .
A comparator can compare a test voltage against any one of these voltages:
■ An individual external reference voltage
■ A shared single external reference voltage
■ A shared internal reference voltage
The comparator can provide its output to a device pin, acting as a replacement for an analog
comparator on the board, or it can be used to signal the application via interrupts to cause it to start
capturing a sample sequence.
1.4.4
Serial Communications Peripherals
The LM3S2730 controller supports both asynchronous and synchronous serial communications
with:
38
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ One fully programmable 16C550-type UART
■ One SSI module
■ One CAN unit
1.4.4.1
UART (see page 353)
A Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART) is an integrated circuit used for RS-232C
serial communications, containing a transmitter (parallel-to-serial converter) and a receiver
(serial-to-parallel converter), each clocked separately.
The LM3S2730 controller includes one fully programmable 16C550-type UARTthat supports data
transfer speeds up to 3.125 Mbps. (Although similar in functionality to a 16C550 UART, it is not
register-compatible.) In addition, each UART is capable of supporting IrDA.
Separate 16x8 transmit (TX) and receive (RX) FIFOs reduce CPU interrupt service loading. The
UART can generate individually masked interrupts from the RX, TX, modem status, and error
conditions. The module provides a single combined interrupt when any of the interrupts are asserted
and are unmasked.
1.4.4.2
SSI (see page 395)
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) is a four-wire bi-directional full and low-speed communications
interface.
The LM3S2730 controller includes one SSI module that provides the functionality for synchronous
serial communications with peripheral devices, and can be configured to use the Freescale SPI,
MICROWIRE, or TI synchronous serial interface frame formats. The size of the data frame is also
configurable, and can be set between 4 and 16 bits, inclusive.
The SSI module performs serial-to-parallel conversion on data received from a peripheral device,
and parallel-to-serial conversion on data transmitted to a peripheral device. The TX and RX paths
are buffered with internal FIFOs, allowing up to eight 16-bit values to be stored independently.
The SSI module can be configured as either a master or slave device. As a slave device, the SSI
module can also be configured to disable its output, which allows a master device to be coupled
with multiple slave devices.
The SSI module also includes a programmable bit rate clock divider and prescaler to generate the
output serial clock derived from the SSI module's input clock. Bit rates are generated based on the
input clock and the maximum bit rate is determined by the connected peripheral.
1.4.4.3
Controller Area Network (see page 433)
Controller Area Network (CAN) is a multicast shared serial-bus standard for connecting electronic
control units (ECUs). CAN was specifically designed to be robust in electromagnetically noisy
environments and can utilize a differential balanced line like RS-485 or a more robust twisted-pair
wire. Originally created for automotive purposes, now it is used in many embedded control
applications (for example, industrial or medical). Bit rates up to 1Mb/s are possible at network lengths
below 40 meters. Decreased bit rates allow longer network distances (for example, 125 Kb/s at
500m).
A transmitter sends a message to all CAN nodes (broadcasting). Each node decides on the basis
of the identifier received whether it should process the message. The identifier also determines the
priority that the message enjoys in competition for bus access. Each CAN message can transmit
from 0 to 8 bytes of user information. The LM3S2730 includes one CAN unit.
June 18, 2012
39
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Architectural Overview
1.4.5
System Peripherals
1.4.5.1
Programmable GPIOs (see page 245)
General-purpose input/output (GPIO) pins offer flexibility for a variety of connections.
The Stellaris GPIO module is comprised of eight physical GPIO blocks, each corresponding to an
individual GPIO port. The GPIO module is FiRM-compliant (compliant to the ARM Foundation IP
for Real-Time Microcontrollers specification) and supports 37-60 programmable input/output pins.
The number of GPIOs available depends on the peripherals being used (see “Signal
Tables” on page 494 for the signals available to each GPIO pin).
The GPIO module features programmable interrupt generation as either edge-triggered or
level-sensitive on all pins, programmable control for GPIO pad configuration, and bit masking in
both read and write operations through address lines. Pins configured as digital inputs are
Schmitt-triggered.
1.4.5.2
Three Programmable Timers (see page 293)
Programmable timers can be used to count or time external events that drive the Timer input pins.
The Stellaris General-Purpose Timer Module (GPTM) contains three GPTM blocks. Each GPTM
block provides two 16-bit timers/counters that can be configured to operate independently as timers
or event counters, or configured to operate as one 32-bit timer or one 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC).
When configured in 32-bit mode, a timer can run as a Real-Time Clock (RTC), one-shot timer or
periodic timer. When in 16-bit mode, a timer can run as a one-shot timer or periodic timer, and can
extend its precision by using an 8-bit prescaler. A 16-bit timer can also be configured for event
capture or Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) generation.
1.4.5.3
Watchdog Timer (see page 329)
A watchdog timer can generate an interrupt or a reset when a time-out value is reached. The
watchdog timer is used to regain control when a system has failed due to a software error or to the
failure of an external device to respond in the expected way.
The Stellaris Watchdog Timer module consists of a 32-bit down counter, a programmable load
register, interrupt generation logic, and a locking register.
The Watchdog Timer can be configured to generate an interrupt to the controller on its first time-out,
and to generate a reset signal on its second time-out. Once the Watchdog Timer has been configured,
the lock register can be written to prevent the timer configuration from being inadvertently altered.
1.4.6
Memory Peripherals
The LM3S2730 controller offers both single-cycle SRAM and single-cycle Flash memory.
1.4.6.1
SRAM (see page 219)
The LM3S2730 static random access memory (SRAM) controller supports 64 KB SRAM. The internal
SRAM of the Stellaris devices starts at base address 0x2000.0000 of the device memory map. To
reduce the number of time-consuming read-modify-write (RMW) operations, ARM has introduced
bit-banding technology in the new Cortex-M3 processor. With a bit-band-enabled processor, certain
regions in the memory map (SRAM and peripheral space) can use address aliases to access
individual bits in a single, atomic operation.
40
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
1.4.6.2
Flash (see page 220)
The LM3S2730 Flash controller supports 128 KB of flash memory. The flash is organized as a set
of 1-KB blocks that can be individually erased. Erasing a block causes the entire contents of the
block to be reset to all 1s. These blocks are paired into a set of 2-KB blocks that can be individually
protected. The blocks can be marked as read-only or execute-only, providing different levels of code
protection. Read-only blocks cannot be erased or programmed, protecting the contents of those
blocks from being modified. Execute-only blocks cannot be erased or programmed, and can only
be read by the controller instruction fetch mechanism, protecting the contents of those blocks from
being read by either the controller or by a debugger.
1.4.7
Additional Features
1.4.7.1
JTAG TAP Controller (see page 148)
The Joint Test Action Group (JTAG) port is an IEEE standard that defines a Test Access Port and
Boundary Scan Architecture for digital integrated circuits and provides a standardized serial interface
for controlling the associated test logic. The TAP, Instruction Register (IR), and Data Registers (DR)
can be used to test the interconnections of assembled printed circuit boards and obtain manufacturing
information on the components. The JTAG Port also provides a means of accessing and controlling
design-for-test features such as I/O pin observation and control, scan testing, and debugging.
The JTAG port is composed of the standard five pins: TRST, TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO. Data is
transmitted serially into the controller on TDI and out of the controller on TDO. The interpretation of
this data is dependent on the current state of the TAP controller. For detailed information on the
operation of the JTAG port and TAP controller, please refer to the IEEE Standard 1149.1-Test
Access Port and Boundary-Scan Architecture.
The Stellaris JTAG controller works with the ARM JTAG controller built into the Cortex-M3 core.
This is implemented by multiplexing the TDO outputs from both JTAG controllers. ARM JTAG
instructions select the ARM TDO output while Stellaris JTAG instructions select the Stellaris TDO
outputs. The multiplexer is controlled by the Stellaris JTAG controller, which has comprehensive
programming for the ARM, Stellaris, and unimplemented JTAG instructions.
1.4.7.2
System Control and Clocks (see page 161)
System control determines the overall operation of the device. It provides information about the
device, controls the clocking of the device and individual peripherals, and handles reset detection
and reporting.
1.4.8
Hardware Details
Details on the pins and package can be found in the following sections:
■ “Pin Diagram” on page 492
■ “Signal Tables” on page 494
■ “Operating Characteristics” on page 517
■ “Electrical Characteristics” on page 518
■ “Package Information” on page 554
June 18, 2012
41
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
2
The Cortex-M3 Processor
The ARM® Cortex™-M3 processor provides a high-performance, low-cost platform that meets the
system requirements of minimal memory implementation, reduced pin count, and low power
consumption, while delivering outstanding computational performance and exceptional system
response to interrupts. Features include:
■ Compact core.
■ Thumb-2 instruction set, delivering the high-performance expected of an ARM core in the memory
size usually associated with 8- and 16-bit devices; typically in the range of a few kilobytes of
memory for microcontroller class applications.
■ Rapid application execution through Harvard architecture characterized by separate buses for
instruction and data.
■ Exceptional interrupt handling, by implementing the register manipulations required for handling
an interrupt in hardware.
■ Deterministic, fast interrupt processing: always 12 cycles, or just 6 cycles with tail-chaining
■ Memory protection unit (MPU) to provide a privileged mode of operation for complex applications.
■ Migration from the ARM7™ processor family for better performance and power efficiency.
■ Full-featured debug solution
– Serial Wire JTAG Debug Port (SWJ-DP)
– Flash Patch and Breakpoint (FPB) unit for implementing breakpoints
– Data Watchpoint and Trigger (DWT) unit for implementing watchpoints, trigger resources,
and system profiling
– Instrumentation Trace Macrocell (ITM) for support of printf style debugging
– Trace Port Interface Unit (TPIU) for bridging to a Trace Port Analyzer
■ Optimized for single-cycle flash usage
■ Three sleep modes with clock gating for low power
■ Single-cycle multiply instruction and hardware divide
■ Atomic operations
■ ARM Thumb2 mixed 16-/32-bit instruction set
■ 1.25 DMIPS/MHz
®
The Stellaris family of microcontrollers builds on this core to bring high-performance 32-bit computing
to cost-sensitive embedded microcontroller applications, such as factory automation and control,
industrial control power devices, building and home automation, and stepper motor control.
42
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
This chapter provides information on the Stellaris implementation of the Cortex-M3 processor,
including the programming model, the memory model, the exception model, fault handling, and
power management.
For technical details on the instruction set, see the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's
Manual.
2.1
Block Diagram
The Cortex-M3 processor is built on a high-performance processor core, with a 3-stage pipeline
Harvard architecture, making it ideal for demanding embedded applications. The processor delivers
exceptional power efficiency through an efficient instruction set and extensively optimized design,
providing high-end processing hardware including a range of single-cycle and SIMD multiplication
and multiply-with-accumulate capabilities, saturating arithmetic and dedicated hardware division.
To facilitate the design of cost-sensitive devices, the Cortex-M3 processor implements tightly coupled
system components that reduce processor area while significantly improving interrupt handling and
system debug capabilities. The Cortex-M3 processor implements a version of the Thumb® instruction
set based on Thumb-2 technology, ensuring high code density and reduced program memory
requirements. The Cortex-M3 instruction set provides the exceptional performance expected of a
modern 32-bit architecture, with the high code density of 8-bit and 16-bit microcontrollers.
The Cortex-M3 processor closely integrates a nested interrupt controller (NVIC), to deliver
industry-leading interrupt performance. The Stellaris NVIC includes a non-maskable interrupt (NMI)
and provides eight interrupt priority levels. The tight integration of the processor core and NVIC
provides fast execution of interrupt service routines (ISRs), dramatically reducing interrupt latency.
The hardware stacking of registers and the ability to suspend load-multiple and store-multiple
operations further reduce interrupt latency. Interrupt handlers do not require any assembler stubs
which removes code overhead from the ISRs. Tail-chaining optimization also significantly reduces
the overhead when switching from one ISR to another. To optimize low-power designs, the NVIC
integrates with the sleep modes, including Deep-sleep mode, which enables the entire device to be
rapidly powered down.
June 18, 2012
43
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Figure 2-1. CPU Block Diagram
Nested
Vectored
Interrupt
Controller
Interrupts
Sleep
ARM
Cortex-M3
CM3 Core
Debug
Instructions
Data
Trace
Port
Interface
Unit
Memory
Protection
Unit
Flash
Patch and
Breakpoint
Instrumentation
Data
Watchpoint Trace Macrocell
and Trace
ROM
Table
Private Peripheral
Bus
(internal)
Adv. Peripheral
Bus
Bus
Matrix
Serial Wire JTAG
Debug Port
Debug
Access Port
2.2
Overview
2.2.1
System-Level Interface
Serial
Wire
Output
Trace
Port
(SWO)
I-code bus
D-code bus
System bus
The Cortex-M3 processor provides multiple interfaces using AMBA® technology to provide
high-speed, low-latency memory accesses. The core supports unaligned data accesses and
implements atomic bit manipulation that enables faster peripheral controls, system spinlocks, and
thread-safe Boolean data handling.
The Cortex-M3 processor has a memory protection unit (MPU) that provides fine-grain memory
control, enabling applications to implement security privilege levels and separate code, data and
stack on a task-by-task basis.
2.2.2
Integrated Configurable Debug
The Cortex-M3 processor implements a complete hardware debug solution, providing high system
visibility of the processor and memory through either a traditional JTAG port or a 2-pin Serial Wire
Debug (SWD) port that is ideal for microcontrollers and other small package devices. The Stellaris
implementation replaces the ARM SW-DP and JTAG-DP with the ARM CoreSight™-compliant
Serial Wire JTAG Debug Port (SWJ-DP) interface. The SWJ-DP interface combines the SWD and
JTAG debug ports into one module. See the ARM® Debug Interface V5 Architecture Specification
for details on SWJ-DP.
For system trace, the processor integrates an Instrumentation Trace Macrocell (ITM) alongside data
watchpoints and a profiling unit. To enable simple and cost-effective profiling of the system trace
events, a Serial Wire Viewer (SWV) can export a stream of software-generated messages, data
trace, and profiling information through a single pin.
44
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
The Flash Patch and Breakpoint Unit (FPB) provides up to eight hardware breakpoint comparators
that debuggers can use. The comparators in the FPB also provide remap functions of up to eight
words in the program code in the CODE memory region. This enables applications stored in a
read-only area of Flash memory to be patched in another area of on-chip SRAM or Flash memory.
If a patch is required, the application programs the FPB to remap a number of addresses. When
those addresses are accessed, the accesses are redirected to a remap table specified in the FPB
configuration.
For more information on the Cortex-M3 debug capabilities, see theARM® Debug Interface V5
Architecture Specification.
2.2.3
Trace Port Interface Unit (TPIU)
The TPIU acts as a bridge between the Cortex-M3 trace data from the ITM, and an off-chip Trace
Port Analyzer, as shown in Figure 2-2 on page 45.
Figure 2-2. TPIU Block Diagram
2.2.4
Debug
ATB
Slave
Port
ATB
Interface
APB
Slave
Port
APB
Interface
Asynchronous FIFO
Trace Out
(serializer)
Serial Wire
Trace Port
(SWO)
Cortex-M3 System Component Details
The Cortex-M3 includes the following system components:
■ SysTick
A 24-bit count-down timer that can be used as a Real-Time Operating System (RTOS) tick timer
or as a simple counter (see “System Timer (SysTick)” on page 84).
■ Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)
An embedded interrupt controller that supports low latency interrupt processing (see “Nested
Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)” on page 85).
■ System Control Block (SCB)
June 18, 2012
45
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
The programming model interface to the processor. The SCB provides system implementation
information and system control, including configuration, control, and reporting of system exceptions
(see “System Control Block (SCB)” on page 87).
■ Memory Protection Unit (MPU)
Improves system reliability by defining the memory attributes for different memory regions. The
MPU provides up to eight different regions and an optional predefined background region (see
“Memory Protection Unit (MPU)” on page 87).
2.3
Programming Model
This section describes the Cortex-M3 programming model. In addition to the individual core register
descriptions, information about the processor modes and privilege levels for software execution and
stacks is included.
2.3.1
Processor Mode and Privilege Levels for Software Execution
The Cortex-M3 has two modes of operation:
■ Thread mode
Used to execute application software. The processor enters Thread mode when it comes out of
reset.
■ Handler mode
Used to handle exceptions. When the processor has finished exception processing, it returns to
Thread mode.
In addition, the Cortex-M3 has two privilege levels:
■ Unprivileged
In this mode, software has the following restrictions:
– Limited access to the MSR and MRS instructions and no use of the CPS instruction
– No access to the system timer, NVIC, or system control block
– Possibly restricted access to memory or peripherals
■ Privileged
In this mode, software can use all the instructions and has access to all resources.
In Thread mode, the CONTROL register (see page 60) controls whether software execution is
privileged or unprivileged. In Handler mode, software execution is always privileged.
Only privileged software can write to the CONTROL register to change the privilege level for software
execution in Thread mode. Unprivileged software can use the SVC instruction to make a supervisor
call to transfer control to privileged software.
2.3.2
Stacks
The processor uses a full descending stack, meaning that the stack pointer indicates the last stacked
item on the memory. When the processor pushes a new item onto the stack, it decrements the stack
pointer and then writes the item to the new memory location. The processor implements two stacks:
46
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
the main stack and the process stack, with a pointer for each held in independent registers (see the
SP register on page 50).
In Thread mode, the CONTROL register (see page 60) controls whether the processor uses the
main stack or the process stack. In Handler mode, the processor always uses the main stack. The
options for processor operations are shown in Table 2-1 on page 47.
Table 2-1. Summary of Processor Mode, Privilege Level, and Stack Use
Processor Mode
Use
Privilege Level
Thread
Applications
Privileged or unprivileged
Stack Used
Handler
Exception handlers
Always privileged
a
Main stack or process stack
a
Main stack
a. See CONTROL (page 60).
2.3.3
Register Map
Figure 2-3 on page 47 shows the Cortex-M3 register set. Table 2-2 on page 48 lists the Core
registers. The core registers are not memory mapped and are accessed by register name, so the
base address is n/a (not applicable) and there is no offset.
Figure 2-3. Cortex-M3 Register Set
R0
R1
R2
Low registers
R3
R4
R5
R6
General-purpose registers
R7
R8
R9
High registers
R10
R11
R12
Stack Pointer
SP (R13)
Link Register
LR (R14)
Program Counter
PC (R15)
PSR
PSP‡
MSP‡
‡
Banked version of SP
Program status register
PRIMASK
FAULTMASK
Exception mask registers
Special registers
BASEPRI
CONTROL
CONTROL register
June 18, 2012
47
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Table 2-2. Processor Register Map
Offset
Type
Reset
-
R0
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 0
49
-
R1
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 1
49
-
R2
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 2
49
-
R3
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 3
49
-
R4
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 4
49
-
R5
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 5
49
-
R6
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 6
49
-
R7
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 7
49
-
R8
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 8
49
-
R9
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 9
49
-
R10
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 10
49
-
R11
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 11
49
-
R12
R/W
-
Cortex General-Purpose Register 12
49
-
SP
R/W
-
Stack Pointer
50
-
LR
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Link Register
51
-
PC
R/W
-
Program Counter
52
-
PSR
R/W
0x0100.0000
Program Status Register
53
-
PRIMASK
R/W
0x0000.0000
Priority Mask Register
57
-
FAULTMASK
R/W
0x0000.0000
Fault Mask Register
58
-
BASEPRI
R/W
0x0000.0000
Base Priority Mask Register
59
-
CONTROL
R/W
0x0000.0000
Control Register
60
2.3.4
Description
See
page
Name
Register Descriptions
This section lists and describes the Cortex-M3 registers, in the order shown in Figure 2-3 on page 47.
The core registers are not memory mapped and are accessed by register name rather than offset.
Note:
The register type shown in the register descriptions refers to type during program execution
in Thread mode and Handler mode. Debug access can differ.
48
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: Cortex General-Purpose Register 0 (R0)
Register 2: Cortex General-Purpose Register 1 (R1)
Register 3: Cortex General-Purpose Register 2 (R2)
Register 4: Cortex General-Purpose Register 3 (R3)
Register 5: Cortex General-Purpose Register 4 (R4)
Register 6: Cortex General-Purpose Register 5 (R5)
Register 7: Cortex General-Purpose Register 6 (R6)
Register 8: Cortex General-Purpose Register 7 (R7)
Register 9: Cortex General-Purpose Register 8 (R8)
Register 10: Cortex General-Purpose Register 9 (R9)
Register 11: Cortex General-Purpose Register 10 (R10)
Register 12: Cortex General-Purpose Register 11 (R11)
Register 13: Cortex General-Purpose Register 12 (R12)
The Rn registers are 32-bit general-purpose registers for data operations and can be accessed
from either privileged or unprivileged mode.
Cortex General-Purpose Register 0 (R0)
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
DATA
Type
Reset
DATA
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
DATA
R/W
-
Description
Register data.
June 18, 2012
49
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Register 14: Stack Pointer (SP)
The Stack Pointer (SP) is register R13. In Thread mode, the function of this register changes
depending on the ASP bit in the Control Register (CONTROL) register. When the ASP bit is clear,
this register is the Main Stack Pointer (MSP). When the ASP bit is set, this register is the Process
Stack Pointer (PSP). On reset, the ASP bit is clear, and the processor loads the MSP with the value
from address 0x0000.0000. The MSP can only be accessed in privileged mode; the PSP can be
accessed in either privileged or unprivileged mode.
Stack Pointer (SP)
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
SP
Type
Reset
SP
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
SP
R/W
-
Description
This field is the address of the stack pointer.
50
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 15: Link Register (LR)
The Link Register (LR) is register R14, and it stores the return information for subroutines, function
calls, and exceptions. LR can be accessed from either privileged or unprivileged mode.
EXC_RETURN is loaded into LR on exception entry. See Table 2-10 on page 76 for the values and
description.
Link Register (LR)
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
LINK
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
LINK
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
LINK
R/W
R/W
1
Reset
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFF.FFFF This field is the return address.
June 18, 2012
51
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Register 16: Program Counter (PC)
The Program Counter (PC) is register R15, and it contains the current program address. On reset,
the processor loads the PC with the value of the reset vector, which is at address 0x0000.0004. Bit
0 of the reset vector is loaded into the THUMB bit of the EPSR at reset and must be 1. The PC register
can be accessed in either privileged or unprivileged mode.
Program Counter (PC)
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
PC
Type
Reset
PC
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
PC
R/W
-
Description
This field is the current program address.
52
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 17: Program Status Register (PSR)
Note:
This register is also referred to as xPSR.
The Program Status Register (PSR) has three functions, and the register bits are assigned to the
different functions:
■ Application Program Status Register (APSR), bits 31:27,
■ Execution Program Status Register (EPSR), bits 26:24, 15:10
■ Interrupt Program Status Register (IPSR), bits 5:0
The PSR, IPSR, and EPSR registers can only be accessed in privileged mode; the APSR register
can be accessed in either privileged or unprivileged mode.
APSR contains the current state of the condition flags from previous instruction executions.
EPSR contains the Thumb state bit and the execution state bits for the If-Then (IT) instruction or
the Interruptible-Continuable Instruction (ICI) field for an interrupted load multiple or store multiple
instruction. Attempts to read the EPSR directly through application software using the MSR instruction
always return zero. Attempts to write the EPSR using the MSR instruction in application software
are always ignored. Fault handlers can examine the EPSR value in the stacked PSR to determine
the operation that faulted (see “Exception Entry and Return” on page 74).
IPSR contains the exception type number of the current Interrupt Service Routine (ISR).
These registers can be accessed individually or as a combination of any two or all three registers,
using the register name as an argument to the MSR or MRS instructions. For example, all of the
registers can be read using PSR with the MRS instruction, or APSR only can be written to using
APSR with the MSR instruction. page 53 shows the possible register combinations for the PSR. See
the MRS and MSR instruction descriptions in the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's
Manual for more information about how to access the program status registers.
Table 2-3. PSR Register Combinations
Register
Type
PSR
R/W
Combination
APSR, EPSR, and IPSR
IEPSR
RO
EPSR and IPSR
a, b
a
APSR and IPSR
b
APSR and EPSR
IAPSR
R/W
EAPSR
R/W
a. The processor ignores writes to the IPSR bits.
b. Reads of the EPSR bits return zero, and the processor ignores writes to these bits.
Program Status Register (PSR)
Type R/W, reset 0x0100.0000
Type
Reset
31
30
29
28
27
N
Z
C
V
Q
26
25
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
ICI / IT
ICI / IT
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
24
23
22
21
20
THUMB
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
ISRNUM
RO
0
June 18, 2012
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
53
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
N
R/W
0
Description
APSR Negative or Less Flag
Value Description
1
The previous operation result was negative or less than.
0
The previous operation result was positive, zero, greater than,
or equal.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or APSR.
30
Z
R/W
0
APSR Zero Flag
Value Description
1
The previous operation result was zero.
0
The previous operation result was non-zero.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or APSR.
29
C
R/W
0
APSR Carry or Borrow Flag
Value Description
1
The previous add operation resulted in a carry bit or the previous
subtract operation did not result in a borrow bit.
0
The previous add operation did not result in a carry bit or the
previous subtract operation resulted in a borrow bit.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or APSR.
28
V
R/W
0
APSR Overflow Flag
Value Description
1
The previous operation resulted in an overflow.
0
The previous operation did not result in an overflow.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or APSR.
27
Q
R/W
0
APSR DSP Overflow and Saturation Flag
Value Description
1
DSP Overflow or saturation has occurred.
0
DSP overflow or saturation has not occurred since reset or since
the bit was last cleared.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or APSR.
This bit is cleared by software using an MRS instruction.
54
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
26:25
ICI / IT
RO
0x0
Description
EPSR ICI / IT status
These bits, along with bits 15:10, contain the Interruptible-Continuable
Instruction (ICI) field for an interrupted load multiple or store multiple
instruction or the execution state bits of the IT instruction.
When EPSR holds the ICI execution state, bits 26:25 are zero.
The If-Then block contains up to four instructions following an IT
instruction. Each instruction in the block is conditional. The conditions
for the instructions are either all the same, or some can be the inverse
of others. See the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's
Manual for more information.
The value of this field is only meaningful when accessing PSR or EPSR.
24
THUMB
RO
1
EPSR Thumb State
This bit indicates the Thumb state and should always be set.
The following can clear the THUMB bit:
■
The BLX, BX and POP{PC} instructions
■
Restoration from the stacked xPSR value on an exception return
■
Bit 0 of the vector value on an exception entry or reset
Attempting to execute instructions when this bit is clear results in a fault
or lockup. See “Lockup” on page 78 for more information.
The value of this bit is only meaningful when accessing PSR or EPSR.
23:16
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:10
ICI / IT
RO
0x0
EPSR ICI / IT status
These bits, along with bits 26:25, contain the Interruptible-Continuable
Instruction (ICI) field for an interrupted load multiple or store multiple
instruction or the execution state bits of the IT instruction.
When an interrupt occurs during the execution of an LDM, STM, PUSH
or POP instruction, the processor stops the load multiple or store multiple
instruction operation temporarily and stores the next register operand
in the multiple operation to bits 15:12. After servicing the interrupt, the
processor returns to the register pointed to by bits 15:12 and resumes
execution of the multiple load or store instruction. When EPSR holds
the ICI execution state, bits 11:10 are zero.
The If-Then block contains up to four instructions following a 16-bit IT
instruction. Each instruction in the block is conditional. The conditions
for the instructions are either all the same, or some can be the inverse
of others. See the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's
Manual for more information.
The value of this field is only meaningful when accessing PSR or EPSR.
9:6
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
55
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
5:0
ISRNUM
RO
0x00
IPSR ISR Number
This field contains the exception type number of the current Interrupt
Service Routine (ISR).
Value
Description
0x00
Thread mode
0x01
Reserved
0x02
NMI
0x03
Hard fault
0x04
Memory management fault
0x05
Bus fault
0x06
Usage fault
0x07-0x0A Reserved
0x0B
SVCall
0x0C
Reserved for Debug
0x0D
Reserved
0x0E
PendSV
0x0F
SysTick
0x10
Interrupt Vector 0
0x11
Interrupt Vector 1
...
...
0x3B
Interrupt Vector 43
0x3C-0x3F Reserved
See “Exception Types” on page 70 for more information.
The value of this field is only meaningful when accessing PSR or IPSR.
56
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: Priority Mask Register (PRIMASK)
The PRIMASK register prevents activation of all exceptions with programmable priority. Reset,
non-maskable interrupt (NMI), and hard fault are the only exceptions with fixed priority. Exceptions
should be disabled when they might impact the timing of critical tasks. This register is only accessible
in privileged mode. The MSR and MRS instructions are used to access the PRIMASK register, and
the CPS instruction may be used to change the value of the PRIMASK register. See the
Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual for more information on these instructions.
For more information on exception priority levels, see “Exception Types” on page 70.
Priority Mask Register (PRIMASK)
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:1
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
0
PRIMASK
R/W
0
RO
0
PRIMASK
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Priority Mask
Value Description
1
Prevents the activation of all exceptions with configurable
priority.
0
No effect.
June 18, 2012
57
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Register 19: Fault Mask Register (FAULTMASK)
The FAULTMASK register prevents activation of all exceptions except for the Non-Maskable Interrupt
(NMI). Exceptions should be disabled when they might impact the timing of critical tasks. This register
is only accessible in privileged mode. The MSR and MRS instructions are used to access the
FAULTMASK register, and the CPS instruction may be used to change the value of the FAULTMASK
register. See the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual for more information on
these instructions. For more information on exception priority levels, see “Exception
Types” on page 70.
Fault Mask Register (FAULTMASK)
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:1
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
0
FAULTMASK
R/W
0
RO
0
FAULTMASK
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Fault Mask
Value Description
1
Prevents the activation of all exceptions except for NMI.
0
No effect.
The processor clears the FAULTMASK bit on exit from any exception
handler except the NMI handler.
58
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 20: Base Priority Mask Register (BASEPRI)
The BASEPRI register defines the minimum priority for exception processing. When BASEPRI is
set to a nonzero value, it prevents the activation of all exceptions with the same or lower priority
level as the BASEPRI value. Exceptions should be disabled when they might impact the timing of
critical tasks. This register is only accessible in privileged mode. For more information on exception
priority levels, see “Exception Types” on page 70.
Base Priority Mask Register (BASEPRI)
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
BASEPRI
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
7:5
BASEPRI
R/W
0x0
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Base Priority
Any exception that has a programmable priority level with the same or
lower priority as the value of this field is masked. The PRIMASK register
can be used to mask all exceptions with programmable priority levels.
Higher priority exceptions have lower priority levels.
Value Description
4:0
reserved
RO
0x0
0x0
All exceptions are unmasked.
0x1
All exceptions with priority level 1-7 are masked.
0x2
All exceptions with priority level 2-7 are masked.
0x3
All exceptions with priority level 3-7 are masked.
0x4
All exceptions with priority level 4-7 are masked.
0x5
All exceptions with priority level 5-7 are masked.
0x6
All exceptions with priority level 6-7 are masked.
0x7
All exceptions with priority level 7 are masked.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
59
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Register 21: Control Register (CONTROL)
The CONTROL register controls the stack used and the privilege level for software execution when
the processor is in Thread mode. This register is only accessible in privileged mode.
Handler mode always uses MSP, so the processor ignores explicit writes to the ASP bit of the
CONTROL register when in Handler mode. The exception entry and return mechanisms automatically
update the CONTROL register based on the EXC_RETURN value (see Table 2-10 on page 76).
In an OS environment, threads running in Thread mode should use the process stack and the kernel
and exception handlers should use the main stack. By default, Thread mode uses MSP. To switch
the stack pointer used in Thread mode to PSP, either use the MSR instruction to set the ASP bit, as
detailed in the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual, or perform an exception
return to Thread mode with the appropriate EXC_RETURN value, as shown in Table 2-10 on page 76.
Note:
When changing the stack pointer, software must use an ISB instruction immediately after
the MSR instruction, ensuring that instructions after the ISB execute use the new stack
pointer. See the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual.
Control Register (CONTROL)
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ASP
TMPL
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:2
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
1
ASP
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Active Stack Pointer
Value Description
1
PSP is the current stack pointer.
0
MSP is the current stack pointer
In Handler mode, this bit reads as zero and ignores writes. The
Cortex-M3 updates this bit automatically on exception return.
0
TMPL
R/W
0
Thread Mode Privilege Level
Value Description
1
Unprivileged software can be executed in Thread mode.
0
Only privileged software can be executed in Thread mode.
60
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
2.3.5
Exceptions and Interrupts
The Cortex-M3 processor supports interrupts and system exceptions. The processor and the Nested
Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) prioritize and handle all exceptions. An exception changes the
normal flow of software control. The processor uses Handler mode to handle all exceptions except
for reset. See “Exception Entry and Return” on page 74 for more information.
The NVIC registers control interrupt handling. See “Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller
(NVIC)” on page 85 for more information.
2.3.6
Data Types
The Cortex-M3 supports 32-bit words, 16-bit halfwords, and 8-bit bytes. The processor also supports
64-bit data transfer instructions. All instruction and data memory accesses are little endian. See
“Memory Regions, Types and Attributes” on page 62 for more information.
2.4
Memory Model
This section describes the processor memory map, the behavior of memory accesses, and the
bit-banding features. The processor has a fixed memory map that provides up to 4 GB of addressable
memory.
The memory map for the LM3S2730 controller is provided in Table 2-4 on page 61. In this manual,
register addresses are given as a hexadecimal increment, relative to the module’s base address
as shown in the memory map.
The regions for SRAM and peripherals include bit-band regions. Bit-banding provides atomic
operations to bit data (see “Bit-Banding” on page 65).
The processor reserves regions of the Private peripheral bus (PPB) address range for core peripheral
registers (see “Cortex-M3 Peripherals” on page 84).
Note:
Within the memory map, all reserved space returns a bus fault when read or written.
Table 2-4. Memory Map
Start
End
Description
For details,
see page ...
0x0000.0000
0x0001.FFFF
On-chip Flash
224
0x0002.0000
0x1FFF.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x2000.0000
0x2000.FFFF
Bit-banded on-chip SRAM
219
0x2001.0000
0x21FF.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x2200.0000
0x221F.FFFF
Bit-band alias of bit-banded on-chip SRAM starting at
0x2000.0000
219
0x2220.0000
0x3FFF.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x4000.0000
0x4000.0FFF
Watchdog timer 0
332
0x4000.1000
0x4000.3FFF
Reserved
-
0x4000.4000
0x4000.4FFF
GPIO Port A
258
0x4000.5000
0x4000.5FFF
GPIO Port B
258
0x4000.6000
0x4000.6FFF
GPIO Port C
258
0x4000.7000
0x4000.7FFF
GPIO Port D
258
0x4000.8000
0x4000.8FFF
SSI0
407
Memory
FiRM Peripherals
June 18, 2012
61
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Table 2-4. Memory Map (continued)
Start
End
Description
For details,
see page ...
0x4000.9000
0x4000.BFFF
Reserved
-
0x4000.C000
0x4000.CFFF
UART0
361
0x4000.D000
0x4001.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x4002.0000
0x4002.3FFF
Reserved
-
0x4002.4000
0x4002.4FFF
GPIO Port E
258
0x4002.5000
0x4002.5FFF
GPIO Port F
258
0x4002.6000
0x4002.6FFF
GPIO Port G
258
0x4002.7000
0x4002.7FFF
GPIO Port H
258
0x4002.8000
0x4002.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x4003.0000
0x4003.0FFF
Timer 0
304
0x4003.1000
0x4003.1FFF
Timer 1
304
0x4003.2000
0x4003.2FFF
Timer 2
304
0x4003.3000
0x4003.BFFF
Reserved
-
0x4003.C000
0x4003.CFFF
Analog Comparators
480
0x4003.D000
0x4003.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x4004.0000
0x4004.0FFF
CAN0 Controller
454
0x4004.1000
0x400F.CFFF
Reserved
-
0x400F.D000
0x400F.DFFF
Flash memory control
224
0x400F.E000
0x400F.EFFF
System control
173
0x400F.F000
0x41FF.FFFF
Reserved
-
0x4200.0000
0x43FF.FFFF
Bit-banded alias of 0x4000.0000 through 0x400F.FFFF
-
0x4400.0000
0xDFFF.FFFF
Reserved
-
0xE000.0000
0xE000.0FFF
Instrumentation Trace Macrocell (ITM)
44
0xE000.1000
0xE000.1FFF
Data Watchpoint and Trace (DWT)
44
0xE000.2000
0xE000.2FFF
Flash Patch and Breakpoint (FPB)
44
0xE000.3000
0xE000.DFFF
Reserved
-
0xE000.E000
0xE000.EFFF
Cortex-M3 Peripherals (SysTick, NVIC, MPU and SCB)
92
0xE000.F000
0xE003.FFFF
Reserved
-
0xE004.0000
0xE004.0FFF
Trace Port Interface Unit (TPIU)
45
0xE004.1000
0xFFFF.FFFF
Reserved
-
Peripherals
Private Peripheral Bus
2.4.1
Memory Regions, Types and Attributes
The memory map and the programming of the MPU split the memory map into regions. Each region
has a defined memory type, and some regions have additional memory attributes. The memory
type and attributes determine the behavior of accesses to the region.
The memory types are:
■ Normal: The processor can re-order transactions for efficiency and perform speculative reads.
62
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ Device: The processor preserves transaction order relative to other transactions to Device or
Strongly Ordered memory.
■ Strongly Ordered: The processor preserves transaction order relative to all other transactions.
The different ordering requirements for Device and Strongly Ordered memory mean that the memory
system can buffer a write to Device memory but must not buffer a write to Strongly Ordered memory.
An additional memory attribute is Execute Never (XN), which means the processor prevents
instruction accesses. A fault exception is generated only on execution of an instruction executed
from an XN region.
2.4.2
Memory System Ordering of Memory Accesses
For most memory accesses caused by explicit memory access instructions, the memory system
does not guarantee that the order in which the accesses complete matches the program order of
the instructions, providing the order does not affect the behavior of the instruction sequence. Normally,
if correct program execution depends on two memory accesses completing in program order,
software must insert a memory barrier instruction between the memory access instructions (see
“Software Ordering of Memory Accesses” on page 64).
However, the memory system does guarantee ordering of accesses to Device and Strongly Ordered
memory. For two memory access instructions A1 and A2, if both A1 and A2 are accesses to either
Device or Strongly Ordered memory, and if A1 occurs before A2 in program order, A1 is always
observed before A2.
2.4.3
Behavior of Memory Accesses
Table 2-5 on page 63 shows the behavior of accesses to each region in the memory map. See
“Memory Regions, Types and Attributes” on page 62 for more information on memory types and
the XN attribute. Stellaris devices may have reserved memory areas within the address ranges
shown below (refer to Table 2-4 on page 61 for more information).
Table 2-5. Memory Access Behavior
Address Range
Memory Region
Memory Type
Execute
Never
(XN)
Description
0x0000.0000 - 0x1FFF.FFFF Code
Normal
-
This executable region is for program code.
Data can also be stored here.
0x2000.0000 - 0x3FFF.FFFF SRAM
Normal
-
This executable region is for data. Code
can also be stored here. This region
includes bit band and bit band alias areas
(see Table 2-6 on page 65).
0x4000.0000 - 0x5FFF.FFFF Peripheral
Device
XN
This region includes bit band and bit band
alias areas (see Table 2-7 on page 65).
0x6000.0000 - 0x9FFF.FFFF External RAM
Normal
-
This executable region is for data.
0xA000.0000 - 0xDFFF.FFFF External device
Device
XN
This region is for external device memory.
0xE000.0000- 0xE00F.FFFF Private peripheral
bus
Strongly
Ordered
XN
This region includes the NVIC, system
timer, and system control block.
0xE010.0000- 0xFFFF.FFFF Reserved
-
-
-
The Code, SRAM, and external RAM regions can hold programs. However, it is recommended that
programs always use the Code region because the Cortex-M3 has separate buses that can perform
instruction fetches and data accesses simultaneously.
June 18, 2012
63
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
The MPU can override the default memory access behavior described in this section. For more
information, see “Memory Protection Unit (MPU)” on page 87.
The Cortex-M3 prefetches instructions ahead of execution and speculatively prefetches from branch
target addresses.
2.4.4
Software Ordering of Memory Accesses
The order of instructions in the program flow does not always guarantee the order of the
corresponding memory transactions for the following reasons:
■ The processor can reorder some memory accesses to improve efficiency, providing this does
not affect the behavior of the instruction sequence.
■ The processor has multiple bus interfaces.
■ Memory or devices in the memory map have different wait states.
■ Some memory accesses are buffered or speculative.
“Memory System Ordering of Memory Accesses” on page 63 describes the cases where the memory
system guarantees the order of memory accesses. Otherwise, if the order of memory accesses is
critical, software must include memory barrier instructions to force that ordering. The Cortex-M3
has the following memory barrier instructions:
■ The Data Memory Barrier (DMB) instruction ensures that outstanding memory transactions
complete before subsequent memory transactions.
■ The Data Synchronization Barrier (DSB) instruction ensures that outstanding memory transactions
complete before subsequent instructions execute.
■ The Instruction Synchronization Barrier (ISB) instruction ensures that the effect of all completed
memory transactions is recognizable by subsequent instructions.
Memory barrier instructions can be used in the following situations:
■ MPU programming
– If the MPU settings are changed and the change must be effective on the very next instruction,
use a DSB instruction to ensure the effect of the MPU takes place immediately at the end of
context switching.
– Use an ISB instruction to ensure the new MPU setting takes effect immediately after
programming the MPU region or regions, if the MPU configuration code was accessed using
a branch or call. If the MPU configuration code is entered using exception mechanisms, then
an ISB instruction is not required.
■ Vector table
If the program changes an entry in the vector table and then enables the corresponding exception,
use a DMB instruction between the operations. The DMB instruction ensures that if the exception
is taken immediately after being enabled, the processor uses the new exception vector.
■ Self-modifying code
64
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
If a program contains self-modifying code, use an ISB instruction immediately after the code
modification in the program. The ISB instruction ensures subsequent instruction execution uses
the updated program.
■ Memory map switching
If the system contains a memory map switching mechanism, use a DSB instruction after switching
the memory map in the program. The DSB instruction ensures subsequent instruction execution
uses the updated memory map.
■ Dynamic exception priority change
When an exception priority has to change when the exception is pending or active, use DSB
instructions after the change. The change then takes effect on completion of the DSB instruction.
Memory accesses to Strongly Ordered memory, such as the System Control Block, do not require
the use of DMB instructions.
For more information on the memory barrier instructions, see the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set
Technical User's Manual.
2.4.5
Bit-Banding
A bit-band region maps each word in a bit-band alias region to a single bit in the bit-band region.
The bit-band regions occupy the lowest 1 MB of the SRAM and peripheral memory regions. Accesses
to the 32-MB SRAM alias region map to the 1-MB SRAM bit-band region, as shown in Table
2-6 on page 65. Accesses to the 32-MB peripheral alias region map to the 1-MB peripheral bit-band
region, as shown in Table 2-7 on page 65. For the specific address range of the bit-band regions,
see Table 2-4 on page 61.
Note:
A word access to the SRAM or the peripheral bit-band alias region maps to a single bit in
the SRAM or peripheral bit-band region.
A word access to a bit band address results in a word access to the underlying memory,
and similarly for halfword and byte accesses. This allows bit band accesses to match the
access requirements of the underlying peripheral.
Table 2-6. SRAM Memory Bit-Banding Regions
Address Range
Memory Region
Instruction and Data Accesses
Start
End
0x2000.0000
0x2000.FFFF
SRAM bit-band region Direct accesses to this memory range behave as SRAM
memory accesses, but this region is also bit addressable
through bit-band alias.
0x2200.0000
0x221F.FFFF
SRAM bit-band alias
Data accesses to this region are remapped to bit band
region. A write operation is performed as
read-modify-write. Instruction accesses are not remapped.
Table 2-7. Peripheral Memory Bit-Banding Regions
Address Range
Start
End
0x4000.0000
0x400F.FFFF
Memory Region
Instruction and Data Accesses
Peripheral bit-band
region
Direct accesses to this memory range behave as
peripheral memory accesses, but this region is also bit
addressable through bit-band alias.
June 18, 2012
65
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Table 2-7. Peripheral Memory Bit-Banding Regions (continued)
Address Range
Memory Region
Start
End
0x4200.0000
0x43FF.FFFF
Instruction and Data Accesses
Peripheral bit-band alias Data accesses to this region are remapped to bit band
region. A write operation is performed as
read-modify-write. Instruction accesses are not permitted.
The following formula shows how the alias region maps onto the bit-band region:
bit_word_offset = (byte_offset x 32) + (bit_number x 4)
bit_word_addr = bit_band_base + bit_word_offset
where:
bit_word_offset
The position of the target bit in the bit-band memory region.
bit_word_addr
The address of the word in the alias memory region that maps to the targeted bit.
bit_band_base
The starting address of the alias region.
byte_offset
The number of the byte in the bit-band region that contains the targeted bit.
bit_number
The bit position, 0-7, of the targeted bit.
Figure 2-4 on page 67 shows examples of bit-band mapping between the SRAM bit-band alias
region and the SRAM bit-band region:
■ The alias word at 0x23FF.FFE0 maps to bit 0 of the bit-band byte at 0x200F.FFFF:
0x23FF.FFE0 = 0x2200.0000 + (0x000F.FFFF*32) + (0*4)
■ The alias word at 0x23FF.FFFC maps to bit 7 of the bit-band byte at 0x200F.FFFF:
0x23FF.FFFC = 0x2200.0000 + (0x000F.FFFF*32) + (7*4)
■ The alias word at 0x2200.0000 maps to bit 0 of the bit-band byte at 0x2000.0000:
0x2200.0000 = 0x2200.0000 + (0*32) + (0*4)
■ The alias word at 0x2200.001C maps to bit 7 of the bit-band byte at 0x2000.0000:
0x2200.001C = 0x2200.0000+ (0*32) + (7*4)
66
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 2-4. Bit-Band Mapping
32-MB Alias Region
0x23FF.FFFC
0x23FF.FFF8
0x23FF.FFF4
0x23FF.FFF0
0x23FF.FFEC
0x23FF.FFE8
0x23FF.FFE4
0x23FF.FFE0
0x2200.001C
0x2200.0018
0x2200.0014
0x2200.0010
0x2200.000C
0x2200.0008
0x2200.0004
0x2200.0000
7
3
1-MB SRAM Bit-Band Region
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
7
6
0x200F.FFFF
7
6
5
4
3
2
0x2000.0003
2.4.5.1
5
4
3
2
1
0
7
6
0x200F.FFFE
1
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
5
4
3
2
1
0
6
0x200F.FFFD
1
0
0x2000.0002
7
6
5
4
3
2
0x2000.0001
5
4
2
1
0
1
0
0x200F.FFFC
1
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
0x2000.0000
Directly Accessing an Alias Region
Writing to a word in the alias region updates a single bit in the bit-band region.
Bit 0 of the value written to a word in the alias region determines the value written to the targeted
bit in the bit-band region. Writing a value with bit 0 set writes a 1 to the bit-band bit, and writing a
value with bit 0 clear writes a 0 to the bit-band bit.
Bits 31:1 of the alias word have no effect on the bit-band bit. Writing 0x01 has the same effect as
writing 0xFF. Writing 0x00 has the same effect as writing 0x0E.
When reading a word in the alias region, 0x0000.0000 indicates that the targeted bit in the bit-band
region is clear and 0x0000.0001 indicates that the targeted bit in the bit-band region is set.
2.4.5.2
Directly Accessing a Bit-Band Region
“Behavior of Memory Accesses” on page 63 describes the behavior of direct byte, halfword, or word
accesses to the bit-band regions.
2.4.6
Data Storage
The processor views memory as a linear collection of bytes numbered in ascending order from zero.
For example, bytes 0-3 hold the first stored word, and bytes 4-7 hold the second stored word. Data
is stored in little-endian format, with the least-significant byte (lsbyte) of a word stored at the
lowest-numbered byte, and the most-significant byte (msbyte) stored at the highest-numbered byte.
Figure 2-5 on page 68 illustrates how data is stored.
June 18, 2012
67
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Figure 2-5. Data Storage
Memory
7
Register
0
31
2.4.7
Address A
B0
A+1
B1
A+2
B2
A+3
B3
lsbyte
24 23
B3
16 15
B2
8 7
B1
0
B0
msbyte
Synchronization Primitives
The Cortex-M3 instruction set includes pairs of synchronization primitives which provide a
non-blocking mechanism that a thread or process can use to obtain exclusive access to a memory
location. Software can use these primitives to perform a guaranteed read-modify-write memory
update sequence or for a semaphore mechanism.
A pair of synchronization primitives consists of:
■ A Load-Exclusive instruction, which is used to read the value of a memory location and requests
exclusive access to that location.
■ A Store-Exclusive instruction, which is used to attempt to write to the same memory location and
returns a status bit to a register. If this status bit is clear, it indicates that the thread or process
gained exclusive access to the memory and the write succeeds; if this status bit is set, it indicates
that the thread or process did not gain exclusive access to the memory and no write was
performed.
The pairs of Load-Exclusive and Store-Exclusive instructions are:
■ The word instructions LDREX and STREX
■ The halfword instructions LDREXH and STREXH
■ The byte instructions LDREXB and STREXB
Software must use a Load-Exclusive instruction with the corresponding Store-Exclusive instruction.
To perform an exclusive read-modify-write of a memory location, software must:
1. Use a Load-Exclusive instruction to read the value of the location.
2. Modify the value, as required.
3. Use a Store-Exclusive instruction to attempt to write the new value back to the memory location.
4. Test the returned status bit.
If the status bit is clear, the read-modify-write completed successfully. If the status bit is set, no
write was performed, which indicates that the value returned at step 1 might be out of date. The
software must retry the entire read-modify-write sequence.
Software can use the synchronization primitives to implement a semaphore as follows:
68
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
1. Use a Load-Exclusive instruction to read from the semaphore address to check whether the
semaphore is free.
2. If the semaphore is free, use a Store-Exclusive to write the claim value to the semaphore
address.
3. If the returned status bit from step 2 indicates that the Store-Exclusive succeeded, then the
software has claimed the semaphore. However, if the Store-Exclusive failed, another process
might have claimed the semaphore after the software performed step 1.
The Cortex-M3 includes an exclusive access monitor that tags the fact that the processor has
executed a Load-Exclusive instruction. The processor removes its exclusive access tag if:
■ It executes a CLREX instruction.
■ It executes a Store-Exclusive instruction, regardless of whether the write succeeds.
■ An exception occurs, which means the processor can resolve semaphore conflicts between
different threads.
For more information about the synchronization primitive instructions, see the Cortex™-M3/M4
Instruction Set Technical User's Manual.
2.5
Exception Model
The ARM Cortex-M3 processor and the Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) prioritize and
handle all exceptions in Handler Mode. The processor state is automatically stored to the stack on
an exception and automatically restored from the stack at the end of the Interrupt Service Routine
(ISR). The vector is fetched in parallel to the state saving, enabling efficient interrupt entry. The
processor supports tail-chaining, which enables back-to-back interrupts to be performed without the
overhead of state saving and restoration.
Table 2-8 on page 71 lists all exception types. Software can set eight priority levels on seven of
these exceptions (system handlers) as well as on 22 interrupts (listed in Table 2-9 on page 72).
Priorities on the system handlers are set with the NVIC System Handler Priority n (SYSPRIn)
registers. Interrupts are enabled through the NVIC Interrupt Set Enable n (ENn) register and
prioritized with the NVIC Interrupt Priority n (PRIn) registers. Priorities can be grouped by splitting
priority levels into preemption priorities and subpriorities. All the interrupt registers are described in
“Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)” on page 85.
Internally, the highest user-programmable priority (0) is treated as fourth priority, after a Reset,
Non-Maskable Interrupt (NMI), and a Hard Fault, in that order. Note that 0 is the default priority for
all the programmable priorities.
Important: After a write to clear an interrupt source, it may take several processor cycles for the
NVIC to see the interrupt source de-assert. Thus if the interrupt clear is done as the
last action in an interrupt handler, it is possible for the interrupt handler to complete
while the NVIC sees the interrupt as still asserted, causing the interrupt handler to be
re-entered errantly. This situation can be avoided by either clearing the interrupt source
at the beginning of the interrupt handler or by performing a read or write after the write
to clear the interrupt source (and flush the write buffer).
See “Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)” on page 85 for more information on exceptions
and interrupts.
June 18, 2012
69
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
2.5.1
Exception States
Each exception is in one of the following states:
■ Inactive. The exception is not active and not pending.
■ Pending. The exception is waiting to be serviced by the processor. An interrupt request from a
peripheral or from software can change the state of the corresponding interrupt to pending.
■ Active. An exception that is being serviced by the processor but has not completed.
Note:
An exception handler can interrupt the execution of another exception handler. In this
case, both exceptions are in the active state.
■ Active and Pending. The exception is being serviced by the processor, and there is a pending
exception from the same source.
2.5.2
Exception Types
The exception types are:
■ Reset. Reset is invoked on power up or a warm reset. The exception model treats reset as a
special form of exception. When reset is asserted, the operation of the processor stops, potentially
at any point in an instruction. When reset is deasserted, execution restarts from the address
provided by the reset entry in the vector table. Execution restarts as privileged execution in
Thread mode.
■ NMI. A non-maskable Interrupt (NMI) can be signaled using the NMI signal or triggered by
software using the Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL) register. This exception has the
highest priority other than reset. NMI is permanently enabled and has a fixed priority of -2. NMIs
cannot be masked or prevented from activation by any other exception or preempted by any
exception other than reset.
■ Hard Fault. A hard fault is an exception that occurs because of an error during exception
processing, or because an exception cannot be managed by any other exception mechanism.
Hard faults have a fixed priority of -1, meaning they have higher priority than any exception with
configurable priority.
■ Memory Management Fault. A memory management fault is an exception that occurs because
of a memory protection related fault, including access violation and no match. The MPU or the
fixed memory protection constraints determine this fault, for both instruction and data memory
transactions. This fault is used to abort instruction accesses to Execute Never (XN) memory
regions, even if the MPU is disabled.
■ Bus Fault. A bus fault is an exception that occurs because of a memory-related fault for an
instruction or data memory transaction such as a prefetch fault or a memory access fault. This
fault can be enabled or disabled.
■ Usage Fault. A usage fault is an exception that occurs because of a fault related to instruction
execution, such as:
– An undefined instruction
– An illegal unaligned access
– Invalid state on instruction execution
70
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
– An error on exception return
An unaligned address on a word or halfword memory access or division by zero can cause a
usage fault when the core is properly configured.
■ SVCall. A supervisor call (SVC) is an exception that is triggered by the SVC instruction. In an
OS environment, applications can use SVC instructions to access OS kernel functions and device
drivers.
■ Debug Monitor. This exception is caused by the debug monitor (when not halting). This exception
is only active when enabled. This exception does not activate if it is a lower priority than the
current activation.
■ PendSV. PendSV is a pendable, interrupt-driven request for system-level service. In an OS
environment, use PendSV for context switching when no other exception is active. PendSV is
triggered using the Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL) register.
■ SysTick. A SysTick exception is an exception that the system timer generates when it reaches
zero when it is enabled to generate an interrupt. Software can also generate a SysTick exception
using the Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL) register. In an OS environment, the processor
can use this exception as system tick.
■ Interrupt (IRQ). An interrupt, or IRQ, is an exception signaled by a peripheral or generated by
a software request and fed through the NVIC (prioritized). All interrupts are asynchronous to
instruction execution. In the system, peripherals use interrupts to communicate with the processor.
Table 2-9 on page 72 lists the interrupts on the LM3S2730 controller.
For an asynchronous exception, other than reset, the processor can execute another instruction
between when the exception is triggered and when the processor enters the exception handler.
Privileged software can disable the exceptions that Table 2-8 on page 71 shows as having
configurable priority (see the SYSHNDCTRL register on page 126 and the DIS0 register on page 101).
For more information about hard faults, memory management faults, bus faults, and usage faults,
see “Fault Handling” on page 76.
Table 2-8. Exception Types
Exception Type
a
Vector
Number
Priority
Vector Address or
b
Offset
-
0
-
0x0000.0000
Stack top is loaded from the first
entry of the vector table on reset.
Reset
1
-3 (highest)
0x0000.0004
Asynchronous
Non-Maskable Interrupt
(NMI)
2
-2
0x0000.0008
Asynchronous
Hard Fault
3
-1
0x0000.000C
-
c
0x0000.0010
Synchronous
c
0x0000.0014
Synchronous when precise and
asynchronous when imprecise
c
Synchronous
Memory Management
4
programmable
Bus Fault
5
programmable
Usage Fault
6
programmable
0x0000.0018
7-10
-
-
-
Activation
c
c
Reserved
SVCall
11
programmable
0x0000.002C
Synchronous
Debug Monitor
12
programmable
0x0000.0030
Synchronous
-
13
-
-
June 18, 2012
Reserved
71
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Table 2-8. Exception Types (continued)
Exception Type
PendSV
SysTick
a
Vector
Number
Priority
14
programmable
15
Interrupts
Vector Address or
b
Offset
c
0x0000.0038
Asynchronous
c
0x0000.003C
Asynchronous
programmable
16 and above
Activation
d
programmable
0x0000.0040 and above Asynchronous
a. 0 is the default priority for all the programmable priorities.
b. See “Vector Table” on page 73.
c. See SYSPRI1 on page 123.
d. See PRIn registers on page 109.
Table 2-9. Interrupts
Vector Number
Interrupt Number (Bit
in Interrupt Registers)
Vector Address or
Offset
Description
0-15
-
0x0000.0000 0x0000.003C
16
0
0x0000.0040
GPIO Port A
17
1
0x0000.0044
GPIO Port B
18
2
0x0000.0048
GPIO Port C
19
3
0x0000.004C
GPIO Port D
20
4
0x0000.0050
GPIO Port E
21
5
0x0000.0054
UART0
22
6
-
Processor exceptions
Reserved
23
7
0x0000.005C
24-33
8-17
-
SSI0
34
18
0x0000.0088
Watchdog Timer 0
35
19
0x0000.008C
Timer 0A
36
20
0x0000.0090
Timer 0B
37
21
0x0000.0094
Timer 1A
38
22
0x0000.0098
Timer 1B
39
23
0x0000.009C
Timer 2A
40
24
0x0000.00A0
Timer 2B
41
25
0x0000.00A4
Analog Comparator 0
42
26
0x0000.00A8
Analog Comparator 1
43
27
-
44
28
0x0000.00B0
System Control
45
29
0x0000.00B4
Flash Memory Control
46
30
0x0000.00B8
GPIO Port F
47
31
0x0000.00BC
GPIO Port G
48
32
0x0000.00C0
GPIO Port H
49-54
33-38
-
55
39
0x0000.00DC
56-59
40-43
-
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
CAN0
Reserved
72
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
2.5.3
Exception Handlers
The processor handles exceptions using:
■ Interrupt Service Routines (ISRs). Interrupts (IRQx) are the exceptions handled by ISRs.
■ Fault Handlers. Hard fault, memory management fault, usage fault, and bus fault are fault
exceptions handled by the fault handlers.
■ System Handlers. NMI, PendSV, SVCall, SysTick, and the fault exceptions are all system
exceptions that are handled by system handlers.
2.5.4
Vector Table
The vector table contains the reset value of the stack pointer and the start addresses, also called
exception vectors, for all exception handlers. The vector table is constructed using the vector address
or offset shown in Table 2-8 on page 71. Figure 2-6 on page 73 shows the order of the exception
vectors in the vector table. The least-significant bit of each vector must be 1, indicating that the
exception handler is Thumb code
Figure 2-6. Vector Table
Exception number IRQ number
59
43
.
.
.
18
2
17
1
16
0
15
-1
14
-2
13
Offset
0x00EC
.
.
.
0x004C
0x0048
0x0044
0x0040
0x003C
0x0038
12
11
Vector
IRQ43
.
.
.
IRQ2
IRQ1
IRQ0
Systick
PendSV
Reserved
Reserved for Debug
-5
10
0x002C
9
SVCall
Reserved
8
7
6
-10
5
-11
4
-12
3
-13
2
-14
1
0x0018
0x0014
0x0010
0x000C
0x0008
0x0004
0x0000
Usage fault
Bus fault
Memory management fault
Hard fault
NMI
Reset
Initial SP value
On system reset, the vector table is fixed at address 0x0000.0000. Privileged software can write to
the Vector Table Offset (VTABLE) register to relocate the vector table start address to a different
June 18, 2012
73
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
memory location, in the range 0x0000.0100 to 0x3FFF.FF00 (see “Vector Table” on page 73). Note
that when configuring the VTABLE register, the offset must be aligned on a 256-byte boundary.
2.5.5
Exception Priorities
As Table 2-8 on page 71 shows, all exceptions have an associated priority, with a lower priority
value indicating a higher priority and configurable priorities for all exceptions except Reset, Hard
fault, and NMI. If software does not configure any priorities, then all exceptions with a configurable
priority have a priority of 0. For information about configuring exception priorities, see page 123 and
page 109.
Note:
Configurable priority values for the Stellaris implementation are in the range 0-7. This means
that the Reset, Hard fault, and NMI exceptions, with fixed negative priority values, always
have higher priority than any other exception.
For example, assigning a higher priority value to IRQ[0] and a lower priority value to IRQ[1] means
that IRQ[1] has higher priority than IRQ[0]. If both IRQ[1] and IRQ[0] are asserted, IRQ[1] is processed
before IRQ[0].
If multiple pending exceptions have the same priority, the pending exception with the lowest exception
number takes precedence. For example, if both IRQ[0] and IRQ[1] are pending and have the same
priority, then IRQ[0] is processed before IRQ[1].
When the processor is executing an exception handler, the exception handler is preempted if a
higher priority exception occurs. If an exception occurs with the same priority as the exception being
handled, the handler is not preempted, irrespective of the exception number. However, the status
of the new interrupt changes to pending.
2.5.6
Interrupt Priority Grouping
To increase priority control in systems with interrupts, the NVIC supports priority grouping. This
grouping divides each interrupt priority register entry into two fields:
■ An upper field that defines the group priority
■ A lower field that defines a subpriority within the group
Only the group priority determines preemption of interrupt exceptions. When the processor is
executing an interrupt exception handler, another interrupt with the same group priority as the
interrupt being handled does not preempt the handler.
If multiple pending interrupts have the same group priority, the subpriority field determines the order
in which they are processed. If multiple pending interrupts have the same group priority and
subpriority, the interrupt with the lowest IRQ number is processed first.
For information about splitting the interrupt priority fields into group priority and subpriority, see
page 117.
2.5.7
Exception Entry and Return
Descriptions of exception handling use the following terms:
■ Preemption. When the processor is executing an exception handler, an exception can preempt
the exception handler if its priority is higher than the priority of the exception being handled. See
“Interrupt Priority Grouping” on page 74 for more information about preemption by an interrupt.
When one exception preempts another, the exceptions are called nested exceptions. See
“Exception Entry” on page 75 more information.
74
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ Return. Return occurs when the exception handler is completed, and there is no pending
exception with sufficient priority to be serviced and the completed exception handler was not
handling a late-arriving exception. The processor pops the stack and restores the processor
state to the state it had before the interrupt occurred. See “Exception Return” on page 76 for
more information.
■ Tail-Chaining. This mechanism speeds up exception servicing. On completion of an exception
handler, if there is a pending exception that meets the requirements for exception entry, the
stack pop is skipped and control transfers to the new exception handler.
■ Late-Arriving. This mechanism speeds up preemption. If a higher priority exception occurs
during state saving for a previous exception, the processor switches to handle the higher priority
exception and initiates the vector fetch for that exception. State saving is not affected by late
arrival because the state saved is the same for both exceptions. Therefore, the state saving
continues uninterrupted. The processor can accept a late arriving exception until the first instruction
of the exception handler of the original exception enters the execute stage of the processor. On
return from the exception handler of the late-arriving exception, the normal tail-chaining rules
apply.
2.5.7.1
Exception Entry
Exception entry occurs when there is a pending exception with sufficient priority and either the
processor is in Thread mode or the new exception is of higher priority than the exception being
handled, in which case the new exception preempts the original exception.
When one exception preempts another, the exceptions are nested.
Sufficient priority means the exception has more priority than any limits set by the mask registers
(see PRIMASK on page 57, FAULTMASK on page 58, and BASEPRI on page 59). An exception
with less priority than this is pending but is not handled by the processor.
When the processor takes an exception, unless the exception is a tail-chained or a late-arriving
exception, the processor pushes information onto the current stack. This operation is referred to as
stacking and the structure of eight data words is referred to as stack frame.
Figure 2-7. Exception Stack Frame
...
{aligner}
xPSR
PC
LR
R12
R3
R2
R1
R0
Pre-IRQ top of stack
IRQ top of stack
Immediately after stacking, the stack pointer indicates the lowest address in the stack frame. Unless
stack alignment is disabled, the stack frame is aligned to a double-word address. If the STKALIGN
bit of the Configuration Control (CCR) register is set, stack align adjustment is performed during
stacking.
The stack frame includes the return address, which is the address of the next instruction in the
interrupted program. This value is restored to the PC at exception return so that the interrupted
program resumes.
June 18, 2012
75
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
In parallel to the stacking operation, the processor performs a vector fetch that reads the exception
handler start address from the vector table. When stacking is complete, the processor starts executing
the exception handler. At the same time, the processor writes an EXC_RETURN value to the LR,
indicating which stack pointer corresponds to the stack frame and what operation mode the processor
was in before the entry occurred.
If no higher-priority exception occurs during exception entry, the processor starts executing the
exception handler and automatically changes the status of the corresponding pending interrupt to
active.
If another higher-priority exception occurs during exception entry, known as late arrival, the processor
starts executing the exception handler for this exception and does not change the pending status
of the earlier exception.
2.5.7.2
Exception Return
Exception return occurs when the processor is in Handler mode and executes one of the following
instructions to load the EXC_RETURN value into the PC:
■ An LDM or POP instruction that loads the PC
■ A BX instruction using any register
■ An LDR instruction with the PC as the destination
EXC_RETURN is the value loaded into the LR on exception entry. The exception mechanism relies
on this value to detect when the processor has completed an exception handler. The lowest four
bits of this value provide information on the return stack and processor mode. Table 2-10 on page 76
shows the EXC_RETURN values with a description of the exception return behavior.
EXC_RETURN bits 31:4 are all set. When this value is loaded into the PC, it indicates to the processor
that the exception is complete, and the processor initiates the appropriate exception return sequence.
Table 2-10. Exception Return Behavior
EXC_RETURN[31:0]
Description
0xFFFF.FFF0
Reserved
0xFFFF.FFF1
Return to Handler mode.
Exception return uses state from MSP.
Execution uses MSP after return.
0xFFFF.FFF2 - 0xFFFF.FFF8
Reserved
0xFFFF.FFF9
Return to Thread mode.
Exception return uses state from MSP.
Execution uses MSP after return.
0xFFFF.FFFA - 0xFFFF.FFFC
Reserved
0xFFFF.FFFD
Return to Thread mode.
Exception return uses state from PSP.
Execution uses PSP after return.
0xFFFF.FFFE - 0xFFFF.FFFF
2.6
Reserved
Fault Handling
Faults are a subset of the exceptions (see “Exception Model” on page 69). The following conditions
generate a fault:
76
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ A bus error on an instruction fetch or vector table load or a data access.
■ An internally detected error such as an undefined instruction or an attempt to change state with
a BX instruction.
■ Attempting to execute an instruction from a memory region marked as Non-Executable (XN).
■ An MPU fault because of a privilege violation or an attempt to access an unmanaged region.
2.6.1
Fault Types
Table 2-11 on page 77 shows the types of fault, the handler used for the fault, the corresponding
fault status register, and the register bit that indicates the fault has occurred. See page 130 for more
information about the fault status registers.
Table 2-11. Faults
Fault
Handler
Fault Status Register
Bit Name
Bus error on a vector read
Hard fault
Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT)
VECT
Fault escalated to a hard fault
Hard fault
Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT)
FORCED
MPU or default memory mismatch on Memory management
instruction access
fault
Memory Management Fault Status
(MFAULTSTAT)
IERR
MPU or default memory mismatch on Memory management
data access
fault
Memory Management Fault Status
(MFAULTSTAT)
DERR
MPU or default memory mismatch on Memory management
exception stacking
fault
Memory Management Fault Status
(MFAULTSTAT)
MSTKE
MPU or default memory mismatch on Memory management
exception unstacking
fault
Memory Management Fault Status
(MFAULTSTAT)
MUSTKE
Bus error during exception stacking
Bus fault
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
BSTKE
Bus error during exception unstacking Bus fault
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
BUSTKE
Bus error during instruction prefetch
Bus fault
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
IBUS
Precise data bus error
Bus fault
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
PRECISE
Imprecise data bus error
Bus fault
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
IMPRE
Attempt to access a coprocessor
Usage fault
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
NOCP
Undefined instruction
Usage fault
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
UNDEF
Attempt to enter an invalid instruction Usage fault
b
set state
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
INVSTAT
a
Invalid EXC_RETURN value
Usage fault
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
INVPC
Illegal unaligned load or store
Usage fault
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
UNALIGN
Divide by 0
Usage fault
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
DIV0
a. Occurs on an access to an XN region even if the MPU is disabled.
b. Attempting to use an instruction set other than the Thumb instruction set, or returning to a non load-store-multiple instruction
with ICI continuation.
2.6.2
Fault Escalation and Hard Faults
All fault exceptions except for hard fault have configurable exception priority (see SYSPRI1 on
page 123). Software can disable execution of the handlers for these faults (see SYSHNDCTRL on
page 126).
June 18, 2012
77
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Usually, the exception priority, together with the values of the exception mask registers, determines
whether the processor enters the fault handler, and whether a fault handler can preempt another
fault handler as described in “Exception Model” on page 69.
In some situations, a fault with configurable priority is treated as a hard fault. This process is called
priority escalation, and the fault is described as escalated to hard fault. Escalation to hard fault
occurs when:
■ A fault handler causes the same kind of fault as the one it is servicing. This escalation to hard
fault occurs because a fault handler cannot preempt itself because it must have the same priority
as the current priority level.
■ A fault handler causes a fault with the same or lower priority as the fault it is servicing. This
situation happens because the handler for the new fault cannot preempt the currently executing
fault handler.
■ An exception handler causes a fault for which the priority is the same as or lower than the currently
executing exception.
■ A fault occurs and the handler for that fault is not enabled.
If a bus fault occurs during a stack push when entering a bus fault handler, the bus fault does not
escalate to a hard fault. Thus if a corrupted stack causes a fault, the fault handler executes even
though the stack push for the handler failed. The fault handler operates but the stack contents are
corrupted.
Note:
2.6.3
Only Reset and NMI can preempt the fixed priority hard fault. A hard fault can preempt any
exception other than Reset, NMI, or another hard fault.
Fault Status Registers and Fault Address Registers
The fault status registers indicate the cause of a fault. For bus faults and memory management
faults, the fault address register indicates the address accessed by the operation that caused the
fault, as shown in Table 2-12 on page 78.
Table 2-12. Fault Status and Fault Address Registers
Handler
Status Register Name
Address Register Name
Register Description
Hard fault
Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT)
-
page 136
Memory management Memory Management Fault Status
fault
(MFAULTSTAT)
Memory Management Fault
Address (MMADDR)
page 130
Bus fault
Bus Fault Address
(FAULTADDR)
page 130
-
page 130
Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
Usage fault
2.6.4
Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT)
page 137
page 138
Lockup
The processor enters a lockup state if a hard fault occurs when executing the NMI or hard fault
handlers. When the processor is in the lockup state, it does not execute any instructions. The
processor remains in lockup state until it is reset, an NMI occurs, or it is halted by a debugger.
Note:
If the lockup state occurs from the NMI handler, a subsequent NMI does not cause the
processor to leave the lockup state.
78
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
2.7
Power Management
The Cortex-M3 processor sleep modes reduce power consumption:
■ Sleep mode stops the processor clock.
■ Deep-sleep mode stops the system clock and switches off the PLL and Flash memory.
The SLEEPDEEP bit of the System Control (SYSCTRL) register selects which sleep mode is used
(see page 119). For more information about the behavior of the sleep modes, see “System
Control” on page 171.
This section describes the mechanisms for entering sleep mode and the conditions for waking up
from sleep mode, both of which apply to Sleep mode and Deep-sleep mode.
2.7.1
Entering Sleep Modes
This section describes the mechanisms software can use to put the processor into one of the sleep
modes.
The system can generate spurious wake-up events, for example a debug operation wakes up the
processor. Therefore, software must be able to put the processor back into sleep mode after such
an event. A program might have an idle loop to put the processor back to sleep mode.
2.7.1.1
Wait for Interrupt
The wait for interrupt instruction, WFI, causes immediate entry to sleep mode unless the wake-up
condition is true (see “Wake Up from WFI or Sleep-on-Exit” on page 80). When the processor
executes a WFI instruction, it stops executing instructions and enters sleep mode. See the
Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual for more information.
2.7.1.2
Wait for Event
The wait for event instruction, WFE, causes entry to sleep mode conditional on the value of a one-bit
event register. When the processor executes a WFE instruction, it checks the event register. If the
register is 0, the processor stops executing instructions and enters sleep mode. If the register is 1,
the processor clears the register and continues executing instructions without entering sleep mode.
If the event register is 1, the processor must not enter sleep mode on execution of a WFE instruction.
Typically, this situation occurs if an SEV instruction has been executed. Software cannot access
this register directly.
See the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual for more information.
2.7.1.3
Sleep-on-Exit
If the SLEEPEXIT bit of the SYSCTRL register is set, when the processor completes the execution
of all exception handlers, it returns to Thread mode and immediately enters sleep mode. This
mechanism can be used in applications that only require the processor to run when an exception
occurs.
2.7.2
Wake Up from Sleep Mode
The conditions for the processor to wake up depend on the mechanism that cause it to enter sleep
mode.
June 18, 2012
79
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
2.7.2.1
Wake Up from WFI or Sleep-on-Exit
Normally, the processor wakes up only when the NVIC detects an exception with sufficient priority
to cause exception entry. Some embedded systems might have to execute system restore tasks
after the processor wakes up and before executing an interrupt handler. Entry to the interrupt handler
can be delayed by setting the PRIMASK bit and clearing the FAULTMASK bit. If an interrupt arrives
that is enabled and has a higher priority than current exception priority, the processor wakes up but
does not execute the interrupt handler until the processor clears PRIMASK. For more information
about PRIMASK and FAULTMASK, see page 57 and page 58.
2.7.2.2
Wake Up from WFE
The processor wakes up if it detects an exception with sufficient priority to cause exception entry.
In addition, if the SEVONPEND bit in the SYSCTRL register is set, any new pending interrupt triggers
an event and wakes up the processor, even if the interrupt is disabled or has insufficient priority to
cause exception entry. For more information about SYSCTRL, see page 119.
2.8
Instruction Set Summary
The processor implements a version of the Thumb instruction set. Table 2-13 on page 80 lists the
supported instructions.
Note:
In Table 2-13 on page 80:
■
■
■
■
■
Angle brackets, <>, enclose alternative forms of the operand
Braces, {}, enclose optional operands
The Operands column is not exhaustive
Op2 is a flexible second operand that can be either a register or a constant
Most instructions can use an optional condition code suffix
For more information on the instructions and operands, see the instruction descriptions in
the Cortex™-M3/M4 Instruction Set Technical User's Manual.
Table 2-13. Cortex-M3 Instruction Summary
Mnemonic
Operands
Brief Description
Flags
ADC, ADCS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Add with carry
N,Z,C,V
ADD, ADDS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Add
N,Z,C,V
ADD, ADDW
{Rd,} Rn , #imm12
Add
N,Z,C,V
ADR
Rd, label
Load PC-relative address
-
AND, ANDS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Logical AND
N,Z,C
ASR, ASRS
Rd, Rm, <Rs|#n>
Arithmetic shift right
N,Z,C
B
label
Branch
-
BFC
Rd, #lsb, #width
Bit field clear
-
BFI
Rd, Rn, #lsb, #width
Bit field insert
-
BIC, BICS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Bit clear
N,Z,C
BKPT
#imm
Breakpoint
-
BL
label
Branch with link
-
BLX
Rm
Branch indirect with link
-
BX
Rm
Branch indirect
-
CBNZ
Rn, label
Compare and branch if non-zero
-
80
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 2-13. Cortex-M3 Instruction Summary (continued)
Mnemonic
Operands
Brief Description
Flags
CBZ
Rn, label
Compare and branch if zero
-
CLREX
-
Clear exclusive
-
CLZ
Rd, Rm
Count leading zeros
-
CMN
Rn, Op2
Compare negative
N,Z,C,V
CMP
Rn, Op2
Compare
N,Z,C,V
CPSID
i
Change processor state, disable
interrupts
-
CPSIE
i
Change processor state, enable
interrupts
-
DMB
-
Data memory barrier
-
DSB
-
Data synchronization barrier
-
EOR, EORS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Exclusive OR
N,Z,C
ISB
-
Instruction synchronization barrier
-
IT
-
If-Then condition block
-
LDM
Rn{!}, reglist
Load multiple registers, increment after -
LDMDB, LDMEA
Rn{!}, reglist
Load multiple registers, decrement
before
LDMFD, LDMIA
Rn{!}, reglist
Load multiple registers, increment after -
LDR
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with word
-
LDRB, LDRBT
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with byte
-
LDRD
Rt, Rt2, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with two bytes
-
LDREX
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register exclusive
-
LDREXB
Rt, [Rn]
Load register exclusive with byte
-
LDREXH
Rt, [Rn]
Load register exclusive with halfword
-
LDRH, LDRHT
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with halfword
-
LDRSB, LDRSBT
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with signed byte
-
LDRSH, LDRSHT
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with signed halfword
-
LDRT
Rt, [Rn, #offset]
Load register with word
-
LSL, LSLS
Rd, Rm, <Rs|#n>
Logical shift left
N,Z,C
LSR, LSRS
Rd, Rm, <Rs|#n>
Logical shift right
N,Z,C
MLA
Rd, Rn, Rm, Ra
Multiply with accumulate, 32-bit result
-
MLS
Rd, Rn, Rm, Ra
Multiply and subtract, 32-bit result
-
MOV, MOVS
Rd, Op2
Move
N,Z,C
MOV, MOVW
Rd, #imm16
Move 16-bit constant
N,Z,C
MOVT
Rd, #imm16
Move top
-
MRS
Rd, spec_reg
Move from special register to general
register
-
MSR
spec_reg, Rm
Move from general register to special
register
N,Z,C,V
MUL, MULS
{Rd,} Rn, Rm
Multiply, 32-bit result
N,Z
MVN, MVNS
Rd, Op2
Move NOT
N,Z,C
NOP
-
No operation
-
ORN, ORNS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Logical OR NOT
N,Z,C
June 18, 2012
-
81
Texas Instruments-Production Data
The Cortex-M3 Processor
Table 2-13. Cortex-M3 Instruction Summary (continued)
Mnemonic
Operands
Brief Description
Flags
ORR, ORRS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Logical OR
N,Z,C
POP
reglist
Pop registers from stack
-
PUSH
reglist
Push registers onto stack
-
RBIT
Rd, Rn
Reverse bits
-
REV
Rd, Rn
Reverse byte order in a word
-
REV16
Rd, Rn
Reverse byte order in each halfword
-
REVSH
Rd, Rn
Reverse byte order in bottom halfword
and sign extend
-
ROR, RORS
Rd, Rm, <Rs|#n>
Rotate right
N,Z,C
RRX, RRXS
Rd, Rm
Rotate right with extend
N,Z,C
RSB, RSBS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Reverse subtract
N,Z,C,V
SBC, SBCS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Subtract with carry
N,Z,C,V
SBFX
Rd, Rn, #lsb, #width
Signed bit field extract
-
SDIV
{Rd,} Rn, Rm
Signed divide
-
SEV
-
Send event
-
SMLAL
RdLo, RdHi, Rn, Rm
Signed multiply with accumulate
(32x32+64), 64-bit result
-
SMULL
RdLo, RdHi, Rn, Rm
Signed multiply (32x32), 64-bit result
-
SSAT
Rd, #n, Rm {,shift #s}
Signed saturate
Q
STM
Rn{!}, reglist
Store multiple registers, increment after -
STMDB, STMEA
Rn{!}, reglist
Store multiple registers, decrement
before
STMFD, STMIA
Rn{!}, reglist
Store multiple registers, increment after -
STR
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register word
-
STRB, STRBT
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register byte
-
STRD
Rt, Rt2, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register two words
-
STREX
Rt, Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register exclusive
-
STREXB
Rd, Rt, [Rn]
Store register exclusive byte
-
STREXH
Rd, Rt, [Rn]
Store register exclusive halfword
-
STRH, STRHT
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register halfword
-
STRSB, STRSBT
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register signed byte
-
STRSH, STRSHT
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register signed halfword
-
STRT
Rt, [Rn {, #offset}]
Store register word
-
SUB, SUBS
{Rd,} Rn, Op2
Subtract
N,Z,C,V
SUB, SUBW
{Rd,} Rn, #imm12
Subtract 12-bit constant
N,Z,C,V
SVC
#imm
Supervisor call
-
SXTB
{Rd,} Rm {,ROR #n}
Sign extend a byte
-
SXTH
{Rd,} Rm {,ROR #n}
Sign extend a halfword
-
TBB
[Rn, Rm]
Table branch byte
-
TBH
[Rn, Rm, LSL #1]
Table branch halfword
-
TEQ
Rn, Op2
Test equivalence
N,Z,C
TST
Rn, Op2
Test
N,Z,C
82
-
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 2-13. Cortex-M3 Instruction Summary (continued)
Mnemonic
Operands
Brief Description
Flags
UBFX
Rd, Rn, #lsb, #width
Unsigned bit field extract
-
UDIV
{Rd,} Rn, Rm
Unsigned divide
-
UMLAL
RdLo, RdHi, Rn, Rm
Unsigned multiply with accumulate
(32x32+32+32), 64-bit result
-
UMULL
RdLo, RdHi, Rn, Rm
Unsigned multiply (32x 2), 64-bit result -
USAT
Rd, #n, Rm {,shift #s}
Unsigned Saturate
Q
UXTB
{Rd,} Rm, {,ROR #n}
Zero extend a Byte
-
UXTH
{Rd,} Rm, {,ROR #n}
Zero extend a Halfword
-
WFE
-
Wait for event
-
WFI
-
Wait for interrupt
-
June 18, 2012
83
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
3
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
®
This chapter provides information on the Stellaris implementation of the Cortex-M3 processor
peripherals, including:
■ SysTick (see page 84)
Provides a simple, 24-bit clear-on-write, decrementing, wrap-on-zero counter with a flexible
control mechanism.
■ Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) (see page 85)
– Facilitates low-latency exception and interrupt handling
– Controls power management
– Implements system control registers
■ System Control Block (SCB) (see page 87)
Provides system implementation information and system control, including configuration, control,
and reporting of system exceptions.
■ Memory Protection Unit (MPU) (see page 87)
Supports the standard ARMv7 Protected Memory System Architecture (PMSA) model. The MPU
provides full support for protection regions, overlapping protection regions, access permissions,
and exporting memory attributes to the system.
Table 3-1 on page 84 shows the address map of the Private Peripheral Bus (PPB). Some peripheral
register regions are split into two address regions, as indicated by two addresses listed.
Table 3-1. Core Peripheral Register Regions
Address
Core Peripheral
Description (see page ...)
0xE000.E010-0xE000.E01F
System Timer
84
0xE000.E100-0xE000.E4EF
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller
85
0xE000.ED00-0xE000.ED3F
System Control Block
87
0xE000.ED90-0xE000.EDB8
Memory Protection Unit
87
0xE000.EF00-0xE000.EF03
3.1
Functional Description
This chapter provides information on the Stellaris implementation of the Cortex-M3 processor
peripherals: SysTick, NVIC, SCB and MPU.
3.1.1
System Timer (SysTick)
Cortex-M3 includes an integrated system timer, SysTick, which provides a simple, 24-bit
clear-on-write, decrementing, wrap-on-zero counter with a flexible control mechanism. The counter
can be used in several different ways, for example as:
■ An RTOS tick timer that fires at a programmable rate (for example, 100 Hz) and invokes a SysTick
routine.
■ A high-speed alarm timer using the system clock.
84
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ A variable rate alarm or signal timer—the duration is range-dependent on the reference clock
used and the dynamic range of the counter.
■ A simple counter used to measure time to completion and time used.
■ An internal clock source control based on missing/meeting durations. The COUNT bit in the
STCTRL control and status register can be used to determine if an action completed within a
set duration, as part of a dynamic clock management control loop.
The timer consists of three registers:
■ SysTick Control and Status (STCTRL): A control and status counter to configure its clock,
enable the counter, enable the SysTick interrupt, and determine counter status.
■ SysTick Reload Value (STRELOAD): The reload value for the counter, used to provide the
counter's wrap value.
■ SysTick Current Value (STCURRENT): The current value of the counter.
When enabled, the timer counts down on each clock from the reload value to zero, reloads (wraps)
to the value in the STRELOAD register on the next clock edge, then decrements on subsequent
clocks. Clearing the STRELOAD register disables the counter on the next wrap. When the counter
reaches zero, the COUNT status bit is set. The COUNT bit clears on reads.
Writing to the STCURRENT register clears the register and the COUNT status bit. The write does
not trigger the SysTick exception logic. On a read, the current value is the value of the register at
the time the register is accessed.
The SysTick counter runs on the system clock. If this clock signal is stopped for low power mode,
the SysTick counter stops. Ensure software uses aligned word accesses to access the SysTick
registers.
Note:
3.1.2
When the processor is halted for debugging, the counter does not decrement.
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)
This section describes the Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) and the registers it uses.
The NVIC supports:
■ 22 interrupts.
■ A programmable priority level of 0-7 for each interrupt. A higher level corresponds to a lower
priority, so level 0 is the highest interrupt priority.
■ Low-latency exception and interrupt handling.
■ Level and pulse detection of interrupt signals.
■ Dynamic reprioritization of interrupts.
■ Grouping of priority values into group priority and subpriority fields.
■ Interrupt tail-chaining.
■ An external Non-maskable interrupt (NMI).
June 18, 2012
85
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
The processor automatically stacks its state on exception entry and unstacks this state on exception
exit, with no instruction overhead, providing low latency exception handling.
3.1.2.1
Level-Sensitive and Pulse Interrupts
The processor supports both level-sensitive and pulse interrupts. Pulse interrupts are also described
as edge-triggered interrupts.
A level-sensitive interrupt is held asserted until the peripheral deasserts the interrupt signal. Typically
this happens because the ISR accesses the peripheral, causing it to clear the interrupt request. A
pulse interrupt is an interrupt signal sampled synchronously on the rising edge of the processor
clock. To ensure the NVIC detects the interrupt, the peripheral must assert the interrupt signal for
at least one clock cycle, during which the NVIC detects the pulse and latches the interrupt.
When the processor enters the ISR, it automatically removes the pending state from the interrupt
(see “Hardware and Software Control of Interrupts” on page 86 for more information). For a
level-sensitive interrupt, if the signal is not deasserted before the processor returns from the ISR,
the interrupt becomes pending again, and the processor must execute its ISR again. As a result,
the peripheral can hold the interrupt signal asserted until it no longer needs servicing.
3.1.2.2
Hardware and Software Control of Interrupts
The Cortex-M3 latches all interrupts. A peripheral interrupt becomes pending for one of the following
reasons:
■ The NVIC detects that the interrupt signal is High and the interrupt is not active.
■ The NVIC detects a rising edge on the interrupt signal.
■ Software writes to the corresponding interrupt set-pending register bit, or to the Software Trigger
Interrupt (SWTRIG) register to make a Software-Generated Interrupt pending. See the INT bit
in the PEND0 register on page 103 or SWTRIG on page 111.
A pending interrupt remains pending until one of the following:
■ The processor enters the ISR for the interrupt, changing the state of the interrupt from pending
to active. Then:
– For a level-sensitive interrupt, when the processor returns from the ISR, the NVIC samples
the interrupt signal. If the signal is asserted, the state of the interrupt changes to pending,
which might cause the processor to immediately re-enter the ISR. Otherwise, the state of the
interrupt changes to inactive.
– For a pulse interrupt, the NVIC continues to monitor the interrupt signal, and if this is pulsed
the state of the interrupt changes to pending and active. In this case, when the processor
returns from the ISR the state of the interrupt changes to pending, which might cause the
processor to immediately re-enter the ISR.
If the interrupt signal is not pulsed while the processor is in the ISR, when the processor
returns from the ISR the state of the interrupt changes to inactive.
■ Software writes to the corresponding interrupt clear-pending register bit
– For a level-sensitive interrupt, if the interrupt signal is still asserted, the state of the interrupt
does not change. Otherwise, the state of the interrupt changes to inactive.
86
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
– For a pulse interrupt, the state of the interrupt changes to inactive, if the state was pending
or to active, if the state was active and pending.
3.1.3
System Control Block (SCB)
The System Control Block (SCB) provides system implementation information and system control,
including configuration, control, and reporting of the system exceptions.
3.1.4
Memory Protection Unit (MPU)
This section describes the Memory protection unit (MPU). The MPU divides the memory map into
a number of regions and defines the location, size, access permissions, and memory attributes of
each region. The MPU supports independent attribute settings for each region, overlapping regions,
and export of memory attributes to the system.
The memory attributes affect the behavior of memory accesses to the region. The Cortex-M3 MPU
defines eight separate memory regions, 0-7, and a background region.
When memory regions overlap, a memory access is affected by the attributes of the region with the
highest number. For example, the attributes for region 7 take precedence over the attributes of any
region that overlaps region 7.
The background region has the same memory access attributes as the default memory map, but is
accessible from privileged software only.
The Cortex-M3 MPU memory map is unified, meaning that instruction accesses and data accesses
have the same region settings.
If a program accesses a memory location that is prohibited by the MPU, the processor generates
a memory management fault, causing a fault exception and possibly causing termination of the
process in an OS environment. In an OS environment, the kernel can update the MPU region setting
dynamically based on the process to be executed. Typically, an embedded OS uses the MPU for
memory protection.
Configuration of MPU regions is based on memory types (see “Memory Regions, Types and
Attributes” on page 62 for more information).
Table 3-2 on page 87 shows the possible MPU region attributes. See the section called “MPU
Configuration for a Stellaris Microcontroller” on page 91 for guidelines for programming a
microcontroller implementation.
Table 3-2. Memory Attributes Summary
Memory Type
Description
Strongly Ordered
All accesses to Strongly Ordered memory occur in program order.
Device
Memory-mapped peripherals
Normal
Normal memory
To avoid unexpected behavior, disable the interrupts before updating the attributes of a region that
the interrupt handlers might access.
Ensure software uses aligned accesses of the correct size to access MPU registers:
■ Except for the MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR) register, all MPU registers must
be accessed with aligned word accesses.
■ The MPUATTR register can be accessed with byte or aligned halfword or word accesses.
June 18, 2012
87
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
The processor does not support unaligned accesses to MPU registers.
When setting up the MPU, and if the MPU has previously been programmed, disable unused regions
to prevent any previous region settings from affecting the new MPU setup.
3.1.4.1
Updating an MPU Region
To update the attributes for an MPU region, the MPU Region Number (MPUNUMBER), MPU
Region Base Address (MPUBASE) and MPUATTR registers must be updated. Each register can
be programmed separately or with a multiple-word write to program all of these registers. You can
use the MPUBASEx and MPUATTRx aliases to program up to four regions simultaneously using
an STM instruction.
Updating an MPU Region Using Separate Words
This example simple code configures one region:
; R1 = region number
; R2 = size/enable
; R3 = attributes
; R4 = address
LDR R0,=MPUNUMBER
STR R1, [R0, #0x0]
STR R4, [R0, #0x4]
STRH R2, [R0, #0x8]
STRH R3, [R0, #0xA]
;
;
;
;
;
0xE000ED98, MPU region number register
Region Number
Region Base Address
Region Size and Enable
Region Attribute
Disable a region before writing new region settings to the MPU if you have previously enabled the
region being changed. For example:
; R1 = region number
; R2 = size/enable
; R3 = attributes
; R4 = address
LDR R0,=MPUNUMBER
STR R1, [R0, #0x0]
BIC R2, R2, #1
STRH R2, [R0, #0x8]
STR R4, [R0, #0x4]
STRH R3, [R0, #0xA]
ORR R2, #1
STRH R2, [R0, #0x8]
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
0xE000ED98, MPU region number register
Region Number
Disable
Region Size and Enable
Region Base Address
Region Attribute
Enable
Region Size and Enable
Software must use memory barrier instructions:
■ Before MPU setup, if there might be outstanding memory transfers, such as buffered writes, that
might be affected by the change in MPU settings.
■ After MPU setup, if it includes memory transfers that must use the new MPU settings.
However, memory barrier instructions are not required if the MPU setup process starts by entering
an exception handler, or is followed by an exception return, because the exception entry and
exception return mechanism cause memory barrier behavior.
Software does not need any memory barrier instructions during MPU setup, because it accesses
the MPU through the Private Peripheral Bus (PPB), which is a Strongly Ordered memory region.
88
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
For example, if all of the memory access behavior is intended to take effect immediately after the
programming sequence, then a DSB instruction and an ISB instruction should be used. A DSB is
required after changing MPU settings, such as at the end of context switch. An ISB is required if
the code that programs the MPU region or regions is entered using a branch or call. If the
programming sequence is entered using a return from exception, or by taking an exception, then
an ISB is not required.
Updating an MPU Region Using Multi-Word Writes
The MPU can be programmed directly using multi-word writes, depending how the information is
divided. Consider the following reprogramming:
; R1 = region number
; R2 = address
; R3 = size, attributes in one
LDR R0, =MPUNUMBER ; 0xE000ED98, MPU region number register
STR R1, [R0, #0x0] ; Region Number
STR R2, [R0, #0x4] ; Region Base Address
STR R3, [R0, #0x8] ; Region Attribute, Size and Enable
An STM instruction can be used to optimize this:
; R1 = region number
; R2 = address
; R3 = size, attributes in one
LDR R0, =MPUNUMBER ; 0xE000ED98, MPU region number register
STM R0, {R1-R3}
; Region number, address, attribute, size and enable
This operation can be done in two words for pre-packed information, meaning that the MPU Region
Base Address (MPUBASE) register (see page 143) contains the required region number and has
the VALID bit set. This method can be used when the data is statically packed, for example in a
boot loader:
; R1 = address and region number in one
; R2 = size and attributes in one
LDR R0, =MPUBASE
; 0xE000ED9C, MPU Region Base register
STR R1, [R0, #0x0] ; Region base address and region number combined
; with VALID (bit 4) set
STR R2, [R0, #0x4] ; Region Attribute, Size and Enable
Subregions
Regions of 256 bytes or more are divided into eight equal-sized subregions. Set the corresponding
bit in the SRD field of the MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR) register (see page 145) to
disable a subregion. The least-significant bit of the SRD field controls the first subregion, and the
most-significant bit controls the last subregion. Disabling a subregion means another region
overlapping the disabled range matches instead. If no other enabled region overlaps the disabled
subregion, the MPU issues a fault.
Regions of 32, 64, and 128 bytes do not support subregions. With regions of these sizes, the SRD
field must be configured to 0x00, otherwise the MPU behavior is unpredictable.
June 18, 2012
89
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Example of SRD Use
Two regions with the same base address overlap. Region one is 128 KB, and region two is 512 KB.
To ensure the attributes from region one apply to the first 128 KB region, configure the SRD field for
region two to 0x03 to disable the first two subregions, as Figure 3-1 on page 90 shows.
Figure 3-1. SRD Use Example
Region 2, with
subregions
Region 1
Base address of both regions
3.1.4.2
Offset from
base address
512KB
448KB
384KB
320KB
256KB
192KB
128KB
Disabled subregion
64KB
Disabled subregion
0
MPU Access Permission Attributes
The access permission bits, TEX, S, C, B, AP, and XN of the MPUATTR register, control access to
the corresponding memory region. If an access is made to an area of memory without the required
permissions, then the MPU generates a permission fault.
Table 3-3 on page 90 shows the encodings for the TEX, C, B, and S access permission bits. All
encodings are shown for completeness, however the current implementation of the Cortex-M3 does
not support the concept of cacheability or shareability. Refer to the section called “MPU Configuration
for a Stellaris Microcontroller” on page 91 for information on programming the MPU for Stellaris
implementations.
Table 3-3. TEX, S, C, and B Bit Field Encoding
TEX
S
000b
x
C
B
Memory Type
Shareability
Other Attributes
a
0
0
Strongly Ordered
Shareable
-
a
-
000
x
0
1
Device
Shareable
000
0
1
0
Normal
Not shareable
000
1
1
0
Normal
Shareable
000
0
1
1
Normal
Not shareable
000
1
1
1
Normal
Shareable
001
0
0
0
Normal
Not shareable
001
1
0
0
Normal
Shareable
Outer and inner
noncacheable.
001
x
a
0
1
Reserved encoding
-
-
a
Outer and inner
write-through. No write
allocate.
001
x
1
0
Reserved encoding
-
-
001
0
1
1
Normal
Not shareable
001
1
1
1
Normal
Shareable
Outer and inner
write-back. Write and
read allocate.
010
x
a
0
0
Device
Not shareable
Nonshared Device.
a
0
1
Reserved encoding
-
-
a
1
x
Reserved encoding
-
-
010
x
010
x
a
90
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 3-3. TEX, S, C, and B Bit Field Encoding (continued)
TEX
S
C
B
Memory Type
Shareability
Other Attributes
1BB
0
A
A
Normal
Not shareable
1BB
1
A
A
Normal
Shareable
Cached memory (BB =
outer policy, AA = inner
policy).
See Table 3-4 for the
encoding of the AA and
BB bits.
a. The MPU ignores the value of this bit.
Table 3-4 on page 91 shows the cache policy for memory attribute encodings with a TEX value in
the range of 0x4-0x7.
Table 3-4. Cache Policy for Memory Attribute Encoding
Encoding, AA or BB
Corresponding Cache Policy
00
Non-cacheable
01
Write back, write and read allocate
10
Write through, no write allocate
11
Write back, no write allocate
Table 3-5 on page 91 shows the AP encodings in the MPUATTR register that define the access
permissions for privileged and unprivileged software.
Table 3-5. AP Bit Field Encoding
AP Bit Field
Privileged
Permissions
Unprivileged
Permissions
Description
000
No access
No access
All accesses generate a permission fault.
001
R/W
No access
Access from privileged software only.
010
R/W
RO
Writes by unprivileged software generate a
permission fault.
011
R/W
R/W
Full access.
100
Unpredictable
Unpredictable
Reserved.
101
RO
No access
Reads by privileged software only.
110
RO
RO
Read-only, by privileged or unprivileged software.
111
RO
RO
Read-only, by privileged or unprivileged software.
MPU Configuration for a Stellaris Microcontroller
Stellaris microcontrollers have only a single processor and no caches. As a result, the MPU should
be programmed as shown in Table 3-6 on page 91.
Table 3-6. Memory Region Attributes for Stellaris Microcontrollers
Memory Region
TEX
S
C
B
Memory Type and Attributes
Flash memory
000b
0
1
0
Normal memory, non-shareable, write-through
Internal SRAM
000b
1
1
0
Normal memory, shareable, write-through
External SRAM
000b
1
1
1
Normal memory, shareable, write-back,
write-allocate
Peripherals
000b
1
0
1
Device memory, shareable
June 18, 2012
91
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
In current Stellaris microcontroller implementations, the shareability and cache policy attributes do
not affect the system behavior. However, using these settings for the MPU regions can make the
application code more portable. The values given are for typical situations.
3.1.4.3
MPU Mismatch
When an access violates the MPU permissions, the processor generates a memory management
fault (see “Exceptions and Interrupts” on page 61 for more information). The MFAULTSTAT register
indicates the cause of the fault. See page 130 for more information.
3.2
Register Map
Table 3-7 on page 92 lists the Cortex-M3 Peripheral SysTick, NVIC, MPU and SCB registers. The
offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to the register's address, relative to the Core Peripherals
base address of 0xE000.E000.
Note:
Register spaces that are not used are reserved for future or internal use. Software should
not modify any reserved memory address.
Table 3-7. Peripherals Register Map
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
Description
See
page
System Timer (SysTick) Registers
0x010
STCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
SysTick Control and Status Register
95
0x014
STRELOAD
R/W
0x0000.0000
SysTick Reload Value Register
97
0x018
STCURRENT
R/WC
0x0000.0000
SysTick Current Value Register
98
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) Registers
0x100
EN0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-31 Set Enable
99
0x104
EN1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-43 Set Enable
100
0x180
DIS0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Enable
101
0x184
DIS1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Enable
102
0x200
PEND0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-31 Set Pending
103
0x204
PEND1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-43 Set Pending
104
0x280
UNPEND0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Pending
105
0x284
UNPEND1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Pending
106
0x300
ACTIVE0
RO
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-31 Active Bit
107
0x304
ACTIVE1
RO
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-43 Active Bit
108
0x400
PRI0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 0-3 Priority
109
0x404
PRI1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 4-7 Priority
109
0x408
PRI2
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 8-11 Priority
109
0x40C
PRI3
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 12-15 Priority
109
0x410
PRI4
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 16-19 Priority
109
92
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 3-7. Peripherals Register Map (continued)
Description
See
page
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
0x414
PRI5
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 20-23 Priority
109
0x418
PRI6
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 24-27 Priority
109
0x41C
PRI7
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 28-31 Priority
109
0x420
PRI8
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 32-35 Priority
109
0x424
PRI9
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 36-39 Priority
109
0x428
PRI10
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt 40-43 Priority
109
0xF00
SWTRIG
WO
0x0000.0000
Software Trigger Interrupt
111
System Control Block (SCB) Registers
0xD00
CPUID
RO
0x411F.C231
CPU ID Base
112
0xD04
INTCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt Control and State
113
0xD08
VTABLE
R/W
0x0000.0000
Vector Table Offset
116
0xD0C
APINT
R/W
0xFA05.0000
Application Interrupt and Reset Control
117
0xD10
SYSCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
System Control
119
0xD14
CFGCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
Configuration and Control
121
0xD18
SYSPRI1
R/W
0x0000.0000
System Handler Priority 1
123
0xD1C
SYSPRI2
R/W
0x0000.0000
System Handler Priority 2
124
0xD20
SYSPRI3
R/W
0x0000.0000
System Handler Priority 3
125
0xD24
SYSHNDCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
System Handler Control and State
126
0xD28
FAULTSTAT
R/W1C
0x0000.0000
Configurable Fault Status
130
0xD2C
HFAULTSTAT
R/W1C
0x0000.0000
Hard Fault Status
136
0xD34
MMADDR
R/W
-
Memory Management Fault Address
137
0xD38
FAULTADDR
R/W
-
Bus Fault Address
138
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) Registers
0xD90
MPUTYPE
RO
0x0000.0800
MPU Type
139
0xD94
MPUCTRL
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Control
140
0xD98
MPUNUMBER
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Number
142
0xD9C
MPUBASE
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Base Address
143
0xDA0
MPUATTR
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Attribute and Size
145
0xDA4
MPUBASE1
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Base Address Alias 1
143
0xDA8
MPUATTR1
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 1
145
0xDAC
MPUBASE2
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Base Address Alias 2
143
0xDB0
MPUATTR2
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 2
145
June 18, 2012
93
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Table 3-7. Peripherals Register Map (continued)
Name
Type
Reset
0xDB4
MPUBASE3
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Base Address Alias 3
143
0xDB8
MPUATTR3
R/W
0x0000.0000
MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 3
145
3.3
Description
See
page
Offset
System Timer (SysTick) Register Descriptions
This section lists and describes the System Timer registers, in numerical order by address offset.
94
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: SysTick Control and Status Register (STCTRL), offset 0x010
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SysTick STCTRL register enables the SysTick features.
SysTick Control and Status Register (STCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x010
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
16
COUNT
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
CLK_SRC
INTEN
ENABLE
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:17
reserved
RO
0x000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
16
COUNT
RO
0
Count Flag
Value
Description
0
The SysTick timer has not counted to 0 since the last time
this bit was read.
1
The SysTick timer has counted to 0 since the last time
this bit was read.
This bit is cleared by a read of the register or if the STCURRENT register
is written with any value.
If read by the debugger using the DAP, this bit is cleared only if the
MasterType bit in the AHB-AP Control Register is clear. Otherwise,
the COUNT bit is not changed by the debugger read. See the ARM®
Debug Interface V5 Architecture Specification for more information on
MasterType.
15:3
reserved
RO
0x000
2
CLK_SRC
R/W
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Clock Source
Value Description
0
External reference clock. (Not implemented for most Stellaris
microcontrollers.)
1
System clock
Because an external reference clock is not implemented, this bit must
be set in order for SysTick to operate.
June 18, 2012
95
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
INTEN
R/W
0
0
ENABLE
R/W
0
Description
Interrupt Enable
Value
Description
0
Interrupt generation is disabled. Software can use the
COUNT bit to determine if the counter has ever reached 0.
1
An interrupt is generated to the NVIC when SysTick counts
to 0.
Enable
Value
Description
0
The counter is disabled.
1
Enables SysTick to operate in a multi-shot way. That is, the
counter loads the RELOAD value and begins counting down.
On reaching 0, the COUNT bit is set and an interrupt is
generated if enabled by INTEN. The counter then loads the
RELOAD value again and begins counting.
96
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 2: SysTick Reload Value Register (STRELOAD), offset 0x014
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The STRELOAD register specifies the start value to load into the SysTick Current Value
(STCURRENT) register when the counter reaches 0. The start value can be between 0x1 and
0x00FF.FFFF. A start value of 0 is possible but has no effect because the SysTick interrupt and the
COUNT bit are activated when counting from 1 to 0.
SysTick can be configured as a multi-shot timer, repeated over and over, firing every N+1 clock
pulses, where N is any value from 1 to 0x00FF.FFFF. For example, if a tick interrupt is required
every 100 clock pulses, 99 must be written into the RELOAD field.
SysTick Reload Value Register (STRELOAD)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x014
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
19
RELOAD
RELOAD
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:24
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:0
RELOAD
R/W
0x00.0000
Reload Value
Value to load into the SysTick Current Value (STCURRENT) register
when the counter reaches 0.
June 18, 2012
97
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 3: SysTick Current Value Register (STCURRENT), offset 0x018
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The STCURRENT register contains the current value of the SysTick counter.
SysTick Current Value Register (STCURRENT)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x018
Type R/WC, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
reserved
Type
Reset
20
19
18
17
16
CURRENT
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
CURRENT
Type
Reset
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
R/WC
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:24
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:0
CURRENT
R/WC
0x00.0000
Current Value
This field contains the current value at the time the register is accessed.
No read-modify-write protection is provided, so change with care.
This register is write-clear. Writing to it with any value clears the register.
Clearing this register also clears the COUNT bit of the STCTRL register.
3.4
NVIC Register Descriptions
This section lists and describes the NVIC registers, in numerical order by address offset.
The NVIC registers can only be fully accessed from privileged mode, but interrupts can be pended
while in unprivileged mode by enabling the Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL) register. Any
other unprivileged mode access causes a bus fault.
Ensure software uses correctly aligned register accesses. The processor does not support unaligned
accesses to NVIC registers.
An interrupt can enter the pending state even if it is disabled.
Before programming the VTABLE register to relocate the vector table, ensure the vector table
entries of the new vector table are set up for fault handlers, NMI, and all enabled exceptions such
as interrupts. For more information, see page 116.
98
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 4: Interrupt 0-31 Set Enable (EN0), offset 0x100
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The EN0 register enables interrupts and shows which interrupts are enabled. Bit 0 corresponds to
Interrupt 0; bit 31 corresponds to Interrupt 31.
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
If a pending interrupt is enabled, the NVIC activates the interrupt based on its priority. If an interrupt
is not enabled, asserting its interrupt signal changes the interrupt state to pending, but the NVIC
never activates the interrupt, regardless of its priority.
Interrupt 0-31 Set Enable (EN0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x100
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
INT
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
INT
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
INT
R/W
R/W
0
Reset
R/W
0
Description
0x0000.0000 Interrupt Enable
Value
Description
0
On a read, indicates the interrupt is disabled.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates the interrupt is enabled.
On a write, enables the interrupt.
A bit can only be cleared by setting the corresponding INT[n] bit in
the DISn register.
June 18, 2012
99
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 5: Interrupt 32-43 Set Enable (EN1), offset 0x104
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The EN1 register enables interrupts and shows which interrupts are enabled. Bit 0 corresponds to
Interrupt 32; bit 11 corresponds to Interrupt 43. See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
If a pending interrupt is enabled, the NVIC activates the interrupt based on its priority. If an interrupt
is not enabled, asserting its interrupt signal changes the interrupt state to pending, but the NVIC
never activates the interrupt, regardless of its priority.
Interrupt 32-43 Set Enable (EN1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x104
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
INT
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:12
reserved
RO
0x0000.0
11:0
INT
R/W
0x000
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt Enable
Value
Description
0
On a read, indicates the interrupt is disabled.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates the interrupt is enabled.
On a write, enables the interrupt.
A bit can only be cleared by setting the corresponding INT[n] bit in
the DIS1 register.
100
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 6: Interrupt 0-31 Clear Enable (DIS0), offset 0x180
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The DIS0 register disables interrupts. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 0; bit 31 corresponds to Interrupt
31.
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Enable (DIS0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x180
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
INT
Type
Reset
INT
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
INT
R/W
Reset
Description
0x0000.0000 Interrupt Disable
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates the interrupt is disabled.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates the interrupt is enabled.
On a write, clears the corresponding INT[n] bit in the EN0
register, disabling interrupt [n].
June 18, 2012
101
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 7: Interrupt 32-43 Clear Enable (DIS1), offset 0x184
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The DIS1 register disables interrupts. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 32; bit 11 corresponds to Interrupt
43. See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Enable (DIS1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x184
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
INT
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:12
reserved
RO
0x0000.0
11:0
INT
R/W
0x000
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt Disable
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates the interrupt is disabled.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates the interrupt is enabled.
On a write, clears the corresponding INT[n] bit in the EN1
register, disabling interrupt [n].
102
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 8: Interrupt 0-31 Set Pending (PEND0), offset 0x200
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The PEND0 register forces interrupts into the pending state and shows which interrupts are pending.
Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 0; bit 31 corresponds to Interrupt 31.
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 0-31 Set Pending (PEND0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x200
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
INT
Type
Reset
INT
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
INT
R/W
Reset
Description
0x0000.0000 Interrupt Set Pending
Value
Description
0
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is pending.
On a write, the corresponding interrupt is set to pending
even if it is disabled.
If the corresponding interrupt is already pending, setting a bit has no
effect.
A bit can only be cleared by setting the corresponding INT[n] bit in
the UNPEND0 register.
June 18, 2012
103
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 9: Interrupt 32-43 Set Pending (PEND1), offset 0x204
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The PEND1 register forces interrupts into the pending state and shows which interrupts are pending.
Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 32; bit 11 corresponds to Interrupt 43. See Table 2-9 on page 72 for
interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 32-43 Set Pending (PEND1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x204
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
INT
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:12
reserved
RO
0x0000.0
11:0
INT
R/W
0x000
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt Set Pending
Value
Description
0
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is pending.
On a write, the corresponding interrupt is set to pending
even if it is disabled.
If the corresponding interrupt is already pending, setting a bit has no
effect.
A bit can only be cleared by setting the corresponding INT[n] bit in
the UNPEND1 register.
104
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 10: Interrupt 0-31 Clear Pending (UNPEND0), offset 0x280
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The UNPEND0 register shows which interrupts are pending and removes the pending state from
interrupts. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 0; bit 31 corresponds to Interrupt 31.
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 0-31 Clear Pending (UNPEND0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x280
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
INT
Type
Reset
INT
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
INT
R/W
Reset
Description
0x0000.0000 Interrupt Clear Pending
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is pending.
On a write, clears the corresponding INT[n] bit in the PEND0
register, so that interrupt [n] is no longer pending.
Setting a bit does not affect the active state of the corresponding
interrupt.
June 18, 2012
105
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 11: Interrupt 32-43 Clear Pending (UNPEND1), offset 0x284
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The UNPEND1 register shows which interrupts are pending and removes the pending state from
interrupts. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 32; bit 11 corresponds to Interrupt 43. See Table
2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Interrupt 32-43 Clear Pending (UNPEND1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x284
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
INT
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:12
reserved
RO
0x0000.0
11:0
INT
R/W
0x000
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt Clear Pending
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates that the interrupt is pending.
On a write, clears the corresponding INT[n] bit in the PEND1
register, so that interrupt [n] is no longer pending.
Setting a bit does not affect the active state of the corresponding
interrupt.
106
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 12: Interrupt 0-31 Active Bit (ACTIVE0), offset 0x300
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The ACTIVE0 register indicates which interrupts are active. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 0; bit 31
corresponds to Interrupt 31.
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Caution – Do not manually set or clear the bits in this register.
Interrupt 0-31 Active Bit (ACTIVE0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x300
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
INT
Type
Reset
INT
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
INT
RO
Reset
Description
0x0000.0000 Interrupt Active
Value Description
0
The corresponding interrupt is not active.
1
The corresponding interrupt is active, or active and pending.
June 18, 2012
107
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 13: Interrupt 32-43 Active Bit (ACTIVE1), offset 0x304
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The ACTIVE1 register indicates which interrupts are active. Bit 0 corresponds to Interrupt 32; bit
11 corresponds to Interrupt 43. See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Caution – Do not manually set or clear the bits in this register.
Interrupt 32-43 Active Bit (ACTIVE1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x304
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
INT
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:12
reserved
RO
0x0000.0
11:0
INT
RO
0x000
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt Active
Value Description
0
The corresponding interrupt is not active.
1
The corresponding interrupt is active, or active and pending.
108
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 14: Interrupt 0-3 Priority (PRI0), offset 0x400
Register 15: Interrupt 4-7 Priority (PRI1), offset 0x404
Register 16: Interrupt 8-11 Priority (PRI2), offset 0x408
Register 17: Interrupt 12-15 Priority (PRI3), offset 0x40C
Register 18: Interrupt 16-19 Priority (PRI4), offset 0x410
Register 19: Interrupt 20-23 Priority (PRI5), offset 0x414
Register 20: Interrupt 24-27 Priority (PRI6), offset 0x418
Register 21: Interrupt 28-31 Priority (PRI7), offset 0x41C
Register 22: Interrupt 32-35 Priority (PRI8), offset 0x420
Register 23: Interrupt 36-39 Priority (PRI9), offset 0x424
Register 24: Interrupt 40-43 Priority (PRI10), offset 0x428
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The PRIn registers provide 3-bit priority fields for each interrupt. These registers are byte accessible.
Each register holds four priority fields that are assigned to interrupts as follows:
PRIn Register Bit Field
Interrupt
Bits 31:29
Interrupt [4n+3]
Bits 23:21
Interrupt [4n+2]
Bits 15:13
Interrupt [4n+1]
Bits 7:5
Interrupt [4n]
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
Each priority level can be split into separate group priority and subpriority fields. The PRIGROUP
field in the Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT) register (see page 117) indicates the
position of the binary point that splits the priority and subpriority fields.
These registers can only be accessed from privileged mode.
Interrupt 0-3 Priority (PRI0)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0x400
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
INTD
Type
Reset
R/W
0
15
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
14
13
12
11
INTB
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
26
25
24
23
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
10
9
8
7
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
22
21
20
19
INTC
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
INTA
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
R/W
0
June 18, 2012
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
109
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:29
INTD
R/W
0x0
Description
Interrupt Priority for Interrupt [4n+3]
This field holds a priority value, 0-7, for the interrupt with the number
[4n+3], where n is the number of the Interrupt Priority register (n=0 for
PRI0, and so on). The lower the value, the greater the priority of the
corresponding interrupt.
28:24
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:21
INTC
R/W
0x0
Interrupt Priority for Interrupt [4n+2]
This field holds a priority value, 0-7, for the interrupt with the number
[4n+2], where n is the number of the Interrupt Priority register (n=0 for
PRI0, and so on). The lower the value, the greater the priority of the
corresponding interrupt.
20:16
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:13
INTB
R/W
0x0
Interrupt Priority for Interrupt [4n+1]
This field holds a priority value, 0-7, for the interrupt with the number
[4n+1], where n is the number of the Interrupt Priority register (n=0 for
PRI0, and so on). The lower the value, the greater the priority of the
corresponding interrupt.
12:8
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:5
INTA
R/W
0x0
Interrupt Priority for Interrupt [4n]
This field holds a priority value, 0-7, for the interrupt with the number
[4n], where n is the number of the Interrupt Priority register (n=0 for
PRI0, and so on). The lower the value, the greater the priority of the
corresponding interrupt.
4:0
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
110
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 25: Software Trigger Interrupt (SWTRIG), offset 0xF00
Note:
Only privileged software can enable unprivileged access to the SWTRIG register.
Writing an interrupt number to the SWTRIG register generates a Software Generated Interrupt (SGI).
See Table 2-9 on page 72 for interrupt assignments.
When the MAINPEND bit in the Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL) register (see page 121) is
set, unprivileged software can access the SWTRIG register.
Software Trigger Interrupt (SWTRIG)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xF00
Type WO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
INTID
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:6
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
5:0
INTID
WO
0x00
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Interrupt ID
This field holds the interrupt ID of the required SGI. For example, a value
of 0x3 generates an interrupt on IRQ3.
3.5
System Control Block (SCB) Register Descriptions
This section lists and describes the System Control Block (SCB) registers, in numerical order by
address offset. The SCB registers can only be accessed from privileged mode.
All registers must be accessed with aligned word accesses except for the FAULTSTAT and
SYSPRI1-SYSPRI3 registers, which can be accessed with byte or aligned halfword or word accesses.
The processor does not support unaligned accesses to system control block registers.
June 18, 2012
111
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 26: CPU ID Base (CPUID), offset 0xD00
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The CPUID register contains the ARM® Cortex™-M3 processor part number, version, and
implementation information.
CPU ID Base (CPUID)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD00
Type RO, reset 0x411F.C231
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
IMP
Type
Reset
21
20
19
18
VAR
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
PARTNO
Type
Reset
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
17
16
RO
1
RO
1
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
CON
REV
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:24
IMP
RO
0x41
Implementer Code
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
Value Description
0x41 ARM
23:20
VAR
RO
0x1
Variant Number
Value Description
0x1
19:16
CON
RO
0xF
The rn value in the rnpn product revision identifier, for example,
the 1 in r1p1.
Constant
Value Description
0xF
15:4
PARTNO
RO
0xC23
Always reads as 0xF.
Part Number
Value Description
0xC23 Cortex-M3 processor.
3:0
REV
RO
0x1
Revision Number
Value Description
0x1
The pn value in the rnpn product revision identifier, for example,
the 1 in r1p1.
112
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 27: Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL), offset 0xD04
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The INCTRL register provides a set-pending bit for the NMI exception, and set-pending and
clear-pending bits for the PendSV and SysTick exceptions. In addition, bits in this register indicate
the exception number of the exception being processed, whether there are preempted active
exceptions, the exception number of the highest priority pending exception, and whether any interrupts
are pending.
When writing to INCTRL, the effect is unpredictable when writing a 1 to both the PENDSV and
UNPENDSV bits, or writing a 1 to both the PENDSTSET and PENDSTCLR bits.
Interrupt Control and State (INTCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD04
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
NMISET
Type
Reset
29
reserved
28
26
25
24
PENDSV UNPENDSV PENDSTSET PENDSTCLR reserved
23
22
21
20
ISRPRE ISRPEND
19
18
17
reserved
16
VECPEND
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
WO
0
R/W
0
WO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
VECPEND
Type
Reset
27
RO
0
RETBASE
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
NMISET
R/W
0
RO
0
VECACT
Description
NMI Set Pending
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates an NMI exception is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates an NMI exception is pending.
On a write, changes the NMI exception state to pending.
Because NMI is the highest-priority exception, normally the processor
enters the NMI exception handler as soon as it registers the setting of
this bit, and clears this bit on entering the interrupt handler. A read of
this bit by the NMI exception handler returns 1 only if the NMI signal is
reasserted while the processor is executing that handler.
30:29
reserved
RO
0x0
28
PENDSV
R/W
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
PendSV Set Pending
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates a PendSV exception is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates a PendSV exception is pending.
On a write, changes the PendSV exception state to pending.
Setting this bit is the only way to set the PendSV exception state to
pending. This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to the UNPENDSV bit.
June 18, 2012
113
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
27
UNPENDSV
WO
0
Description
PendSV Clear Pending
Value Description
0
On a write, no effect.
1
On a write, removes the pending state from the PendSV
exception.
This bit is write only; on a register read, its value is unknown.
26
PENDSTSET
R/W
0
SysTick Set Pending
Value Description
0
On a read, indicates a SysTick exception is not pending.
On a write, no effect.
1
On a read, indicates a SysTick exception is pending.
On a write, changes the SysTick exception state to pending.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to the PENDSTCLR bit.
25
PENDSTCLR
WO
0
SysTick Clear Pending
Value Description
0
On a write, no effect.
1
On a write, removes the pending state from the SysTick
exception.
This bit is write only; on a register read, its value is unknown.
24
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23
ISRPRE
RO
0
Debug Interrupt Handling
Value Description
0
The release from halt does not take an interrupt.
1
The release from halt takes an interrupt.
This bit is only meaningful in Debug mode and reads as zero when the
processor is not in Debug mode.
22
ISRPEND
RO
0
Interrupt Pending
Value Description
0
No interrupt is pending.
1
An interrupt is pending.
This bit provides status for all interrupts excluding NMI and Faults.
21:18
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
114
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
17:12
VECPEND
RO
0x00
Interrupt Pending Vector Number
This field contains the exception number of the highest priority pending
enabled exception. The value indicated by this field includes the effect
of the BASEPRI and FAULTMASK registers, but not any effect of the
PRIMASK register.
Value
Description
0x00
No exceptions are pending
0x01
Reserved
0x02
NMI
0x03
Hard fault
0x04
Memory management fault
0x05
Bus fault
0x06
Usage fault
0x07-0x0A Reserved
0x0B
SVCall
0x0C
Reserved for Debug
0x0D
Reserved
0x0E
PendSV
0x0F
SysTick
0x10
Interrupt Vector 0
0x11
Interrupt Vector 1
...
...
0x3B
Interrupt Vector 43
0x3C-0x3F Reserved
11
RETBASE
RO
0
Return to Base
Value Description
0
There are preempted active exceptions to execute.
1
There are no active exceptions, or the currently executing
exception is the only active exception.
This bit provides status for all interrupts excluding NMI and Faults. This
bit only has meaning if the processor is currently executing an ISR (the
Interrupt Program Status (IPSR) register is non-zero).
10:6
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:0
VECACT
RO
0x00
Interrupt Pending Vector Number
This field contains the active exception number. The exception numbers
can be found in the description for the VECPEND field. If this field is clear,
the processor is in Thread mode. This field contains the same value as
the ISRNUM field in the IPSR register.
Subtract 16 from this value to obtain the IRQ number required to index
into the Interrupt Set Enable (ENn), Interrupt Clear Enable (DISn),
Interrupt Set Pending (PENDn), Interrupt Clear Pending (UNPENDn),
and Interrupt Priority (PRIn) registers (see page 53).
June 18, 2012
115
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 28: Vector Table Offset (VTABLE), offset 0xD08
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The VTABLE register indicates the offset of the vector table base address from memory address
0x0000.0000.
Vector Table Offset (VTABLE)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD08
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
reserved
Type
Reset
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
BASE
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
OFFSET
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
OFFSET
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:30
reserved
RO
0x0
29
BASE
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Vector Table Base
Value Description
28:8
OFFSET
R/W
0x000.00
0
The vector table is in the code memory region.
1
The vector table is in the SRAM memory region.
Vector Table Offset
When configuring the OFFSET field, the offset must be aligned to the
number of exception entries in the vector table. Because there are 43
interrupts, the offset must be aligned on a 256-byte boundary.
7:0
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
116
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 29: Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT), offset 0xD0C
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The APINT register provides priority grouping control for the exception model, endian status for
data accesses, and reset control of the system. To write to this register, 0x05FA must be written to
the VECTKEY field, otherwise the write is ignored.
The PRIGROUP field indicates the position of the binary point that splits the INTx fields in the
Interrupt Priority (PRIx) registers into separate group priority and subpriority fields. Table
3-8 on page 117 shows how the PRIGROUP value controls this split. The bit numbers in the Group
Priority Field and Subpriority Field columns in the table refer to the bits in the INTA field. For the
INTB field, the corresponding bits are 15:13; for INTC, 23:21; and for INTD, 31:29.
Note:
Determining preemption of an exception uses only the group priority field.
Table 3-8. Interrupt Priority Levels
a
PRIGROUP Bit Field
Binary Point
Group Priority Field Subpriority Field
Group
Priorities
Subpriorities
0x0 - 0x4
bxxx.
[7:5]
None
8
1
0x5
bxx.y
[7:6]
[5]
4
2
0x6
bx.yy
[7]
[6:5]
2
4
0x7
b.yyy
None
[7:5]
1
8
a. INTx field showing the binary point. An x denotes a group priority field bit, and a y denotes a subpriority field bit.
Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD0C
Type R/W, reset 0xFA05.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
R/W
0
R/W
1
5
4
3
2
1
0
VECTKEY
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
reserved
ENDIANESS
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
1
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
9
8
7
6
PRIGROUP
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
VECTKEY
R/W
0xFA05
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
SYSRESREQ VECTCLRACT VECTRESET
RO
0
RO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
Description
Register Key
This field is used to guard against accidental writes to this register.
0x05FA must be written to this field in order to change the bits in this
register. On a read, 0xFA05 is returned.
15
ENDIANESS
RO
0
Data Endianess
The Stellaris implementation uses only little-endian mode so this is
cleared to 0.
14:11
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
117
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
10:8
PRIGROUP
R/W
0x0
Description
Interrupt Priority Grouping
This field determines the split of group priority from subpriority (see
Table 3-8 on page 117 for more information).
7:3
reserved
RO
0x0
2
SYSRESREQ
WO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
System Reset Request
Value Description
0
No effect.
1
Resets the core and all on-chip peripherals except the Debug
interface.
This bit is automatically cleared during the reset of the core and reads
as 0.
1
VECTCLRACT
WO
0
Clear Active NMI / Fault
This bit is reserved for Debug use and reads as 0. This bit must be
written as a 0, otherwise behavior is unpredictable.
0
VECTRESET
WO
0
System Reset
This bit is reserved for Debug use and reads as 0. This bit must be
written as a 0, otherwise behavior is unpredictable.
118
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 30: System Control (SYSCTRL), offset 0xD10
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SYSCTRL register controls features of entry to and exit from low-power state.
System Control (SYSCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD10
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:5
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
4
SEVONPEND
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
SEVONPEND
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
SLEEPDEEP SLEEPEXIT
R/W
0
R/W
0
0
reserved
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Wake Up on Pending
Value Description
0
Only enabled interrupts or events can wake up the processor;
disabled interrupts are excluded.
1
Enabled events and all interrupts, including disabled interrupts,
can wake up the processor.
When an event or interrupt enters the pending state, the event signal
wakes up the processor from WFE. If the processor is not waiting for an
event, the event is registered and affects the next WFE.
The processor also wakes up on execution of a SEV instruction or an
external event.
3
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
2
SLEEPDEEP
R/W
0
Deep Sleep Enable
Value Description
0
Use Sleep mode as the low power mode.
1
Use Deep-sleep mode as the low power mode.
June 18, 2012
119
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
SLEEPEXIT
R/W
0
Description
Sleep on ISR Exit
Value Description
0
When returning from Handler mode to Thread mode, do not
sleep when returning to Thread mode.
1
When returning from Handler mode to Thread mode, enter sleep
or deep sleep on return from an ISR.
Setting this bit enables an interrupt-driven application to avoid returning
to an empty main application.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
120
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 31: Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL), offset 0xD14
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The CFGCTRL register controls entry to Thread mode and enables: the handlers for NMI, hard fault
and faults escalated by the FAULTMASK register to ignore bus faults; trapping of divide by zero
and unaligned accesses; and access to the SWTRIG register by unprivileged software (see page 111).
Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD14
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
reserved
STKALIGN BFHFNMIGN
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:10
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
9
STKALIGN
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
2
1
0
DIV0
UNALIGNED
reserved
MAINPEND
BASETHR
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Stack Alignment on Exception Entry
Value Description
0
The stack is 4-byte aligned.
1
The stack is 8-byte aligned.
On exception entry, the processor uses bit 9 of the stacked PSR to
indicate the stack alignment. On return from the exception, it uses this
stacked bit to restore the correct stack alignment.
8
BFHFNMIGN
R/W
0
Ignore Bus Fault in NMI and Fault
This bit enables handlers with priority -1 or -2 to ignore data bus faults
caused by load and store instructions. The setting of this bit applies to
the hard fault, NMI, and FAULTMASK escalated handlers.
Value Description
0
Data bus faults caused by load and store instructions cause a
lock-up.
1
Handlers running at priority -1 and -2 ignore data bus faults
caused by load and store instructions.
Set this bit only when the handler and its data are in absolutely safe
memory. The normal use of this bit is to probe system devices and
bridges to detect control path problems and fix them.
7:5
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
121
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
4
DIV0
R/W
0
Description
Trap on Divide by 0
This bit enables faulting or halting when the processor executes an
SDIV or UDIV instruction with a divisor of 0.
Value Description
3
UNALIGNED
R/W
0
0
Do not trap on divide by 0. A divide by zero returns a quotient
of 0.
1
Trap on divide by 0.
Trap on Unaligned Access
Value Description
0
Do not trap on unaligned halfword and word accesses.
1
Trap on unaligned halfword and word accesses. An unaligned
access generates a usage fault.
Unaligned LDM, STM, LDRD, and STRD instructions always fault
regardless of whether UNALIGNED is set.
2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
MAINPEND
R/W
0
Allow Main Interrupt Trigger
Value Description
0
BASETHR
R/W
0
0
Disables unprivileged software access to the SWTRIG register.
1
Enables unprivileged software access to the SWTRIG register
(see page 111).
Thread State Control
Value Description
0
The processor can enter Thread mode only when no exception
is active.
1
The processor can enter Thread mode from any level under the
control of an EXC_RETURN value (see “Exception
Return” on page 76 for more information).
122
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 32: System Handler Priority 1 (SYSPRI1), offset 0xD18
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SYSPRI1 register configures the priority level, 0 to 7 of the usage fault, bus fault, and memory
management fault exception handlers. This register is byte-accessible.
System Handler Priority 1 (SYSPRI1)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD18
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
15
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
14
13
12
11
BUS
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
10
9
8
7
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
22
21
20
19
USAGE
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
MEM
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:24
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:21
USAGE
R/W
0x0
Usage Fault Priority
This field configures the priority level of the usage fault. Configurable
priority values are in the range 0-7, with lower values having higher
priority.
20:16
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:13
BUS
R/W
0x0
Bus Fault Priority
This field configures the priority level of the bus fault. Configurable priority
values are in the range 0-7, with lower values having higher priority.
12:8
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:5
MEM
R/W
0x0
Memory Management Fault Priority
This field configures the priority level of the memory management fault.
Configurable priority values are in the range 0-7, with lower values
having higher priority.
4:0
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
123
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 33: System Handler Priority 2 (SYSPRI2), offset 0xD1C
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SYSPRI2 register configures the priority level, 0 to 7 of the SVCall handler. This register is
byte-accessible.
System Handler Priority 2 (SYSPRI2)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD1C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
SVC
Type
Reset
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:29
SVC
R/W
0x0
RO
0
Description
SVCall Priority
This field configures the priority level of SVCall. Configurable priority
values are in the range 0-7, with lower values having higher priority.
28:0
reserved
RO
0x000.0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
124
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 34: System Handler Priority 3 (SYSPRI3), offset 0xD20
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SYSPRI3 register configures the priority level, 0 to 7 of the SysTick exception and PendSV
handlers. This register is byte-accessible.
System Handler Priority 3 (SYSPRI3)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD20
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
TICK
Type
Reset
26
25
24
23
reserved
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
22
21
20
19
PENDSV
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
DEBUG
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:29
TICK
R/W
0x0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Description
SysTick Exception Priority
This field configures the priority level of the SysTick exception.
Configurable priority values are in the range 0-7, with lower values
having higher priority.
28:24
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:21
PENDSV
R/W
0x0
PendSV Priority
This field configures the priority level of PendSV. Configurable priority
values are in the range 0-7, with lower values having higher priority.
20:8
reserved
RO
0x000
7:5
DEBUG
R/W
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Debug Priority
This field configures the priority level of Debug. Configurable priority
values are in the range 0-7, with lower values having higher priority.
4:0
reserved
RO
0x0.0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
125
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 35: System Handler Control and State (SYSHNDCTRL), offset 0xD24
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The SYSHNDCTRL register enables the system handlers, and indicates the pending status of the
usage fault, bus fault, memory management fault, and SVC exceptions as well as the active status
of the system handlers.
If a system handler is disabled and the corresponding fault occurs, the processor treats the fault as
a hard fault.
This register can be modified to change the pending or active status of system exceptions. An OS
kernel can write to the active bits to perform a context switch that changes the current exception
type.
Caution – Software that changes the value of an active bit in this register without correct adjustment
to the stacked content can cause the processor to generate a fault exception. Ensure software that writes
to this register retains and subsequently restores the current active status.
If the value of a bit in this register must be modified after enabling the system handlers, a
read-modify-write procedure must be used to ensure that only the required bit is modified.
System Handler Control and State (SYSHNDCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD24
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
SVC
BUSP
MEMP
USAGEP
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
USAGE
BUS
MEM
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TICK
PNDSV
reserved
MON
SVCA
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
USGA
reserved
BUSA
MEMA
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
Type
Reset
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:19
reserved
RO
0x000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
USAGE
R/W
0
Usage Fault Enable
Value Description
17
BUS
R/W
0
0
Disables the usage fault exception.
1
Enables the usage fault exception.
Bus Fault Enable
Value Description
0
Disables the bus fault exception.
1
Enables the bus fault exception.
126
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
16
MEM
R/W
0
Description
Memory Management Fault Enable
Value Description
15
SVC
R/W
0
0
Disables the memory management fault exception.
1
Enables the memory management fault exception.
SVC Call Pending
Value Description
0
An SVC call exception is not pending.
1
An SVC call exception is pending.
This bit can be modified to change the pending status of the SVC call
exception.
14
BUSP
R/W
0
Bus Fault Pending
Value Description
0
A bus fault exception is not pending.
1
A bus fault exception is pending.
This bit can be modified to change the pending status of the bus fault
exception.
13
MEMP
R/W
0
Memory Management Fault Pending
Value Description
0
A memory management fault exception is not pending.
1
A memory management fault exception is pending.
This bit can be modified to change the pending status of the memory
management fault exception.
12
USAGEP
R/W
0
Usage Fault Pending
Value Description
0
A usage fault exception is not pending.
1
A usage fault exception is pending.
This bit can be modified to change the pending status of the usage fault
exception.
11
TICK
R/W
0
SysTick Exception Active
Value Description
0
A SysTick exception is not active.
1
A SysTick exception is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the SysTick
exception, however, see the Caution above before setting this bit.
June 18, 2012
127
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
10
PNDSV
R/W
0
Description
PendSV Exception Active
Value Description
0
A PendSV exception is not active.
1
A PendSV exception is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the PendSV
exception, however, see the Caution above before setting this bit.
9
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
8
MON
R/W
0
Debug Monitor Active
Value Description
7
SVCA
R/W
0
0
The Debug monitor is not active.
1
The Debug monitor is active.
SVC Call Active
Value Description
0
SVC call is not active.
1
SVC call is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the SVC call
exception, however, see the Caution above before setting this bit.
6:4
reserved
RO
0x0
3
USGA
R/W
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Usage Fault Active
Value Description
0
Usage fault is not active.
1
Usage fault is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the usage fault
exception, however, see the Caution above before setting this bit.
2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
BUSA
R/W
0
Bus Fault Active
Value Description
0
Bus fault is not active.
1
Bus fault is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the bus fault
exception, however, see the Caution above before setting this bit.
128
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
0
MEMA
R/W
0
Description
Memory Management Fault Active
Value Description
0
Memory management fault is not active.
1
Memory management fault is active.
This bit can be modified to change the active status of the memory
management fault exception, however, see the Caution above before
setting this bit.
June 18, 2012
129
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 36: Configurable Fault Status (FAULTSTAT), offset 0xD28
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The FAULTSTAT register indicates the cause of a memory management fault, bus fault, or usage
fault. Each of these functions is assigned to a subregister as follows:
■ Usage Fault Status (UFAULTSTAT), bits 31:16
■ Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT), bits 15:8
■ Memory Management Fault Status (MFAULTSTAT), bits 7:0
FAULTSTAT is byte accessible. FAULTSTAT or its subregisters can be accessed as follows:
■
■
■
■
■
The complete FAULTSTAT register, with a word access to offset 0xD28
The MFAULTSTAT, with a byte access to offset 0xD28
The MFAULTSTAT and BFAULTSTAT, with a halfword access to offset 0xD28
The BFAULTSTAT, with a byte access to offset 0xD29
The UFAULTSTAT, with a halfword access to offset 0xD2A
Bits are cleared by writing a 1 to them.
In a fault handler, the true faulting address can be determined by:
1. Read and save the Memory Management Fault Address (MMADDR) or Bus Fault Address
(FAULTADDR) value.
2. Read the MMARV bit in MFAULTSTAT, or the BFARV bit in BFAULTSTAT to determine if the
MMADDR or FAULTADDR contents are valid.
Software must follow this sequence because another higher priority exception might change the
MMADDR or FAULTADDR value. For example, if a higher priority handler preempts the current
fault handler, the other fault might change the MMADDR or FAULTADDR value.
Configurable Fault Status (FAULTSTAT)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD28
Type R/W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
BFARV
Type
Reset
R/W1C
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
25
24
DIV0
UNALIGN
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
23
22
21
20
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
12
11
10
9
8
7
BSTKE
BUSTKE
IMPRE
PRECISE
IBUS
MMARV
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
19
18
17
16
NOCP
INVPC
INVSTAT
UNDEF
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
4
3
2
1
0
MSTKE
MUSTKE
reserved
DERR
IERR
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
RO
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
130
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
25
DIV0
R/W1C
0
Description
Divide-by-Zero Usage Fault
Value Description
0
No divide-by-zero fault has occurred, or divide-by-zero trapping
is not enabled.
1
The processor has executed an SDIV or UDIV instruction with
a divisor of 0.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the instruction that performed the divide by zero.
Trapping on divide-by-zero is enabled by setting the DIV0 bit in the
Configuration and Control (CFGCTRL) register (see page 121).
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
24
UNALIGN
R/W1C
0
Unaligned Access Usage Fault
Value Description
0
No unaligned access fault has occurred, or unaligned access
trapping is not enabled.
1
The processor has made an unaligned memory access.
Unaligned LDM, STM, LDRD, and STRD instructions always fault
regardless of the configuration of this bit.
Trapping on unaligned access is enabled by setting the UNALIGNED bit
in the CFGCTRL register (see page 121).
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
23:20
reserved
RO
0x00
19
NOCP
R/W1C
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
No Coprocessor Usage Fault
Value Description
0
A usage fault has not been caused by attempting to access a
coprocessor.
1
The processor has attempted to access a coprocessor.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
18
INVPC
R/W1C
0
Invalid PC Load Usage Fault
Value Description
0
A usage fault has not been caused by attempting to load an
invalid PC value.
1
The processor has attempted an illegal load of EXC_RETURN
to the PC as a result of an invalid context or an invalid
EXC_RETURN value.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the instruction that tried to perform the illegal load of the PC.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
June 18, 2012
131
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
17
INVSTAT
R/W1C
0
Description
Invalid State Usage Fault
Value Description
0
A usage fault has not been caused by an invalid state.
1
The processor has attempted to execute an instruction that
makes illegal use of the EPSR register.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the instruction that attempted the illegal use of the Execution
Program Status Register (EPSR) register.
This bit is not set if an undefined instruction uses the EPSR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
16
UNDEF
R/W1C
0
Undefined Instruction Usage Fault
Value Description
0
A usage fault has not been caused by an undefined instruction.
1
The processor has attempted to execute an undefined
instruction.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the undefined instruction.
An undefined instruction is an instruction that the processor cannot
decode.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
15
BFARV
R/W1C
0
Bus Fault Address Register Valid
Value Description
0
The value in the Bus Fault Address (FAULTADDR) register
is not a valid fault address.
1
The FAULTADDR register is holding a valid fault address.
This bit is set after a bus fault, where the address is known. Other faults
can clear this bit, such as a memory management fault occurring later.
If a bus fault occurs and is escalated to a hard fault because of priority,
the hard fault handler must clear this bit. This action prevents problems
if returning to a stacked active bus fault handler whose FAULTADDR
register value has been overwritten.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
14:13
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
132
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
12
BSTKE
R/W1C
0
Description
Stack Bus Fault
Value Description
0
No bus fault has occurred on stacking for exception entry.
1
Stacking for an exception entry has caused one or more bus
faults.
When this bit is set, the SP is still adjusted but the values in the context
area on the stack might be incorrect. A fault address is not written to
the FAULTADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
11
BUSTKE
R/W1C
0
Unstack Bus Fault
Value Description
0
No bus fault has occurred on unstacking for a return from
exception.
1
Unstacking for a return from exception has caused one or more
bus faults.
This fault is chained to the handler. Thus, when this bit is set, the original
return stack is still present. The SP is not adjusted from the failing return,
a new save is not performed, and a fault address is not written to the
FAULTADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
10
IMPRE
R/W1C
0
Imprecise Data Bus Error
Value Description
0
An imprecise data bus error has not occurred.
1
A data bus error has occurred, but the return address in the
stack frame is not related to the instruction that caused the error.
When this bit is set, a fault address is not written to the FAULTADDR
register.
This fault is asynchronous. Therefore, if the fault is detected when the
priority of the current process is higher than the bus fault priority, the
bus fault becomes pending and becomes active only when the processor
returns from all higher-priority processes. If a precise fault occurs before
the processor enters the handler for the imprecise bus fault, the handler
detects that both the IMPRE bit is set and one of the precise fault status
bits is set.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
9
PRECISE
R/W1C
0
Precise Data Bus Error
Value Description
0
A precise data bus error has not occurred.
1
A data bus error has occurred, and the PC value stacked for
the exception return points to the instruction that caused the
fault.
When this bit is set, the fault address is written to the FAULTADDR
register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
June 18, 2012
133
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
8
IBUS
R/W1C
0
Description
Instruction Bus Error
Value Description
0
An instruction bus error has not occurred.
1
An instruction bus error has occurred.
The processor detects the instruction bus error on prefetching an
instruction, but sets this bit only if it attempts to issue the faulting
instruction.
When this bit is set, a fault address is not written to the FAULTADDR
register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
7
MMARV
R/W1C
0
Memory Management Fault Address Register Valid
Value Description
0
The value in the Memory Management Fault Address
(MMADDR) register is not a valid fault address.
1
The MMADDR register is holding a valid fault address.
If a memory management fault occurs and is escalated to a hard fault
because of priority, the hard fault handler must clear this bit. This action
prevents problems if returning to a stacked active memory management
fault handler whose MMADDR register value has been overwritten.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
6:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
MSTKE
R/W1C
0
Stack Access Violation
Value Description
0
No memory management fault has occurred on stacking for
exception entry.
1
Stacking for an exception entry has caused one or more access
violations.
When this bit is set, the SP is still adjusted but the values in the context
area on the stack might be incorrect. A fault address is not written to
the MMADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
134
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
MUSTKE
R/W1C
0
Description
Unstack Access Violation
Value Description
0
No memory management fault has occurred on unstacking for
a return from exception.
1
Unstacking for a return from exception has caused one or more
access violations.
This fault is chained to the handler. Thus, when this bit is set, the original
return stack is still present. The SP is not adjusted from the failing return,
a new save is not performed, and a fault address is not written to the
MMADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
DERR
R/W1C
0
Data Access Violation
Value Description
0
A data access violation has not occurred.
1
The processor attempted a load or store at a location that does
not permit the operation.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the faulting instruction and the address of the attempted access is
written to the MMADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
0
IERR
R/W1C
0
Instruction Access Violation
Value Description
0
An instruction access violation has not occurred.
1
The processor attempted an instruction fetch from a location
that does not permit execution.
This fault occurs on any access to an XN region, even when the MPU
is disabled or not present.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the faulting instruction and the address of the attempted access is
not written to the MMADDR register.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
June 18, 2012
135
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 37: Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT), offset 0xD2C
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The HFAULTSTAT register gives information about events that activate the hard fault handler.
Bits are cleared by writing a 1 to them.
Hard Fault Status (HFAULTSTAT)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD2C
Type R/W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
Type
Reset
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
DBG
FORCED
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
VECT
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W1C
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
DBG
R/W1C
0
Description
Debug Event
This bit is reserved for Debug use. This bit must be written as a 0,
otherwise behavior is unpredictable.
30
FORCED
R/W1C
0
Forced Hard Fault
Value Description
0
No forced hard fault has occurred.
1
A forced hard fault has been generated by escalation of a fault
with configurable priority that cannot be handled, either because
of priority or because it is disabled.
When this bit is set, the hard fault handler must read the other fault
status registers to find the cause of the fault.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
29:2
reserved
RO
0x00
1
VECT
R/W1C
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Vector Table Read Fault
Value Description
0
No bus fault has occurred on a vector table read.
1
A bus fault occurred on a vector table read.
This error is always handled by the hard fault handler.
When this bit is set, the PC value stacked for the exception return points
to the instruction that was preempted by the exception.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
136
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 38: Memory Management Fault Address (MMADDR), offset 0xD34
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MMADDR register contains the address of the location that generated a memory management
fault. When an unaligned access faults, the address in the MMADDR register is the actual address
that faulted. Because a single read or write instruction can be split into multiple aligned accesses,
the fault address can be any address in the range of the requested access size. Bits in the Memory
Management Fault Status (MFAULTSTAT) register indicate the cause of the fault and whether
the value in the MMADDR register is valid (see page 130).
Memory Management Fault Address (MMADDR)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD34
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
ADDR
Type
Reset
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
ADDR
Type
Reset
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
ADDR
R/W
-
R/W
-
Description
Fault Address
When the MMARV bit of MFAULTSTAT is set, this field holds the address
of the location that generated the memory management fault.
June 18, 2012
137
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 39: Bus Fault Address (FAULTADDR), offset 0xD38
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The FAULTADDR register contains the address of the location that generated a bus fault. When
an unaligned access faults, the address in the FAULTADDR register is the one requested by the
instruction, even if it is not the address of the fault. Bits in the Bus Fault Status (BFAULTSTAT)
register indicate the cause of the fault and whether the value in the FAULTADDR register is valid
(see page 130).
Bus Fault Address (FAULTADDR)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD38
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
ADDR
Type
Reset
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
ADDR
Type
Reset
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
ADDR
R/W
-
R/W
-
Description
Fault Address
When the FAULTADDRV bit of BFAULTSTAT is set, this field holds the
address of the location that generated the bus fault.
3.6
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) Register Descriptions
This section lists and describes the Memory Protection Unit (MPU) registers, in numerical order by
address offset.
The MPU registers can only be accessed from privileged mode.
138
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 40: MPU Type (MPUTYPE), offset 0xD90
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MPUTYPE register indicates whether the MPU is present, and if so, how many regions it
supports.
MPU Type (MPUTYPE)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD90
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0800
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
DREGION
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
19
18
17
16
RO
0
IREGION
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
2
1
reserved
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
0
SEPARATE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:24
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:16
IREGION
RO
0x00
Number of I Regions
This field indicates the number of supported MPU instruction regions.
This field always contains 0x00. The MPU memory map is unified and
is described by the DREGION field.
15:8
DREGION
RO
0x08
Number of D Regions
Value Description
0x08 Indicates there are eight supported MPU data regions.
7:1
reserved
RO
0x00
0
SEPARATE
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Separate or Unified MPU
Value Description
0
Indicates the MPU is unified.
June 18, 2012
139
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 41: MPU Control (MPUCTRL), offset 0xD94
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MPUCTRL register enables the MPU, enables the default memory map background region,
and enables use of the MPU when in the hard fault, Non-maskable Interrupt (NMI), and Fault Mask
Register (FAULTMASK) escalated handlers.
When the ENABLE and PRIVDEFEN bits are both set:
■ For privileged accesses, the default memory map is as described in “Memory Model” on page 61.
Any access by privileged software that does not address an enabled memory region behaves
as defined by the default memory map.
■ Any access by unprivileged software that does not address an enabled memory region causes
a memory management fault.
Execute Never (XN) and Strongly Ordered rules always apply to the System Control Space regardless
of the value of the ENABLE bit.
When the ENABLE bit is set, at least one region of the memory map must be enabled for the system
to function unless the PRIVDEFEN bit is set. If the PRIVDEFEN bit is set and no regions are enabled,
then only privileged software can operate.
When the ENABLE bit is clear, the system uses the default memory map, which has the same
memory attributes as if the MPU is not implemented (see Table 2-5 on page 63 for more information).
The default memory map applies to accesses from both privileged and unprivileged software.
When the MPU is enabled, accesses to the System Control Space and vector table are always
permitted. Other areas are accessible based on regions and whether PRIVDEFEN is set.
Unless HFNMIENA is set, the MPU is not enabled when the processor is executing the handler for
an exception with priority –1 or –2. These priorities are only possible when handling a hard fault or
NMI exception or when FAULTMASK is enabled. Setting the HFNMIENA bit enables the MPU when
operating with these two priorities.
MPU Control (MPUCTRL)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD94
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:3
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
PRIVDEFEN HFNMIENA
R/W
0
R/W
0
ENABLE
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
140
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2
PRIVDEFEN
R/W
0
Description
MPU Default Region
This bit enables privileged software access to the default memory map.
Value Description
0
If the MPU is enabled, this bit disables use of the default memory
map. Any memory access to a location not covered by any
enabled region causes a fault.
1
If the MPU is enabled, this bit enables use of the default memory
map as a background region for privileged software accesses.
When this bit is set, the background region acts as if it is region number
-1. Any region that is defined and enabled has priority over this default
map.
If the MPU is disabled, the processor ignores this bit.
1
HFNMIENA
R/W
0
MPU Enabled During Faults
This bit controls the operation of the MPU during hard fault, NMI, and
FAULTMASK handlers.
Value Description
0
The MPU is disabled during hard fault, NMI, and FAULTMASK
handlers, regardless of the value of the ENABLE bit.
1
The MPU is enabled during hard fault, NMI, and FAULTMASK
handlers.
When the MPU is disabled and this bit is set, the resulting behavior is
unpredictable.
0
ENABLE
R/W
0
MPU Enable
Value Description
0
The MPU is disabled.
1
The MPU is enabled.
When the MPU is disabled and the HFNMIENA bit is set, the resulting
behavior is unpredictable.
June 18, 2012
141
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Register 42: MPU Region Number (MPUNUMBER), offset 0xD98
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MPUNUMBER register selects which memory region is referenced by the MPU Region Base
Address (MPUBASE) and MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR) registers. Normally, the
required region number should be written to this register before accessing the MPUBASE or the
MPUATTR register. However, the region number can be changed by writing to the MPUBASE
register with the VALID bit set (see page 143). This write updates the value of the REGION field.
MPU Region Number (MPUNUMBER)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD98
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
1
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:3
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
2:0
NUMBER
R/W
0x0
NUMBER
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
MPU Region to Access
This field indicates the MPU region referenced by the MPUBASE and
MPUATTR registers. The MPU supports eight memory regions.
142
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 43: MPU Region Base Address (MPUBASE), offset 0xD9C
Register 44: MPU Region Base Address Alias 1 (MPUBASE1), offset 0xDA4
Register 45: MPU Region Base Address Alias 2 (MPUBASE2), offset 0xDAC
Register 46: MPU Region Base Address Alias 3 (MPUBASE3), offset 0xDB4
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MPUBASE register defines the base address of the MPU region selected by the MPU Region
Number (MPUNUMBER) register and can update the value of the MPUNUMBER register. To
change the current region number and update the MPUNUMBER register, write the MPUBASE
register with the VALID bit set.
The ADDR field is bits 31:N of the MPUBASE register. Bits (N-1):5 are reserved. The region size,
as specified by the SIZE field in the MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR) register, defines
the value of N where:
N = Log2(Region size in bytes)
If the region size is configured to 4 GB in the MPUATTR register, there is no valid ADDR field. In
this case, the region occupies the complete memory map, and the base address is 0x0000.0000.
The base address is aligned to the size of the region. For example, a 64-KB region must be aligned
on a multiple of 64 KB, for example, at 0x0001.0000 or 0x0002.0000.
MPU Region Base Address (MPUBASE)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xD9C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
VALID
reserved
WO
0
RO
0
ADDR
Type
Reset
ADDR
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:5
ADDR
R/W
0x0000.000
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
REGION
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Base Address Mask
Bits 31:N in this field contain the region base address. The value of N
depends on the region size, as shown above. The remaining bits (N-1):5
are reserved.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
143
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
4
VALID
WO
0
Description
Region Number Valid
Value Description
0
The MPUNUMBER register is not changed and the processor
updates the base address for the region specified in the
MPUNUMBER register and ignores the value of the REGION
field.
1
The MPUNUMBER register is updated with the value of the
REGION field and the base address is updated for the region
specified in the REGION field.
This bit is always read as 0.
3
reserved
RO
0
2:0
REGION
R/W
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Region Number
On a write, contains the value to be written to the MPUNUMBER register.
On a read, returns the current region number in the MPUNUMBER
register.
144
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 47: MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR), offset 0xDA0
Register 48: MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 1 (MPUATTR1), offset 0xDA8
Register 49: MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 2 (MPUATTR2), offset 0xDB0
Register 50: MPU Region Attribute and Size Alias 3 (MPUATTR3), offset 0xDB8
Note:
This register can only be accessed from privileged mode.
The MPUATTR register defines the region size and memory attributes of the MPU region specified
by the MPU Region Number (MPUNUMBER) register and enables that region and any subregions.
The MPUATTR register is accessible using word or halfword accesses with the most-significant
halfword holding the region attributes and the least-significant halfword holds the region size and
the region and subregion enable bits.
The MPU access permission attribute bits, XN, AP, TEX, S, C, and B, control access to the
corresponding memory region. If an access is made to an area of memory without the required
permissions, then the MPU generates a permission fault.
The SIZE field defines the size of the MPU memory region specified by the MPUNUMBER register
as follows:
(Region size in bytes) = 2(SIZE+1)
The smallest permitted region size is 32 bytes, corresponding to a SIZE value of 4. Table
3-9 on page 145 gives example SIZE values with the corresponding region size and value of N in
the MPU Region Base Address (MPUBASE) register.
Table 3-9. Example SIZE Field Values
a
SIZE Encoding
Region Size
Value of N
Note
00100b (0x4)
32 B
5
Minimum permitted size
01001b (0x9)
1 KB
10
-
10011b (0x13)
1 MB
20
-
11101b (0x1D)
1 GB
30
-
11111b (0x1F)
4 GB
No valid ADDR field in MPUBASE; the Maximum possible size
region occupies the complete
memory map.
a. Refers to the N parameter in the MPUBASE register (see page 143).
MPU Region Attribute and Size (MPUATTR)
Base 0xE000.E000
Offset 0xDA0
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
reserved
Type
Reset
26
25
24
23
AP
21
reserved
20
19
18
TEX
17
16
XN
reserved
S
C
B
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
SRD
Type
Reset
22
reserved
SIZE
June 18, 2012
R/W
0
ENABLE
R/W
0
145
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:29
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
28
XN
R/W
0
Instruction Access Disable
Value Description
0
Instruction fetches are enabled.
1
Instruction fetches are disabled.
27
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
26:24
AP
R/W
0
Access Privilege
For information on using this bit field, see Table 3-5 on page 91.
23:22
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
21:19
TEX
R/W
0x0
Type Extension Mask
For information on using this bit field, see Table 3-3 on page 90.
18
S
R/W
0
Shareable
For information on using this bit, see Table 3-3 on page 90.
17
C
R/W
0
Cacheable
For information on using this bit, see Table 3-3 on page 90.
16
B
R/W
0
Bufferable
For information on using this bit, see Table 3-3 on page 90.
15:8
SRD
R/W
0x00
Subregion Disable Bits
Value Description
0
The corresponding subregion is enabled.
1
The corresponding subregion is disabled.
Region sizes of 128 bytes and less do not support subregions. When
writing the attributes for such a region, configure the SRD field as 0x00.
See the section called “Subregions” on page 89 for more information.
7:6
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:1
SIZE
R/W
0x0
Region Size Mask
The SIZE field defines the size of the MPU memory region specified by
the MPUNUMBER register. Refer to Table 3-9 on page 145 for more
information.
146
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
0
ENABLE
R/W
0
Description
Region Enable
Value Description
0
The region is disabled.
1
The region is enabled.
June 18, 2012
147
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
4
JTAG Interface
The Joint Test Action Group (JTAG) port is an IEEE standard that defines a Test Access Port and
Boundary Scan Architecture for digital integrated circuits and provides a standardized serial interface
for controlling the associated test logic. The TAP, Instruction Register (IR), and Data Registers (DR)
can be used to test the interconnections of assembled printed circuit boards and obtain manufacturing
information on the components. The JTAG Port also provides a means of accessing and controlling
design-for-test features such as I/O pin observation and control, scan testing, and debugging.
The JTAG port is comprised of five pins: TRST, TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO. Data is transmitted serially
into the controller on TDI and out of the controller on TDO. The interpretation of this data is dependent
on the current state of the TAP controller. For detailed information on the operation of the JTAG
port and TAP controller, please refer to the IEEE Standard 1149.1-Test Access Port and
Boundary-Scan Architecture.
®
The Stellaris JTAG controller works with the ARM JTAG controller built into the Cortex-M3 core.
This is implemented by multiplexing the TDO outputs from both JTAG controllers. ARM JTAG
instructions select the ARM TDO output while Stellaris JTAG instructions select the Stellaris TDO
outputs. The multiplexer is controlled by the Stellaris JTAG controller, which has comprehensive
programming for the ARM, Stellaris, and unimplemented JTAG instructions.
The Stellaris JTAG module has the following features:
■ IEEE 1149.1-1990 compatible Test Access Port (TAP) controller
■ Four-bit Instruction Register (IR) chain for storing JTAG instructions
■ IEEE standard instructions: BYPASS, IDCODE, SAMPLE/PRELOAD, EXTEST and INTEST
■ ARM additional instructions: APACC, DPACC and ABORT
■ Integrated ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD)
See the ARM® Debug Interface V5 Architecture Specification for more information on the ARM
JTAG controller.
148
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
4.1
Block Diagram
Figure 4-1. JTAG Module Block Diagram
TRST
TCK
TMS
TAP Controller
TDI
Instruction Register (IR)
BYPASS Data Register
TDO
Boundary Scan Data Register
IDCODE Data Register
ABORT Data Register
DPACC Data Register
APACC Data Register
Cortex-M3
Debug
Port
4.2
Signal Description
Table 4-1 on page 149 and Table 4-2 on page 150 list the external signals of the JTAG/SWD controller
and describe the function of each. The JTAG/SWD controller signals are alternate functions for
some GPIO signals, however note that the reset state of the pins is for the JTAG/SWD function.
The JTAG/SWD controller signals are under commit protection and require a special process to be
configured as GPIOs, see “Commit Control” on page 255. The column in the table below titled "Pin
Assignment" lists the GPIO pin placement for the JTAG/SWD controller signals. The AFSEL bit in
the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) is set to choose the
JTAG/SWD function. For more information on configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs
(GPIOs)” on page 245.
Table 4-1. JTAG_SWD_SWO Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
SWCLK
80
I
TTL
Description
JTAG/SWD CLK.
SWDIO
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
80
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
78
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
TDO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
89
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
June 18, 2012
149
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
Table 4-2. JTAG_SWD_SWO Signals (108BGA)
Pin Name
Pin Number
SWCLK
SWDIO
a
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
B8
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
TDO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
A8
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
4.3
Functional Description
A high-level conceptual drawing of the JTAG module is shown in Figure 4-1 on page 149. The JTAG
module is composed of the Test Access Port (TAP) controller and serial shift chains with parallel
update registers. The TAP controller is a simple state machine controlled by the TRST, TCK and
TMS inputs. The current state of the TAP controller depends on the current value of TRST and the
sequence of values captured on TMS at the rising edge of TCK. The TAP controller determines when
the serial shift chains capture new data, shift data from TDI towards TDO, and update the parallel
load registers. The current state of the TAP controller also determines whether the Instruction
Register (IR) chain or one of the Data Register (DR) chains is being accessed.
The serial shift chains with parallel load registers are comprised of a single Instruction Register (IR)
chain and multiple Data Register (DR) chains. The current instruction loaded in the parallel load
register determines which DR chain is captured, shifted, or updated during the sequencing of the
TAP controller.
Some instructions, like EXTEST and INTEST, operate on data currently in a DR chain and do not
capture, shift, or update any of the chains. Instructions that are not implemented decode to the
BYPASS instruction to ensure that the serial path between TDI and TDO is always connected (see
Table 4-4 on page 157 for a list of implemented instructions).
See “JTAG and Boundary Scan” on page 522 for JTAG timing diagrams.
4.3.1
JTAG Interface Pins
The JTAG interface consists of five standard pins: TRST,TCK, TMS, TDI, and TDO. These pins and
their associated reset state are given in Table 4-3 on page 150. Detailed information on each pin
follows.
Table 4-3. JTAG Port Pins Reset State
Pin Name
Data Direction
Internal Pull-Up
Internal Pull-Down
Drive Strength
Drive Value
TRST
Input
Enabled
Disabled
N/A
N/A
TCK
Input
Enabled
Disabled
N/A
N/A
TMS
Input
Enabled
Disabled
N/A
N/A
TDI
Input
Enabled
Disabled
N/A
N/A
TDO
Output
Enabled
Disabled
2-mA driver
High-Z
150
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
4.3.1.1
Test Reset Input (TRST)
The TRST pin is an asynchronous active Low input signal for initializing and resetting the JTAG TAP
controller and associated JTAG circuitry. When TRST is asserted, the TAP controller resets to the
Test-Logic-Reset state and remains there while TRST is asserted. When the TAP controller enters
the Test-Logic-Reset state, the JTAG Instruction Register (IR) resets to the default instruction,
IDCODE.
By default, the internal pull-up resistor on the TRST pin is enabled after reset. Changes to the pull-up
resistor settings on GPIO Port B should ensure that the internal pull-up resistor remains enabled
on PB7/TRST; otherwise JTAG communication could be lost.
4.3.1.2
Test Clock Input (TCK)
The TCK pin is the clock for the JTAG module. This clock is provided so the test logic can operate
independently of any other system clocks. In addition, it ensures that multiple JTAG TAP controllers
that are daisy-chained together can synchronously communicate serial test data between
components. During normal operation, TCK is driven by a free-running clock with a nominal 50%
duty cycle. When necessary, TCK can be stopped at 0 or 1 for extended periods of time. While TCK
is stopped at 0 or 1, the state of the TAP controller does not change and data in the JTAG Instruction
and Data Registers is not lost.
By default, the internal pull-up resistor on the TCK pin is enabled after reset. This assures that no
clocking occurs if the pin is not driven from an external source. The internal pull-up and pull-down
resistors can be turned off to save internal power as long as the TCK pin is constantly being driven
by an external source.
4.3.1.3
Test Mode Select (TMS)
The TMS pin selects the next state of the JTAG TAP controller. TMS is sampled on the rising edge
of TCK. Depending on the current TAP state and the sampled value of TMS, the next state is entered.
Because the TMS pin is sampled on the rising edge of TCK, the IEEE Standard 1149.1 expects the
value on TMS to change on the falling edge of TCK.
Holding TMS high for five consecutive TCK cycles drives the TAP controller state machine to the
Test-Logic-Reset state. When the TAP controller enters the Test-Logic-Reset state, the JTAG
Instruction Register (IR) resets to the default instruction, IDCODE. Therefore, this sequence can
be used as a reset mechanism, similar to asserting TRST. The JTAG Test Access Port state machine
can be seen in its entirety in Figure 4-2 on page 153.
By default, the internal pull-up resistor on the TMS pin is enabled after reset. Changes to the pull-up
resistor settings on GPIO Port C should ensure that the internal pull-up resistor remains enabled
on PC1/TMS; otherwise JTAG communication could be lost.
4.3.1.4
Test Data Input (TDI)
The TDI pin provides a stream of serial information to the IR chain and the DR chains. TDI is
sampled on the rising edge of TCK and, depending on the current TAP state and the current
instruction, presents this data to the proper shift register chain. Because the TDI pin is sampled on
the rising edge of TCK, the IEEE Standard 1149.1 expects the value on TDI to change on the falling
edge of TCK.
By default, the internal pull-up resistor on the TDI pin is enabled after reset. Changes to the pull-up
resistor settings on GPIO Port C should ensure that the internal pull-up resistor remains enabled
on PC2/TDI; otherwise JTAG communication could be lost.
June 18, 2012
151
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
4.3.1.5
Test Data Output (TDO)
The TDO pin provides an output stream of serial information from the IR chain or the DR chains.
The value of TDO depends on the current TAP state, the current instruction, and the data in the
chain being accessed. In order to save power when the JTAG port is not being used, the TDO pin
is placed in an inactive drive state when not actively shifting out data. Because TDO can be connected
to the TDI of another controller in a daisy-chain configuration, the IEEE Standard 1149.1 expects
the value on TDO to change on the falling edge of TCK.
By default, the internal pull-up resistor on the TDO pin is enabled after reset. This assures that the
pin remains at a constant logic level when the JTAG port is not being used. The internal pull-up and
pull-down resistors can be turned off to save internal power if a High-Z output value is acceptable
during certain TAP controller states.
4.3.2
JTAG TAP Controller
The JTAG TAP controller state machine is shown in Figure 4-2 on page 153. The TAP controller
state machine is reset to the Test-Logic-Reset state on the assertion of a Power-On-Reset (POR)
or the assertion of TRST. Asserting the correct sequence on the TMS pin allows the JTAG module
to shift in new instructions, shift in data, or idle during extended testing sequences. For detailed
information on the function of the TAP controller and the operations that occur in each state, please
refer to IEEE Standard 1149.1.
152
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 4-2. Test Access Port State Machine
Test Logic Reset
1
0
Run Test Idle
0
Select DR Scan
1
Select IR Scan
1
0
1
Capture DR
1
Capture IR
0
0
Shift DR
Shift IR
0
1
Exit 1 DR
Exit 1 IR
1
Pause IR
0
1
Exit 2 DR
0
1
0
Exit 2 IR
1
1
Update DR
4.3.3
1
0
Pause DR
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
Update IR
1
0
Shift Registers
The Shift Registers consist of a serial shift register chain and a parallel load register. The serial shift
register chain samples specific information during the TAP controller’s CAPTURE states and allows
this information to be shifted out of TDO during the TAP controller’s SHIFT states. While the sampled
data is being shifted out of the chain on TDO, new data is being shifted into the serial shift register
on TDI. This new data is stored in the parallel load register during the TAP controller’s UPDATE
states. Each of the shift registers is discussed in detail in “Register Descriptions” on page 156.
4.3.4
Operational Considerations
There are certain operational considerations when using the JTAG module. Because the JTAG pins
can be programmed to be GPIOs, board configuration and reset conditions on these pins must be
considered. In addition, because the JTAG module has integrated ARM Serial Wire Debug, the
method for switching between these two operational modes is described below.
June 18, 2012
153
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
4.3.4.1
GPIO Functionality
When the controller is reset with either a POR or RST, the JTAG/SWD port pins default to their
JTAG/SWD configurations. The default configuration includes enabling digital functionality (setting
GPIODEN to 1), enabling the pull-up resistors (setting GPIOPUR to 1), and enabling the alternate
hardware function (setting GPIOAFSEL to 1) for the PB7 and PC[3:0] JTAG/SWD pins.
It is possible for software to configure these pins as GPIOs after reset by writing 0s to PB7 and
PC[3:0] in the GPIOAFSEL register. If the user does not require the JTAG/SWD port for debugging
or board-level testing, this provides five more GPIOs for use in the design.
Caution – It is possible to create a software sequence that prevents the debugger from connecting to
the Stellaris microcontroller. If the program code loaded into flash immediately changes the JTAG pins
to their GPIO functionality, the debugger may not have enough time to connect and halt the controller
before the JTAG pin functionality switches. This may lock the debugger out of the part. This can be
avoided with a software routine that restores JTAG functionality based on an external or software
trigger.
The GPIO commit control registers provide a layer of protection against accidental programming of
critical hardware peripherals. Protection is currently provided for the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and
PC[3:0]). Writes to protected bits of the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register
(see page 268) are not committed to storage unless the GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK) register (see
page 278) has been unlocked and the appropriate bits of the GPIO Commit (GPIOCR) register (see
page 279) have been set to 1.
Recovering a "Locked" Device
Note:
The mass erase of the flash memory caused by the below sequence erases the entire flash
memory, regardless of the settings in the Flash Memory Protection Program Enable n
(FMPPEn) registers. Performing the sequence below does not affect the nonvolatile registers
discussed in “Nonvolatile Register Programming” on page 222.
If software configures any of the JTAG/SWD pins as GPIO and loses the ability to communicate
with the debugger, there is a debug sequence that can be used to recover the device. Performing
a total of ten JTAG-to-SWD and SWD-to-JTAG switch sequences while holding the device in reset
mass erases the flash memory. The sequence to recover the device is:
1. Assert and hold the RST signal.
2. Apply power to the device.
3. Perform the JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence.
4. Perform the SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence.
5. Perform the JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence.
6. Perform the SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence.
7. Perform the JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence.
8. Perform the SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence.
9. Perform the JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence.
10. Perform the SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence.
154
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
11. Perform the JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence.
12. Perform the SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence.
13. Release the RST signal.
14. Wait 400 ms.
15. Power-cycle the device.
The JTAG-to-SWD and SWD-to-JTAG switch sequences are described in “ARM Serial Wire Debug
(SWD)” on page 155. When performing switch sequences for the purpose of recovering the debug
capabilities of the device, only steps 1 and 2 of the switch sequence in the section called
“JTAG-to-SWD Switching” on page 155 must be performed.
4.3.4.2
Communication with JTAG/SWD
Because the debug clock and the system clock can be running at different frequencies, care must
be taken to maintain reliable communication with the JTAG/SWD interface. In the Capture-DR state,
the result of the previous transaction, if any, is returned, together with a 3-bit ACK response. Software
should check the ACK response to see if the previous operation has completed before initiating a
new transaction. Alternatively, if the system clock is at least 8 times faster than the debug clock
(TCK or SWCLK), the previous operation has enough time to complete and the ACK bits do not have
to be checked.
4.3.4.3
ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD)
In order to seamlessly integrate the ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD) functionality, a serial-wire
debugger must be able to connect to the Cortex-M3 core without having to perform, or have any
knowledge of, JTAG cycles. This is accomplished with a SWD preamble that is issued before the
SWD session begins.
The switching preamble used to enable the SWD interface of the SWJ-DP module starts with the
TAP controller in the Test-Logic-Reset state. From here, the preamble sequences the TAP controller
through the following states: Run Test Idle, Select DR, Select IR, Test Logic Reset, Test Logic
Reset, Run Test Idle, Run Test Idle, Select DR, Select IR, Test Logic Reset, Test Logic Reset, Run
Test Idle, Run Test Idle, Select DR, Select IR, and Test Logic Reset states.
Stepping through this sequences of the TAP state machine enables the SWD interface and disables
the JTAG interface. For more information on this operation and the SWD interface, see the ARM®
Debug Interface V5 Architecture Specification.
Because this sequence is a valid series of JTAG operations that could be issued, the ARM JTAG
TAP controller is not fully compliant to the IEEE Standard 1149.1. This is the only instance where
the ARM JTAG TAP controller does not meet full compliance with the specification. Due to the low
probability of this sequence occurring during normal operation of the TAP controller, it should not
affect normal performance of the JTAG interface.
JTAG-to-SWD Switching
To switch the operating mode of the Debug Access Port (DAP) from JTAG to SWD mode, the
external debug hardware must send the switching preamble to the device. The 16-bit switch sequence
for switching to SWD mode is defined as b1110011110011110, transmitted LSB first. This can also
be represented as 16'hE79E when transmitted LSB first. The complete switch sequence should
consist of the following transactions on the TCK/SWCLK and TMS/SWDIO signals:
June 18, 2012
155
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
1. Send at least 50 TCK/SWCLK cycles with TMS/SWDIO set to 1. This ensures that both JTAG and
SWD are in their reset/idle states.
2. Send the 16-bit JTAG-to-SWD switch sequence, 16'hE79E.
3. Send at least 50 TCK/SWCLK cycles with TMS/SWDIO set to 1. This ensures that if SWJ-DP was
already in SWD mode, before sending the switch sequence, the SWD goes into the line reset
state.
SWD-to-JTAG Switching
To switch the operating mode of the Debug Access Port (DAP) from SWD to JTAG mode, the
external debug hardware must send a switch sequence to the device. The 16-bit switch sequence
for switching to JTAG mode is defined as b1110011100111100, transmitted LSB first. This can also
be represented as 16'hE73C when transmitted LSB first. The complete switch sequence should
consist of the following transactions on the TCK/SWCLK and TMS/SWDIO signals:
1. Send at least 50 TCK/SWCLK cycles with TMS/SWDIO set to 1. This ensures that both JTAG and
SWD are in their reset/idle states.
2. Send the 16-bit SWD-to-JTAG switch sequence, 16'hE73C.
3. Send at least 5 TCK/SWCLK cycles with TMS/SWDIO set to 1. This ensures that if SWJ-DP was
already in JTAG mode, before sending the switch sequence, the JTAG goes into the Test Logic
Reset state.
4.4
Initialization and Configuration
After a Power-On-Reset or an external reset (RST), the JTAG pins are automatically configured for
JTAG communication. No user-defined initialization or configuration is needed. However, if the user
application changes these pins to their GPIO function, they must be configured back to their JTAG
functionality before JTAG communication can be restored. This is done by enabling the five JTAG
pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]) for their alternate function using the GPIOAFSEL register. In addition to
enabling the alternate functions, any other changes to the GPIO pad configurations on the five JTAG
pins (PB7 andPC[3:0]) should be reverted to their default settings.
4.5
Register Descriptions
There are no APB-accessible registers in the JTAG TAP Controller or Shift Register chains. The
registers within the JTAG controller are all accessed serially through the TAP Controller. The registers
can be broken down into two main categories: Instruction Registers and Data Registers.
4.5.1
Instruction Register (IR)
The JTAG TAP Instruction Register (IR) is a four-bit serial scan chain connected between the JTAG
TDI and TDO pins with a parallel load register. When the TAP Controller is placed in the correct
states, bits can be shifted into the Instruction Register. Once these bits have been shifted into the
chain and updated, they are interpreted as the current instruction. The decode of the Instruction
Register bits is shown in Table 4-4 on page 157. A detailed explanation of each instruction, along
with its associated Data Register, follows.
156
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 4-4. JTAG Instruction Register Commands
4.5.1.1
IR[3:0]
Instruction
Description
0000
EXTEST
Drives the values preloaded into the Boundary Scan Chain by the
SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction onto the pads.
0001
INTEST
Drives the values preloaded into the Boundary Scan Chain by the
SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction into the controller.
0010
SAMPLE / PRELOAD
Captures the current I/O values and shifts the sampled values out of the
Boundary Scan Chain while new preload data is shifted in.
1000
ABORT
Shifts data into the ARM Debug Port Abort Register.
1010
DPACC
Shifts data into and out of the ARM DP Access Register.
1011
APACC
Shifts data into and out of the ARM AC Access Register.
1110
IDCODE
Loads manufacturing information defined by the IEEE Standard 1149.1
into the IDCODE chain and shifts it out.
1111
BYPASS
Connects TDI to TDO through a single Shift Register chain.
All Others
Reserved
Defaults to the BYPASS instruction to ensure that TDI is always connected
to TDO.
EXTEST Instruction
The EXTEST instruction is not associated with its own Data Register chain. The EXTEST instruction
uses the data that has been preloaded into the Boundary Scan Data Register using the
SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction. When the EXTEST instruction is present in the Instruction Register,
the preloaded data in the Boundary Scan Data Register associated with the outputs and output
enables are used to drive the GPIO pads rather than the signals coming from the core. This allows
tests to be developed that drive known values out of the controller, which can be used to verify
connectivity. While the EXTEST instruction is present in the Instruction Register, the Boundary Scan
Data Register can be accessed to sample and shift out the current data and load new data into the
Boundary Scan Data Register.
4.5.1.2
INTEST Instruction
The INTEST instruction is not associated with its own Data Register chain. The INTEST instruction
uses the data that has been preloaded into the Boundary Scan Data Register using the
SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction. When the INTEST instruction is present in the Instruction Register,
the preloaded data in the Boundary Scan Data Register associated with the inputs are used to drive
the signals going into the core rather than the signals coming from the GPIO pads. This allows tests
to be developed that drive known values into the controller, which can be used for testing. It is
important to note that although the RST input pin is on the Boundary Scan Data Register chain, it
is only observable. While the INTEXT instruction is present in the Instruction Register, the Boundary
Scan Data Register can be accessed to sample and shift out the current data and load new data
into the Boundary Scan Data Register.
4.5.1.3
SAMPLE/PRELOAD Instruction
The SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction connects the Boundary Scan Data Register chain between
TDI and TDO. This instruction samples the current state of the pad pins for observation and preloads
new test data. Each GPIO pad has an associated input, output, and output enable signal. When the
TAP controller enters the Capture DR state during this instruction, the input, output, and output-enable
signals to each of the GPIO pads are captured. These samples are serially shifted out of TDO while
the TAP controller is in the Shift DR state and can be used for observation or comparison in various
tests.
June 18, 2012
157
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
While these samples of the inputs, outputs, and output enables are being shifted out of the Boundary
Scan Data Register, new data is being shifted into the Boundary Scan Data Register from TDI.
Once the new data has been shifted into the Boundary Scan Data Register, the data is saved in the
parallel load registers when the TAP controller enters the Update DR state. This update of the
parallel load register preloads data into the Boundary Scan Data Register that is associated with
each input, output, and output enable. This preloaded data can be used with the EXTEST and
INTEST instructions to drive data into or out of the controller. Please see “Boundary Scan Data
Register” on page 159 for more information.
4.5.1.4
ABORT Instruction
The ABORT instruction connects the associated ABORT Data Register chain between TDI and
TDO. This instruction provides read and write access to the ABORT Register of the ARM Debug
Access Port (DAP). Shifting the proper data into this Data Register clears various error bits or initiates
a DAP abort of a previous request. Please see the “ABORT Data Register” on page 160 for more
information.
4.5.1.5
DPACC Instruction
The DPACC instruction connects the associated DPACC Data Register chain between TDI and
TDO. This instruction provides read and write access to the DPACC Register of the ARM Debug
Access Port (DAP). Shifting the proper data into this register and reading the data output from this
register allows read and write access to the ARM debug and status registers. Please see “DPACC
Data Register” on page 160 for more information.
4.5.1.6
APACC Instruction
The APACC instruction connects the associated APACC Data Register chain between TDI and
TDO. This instruction provides read and write access to the APACC Register of the ARM Debug
Access Port (DAP). Shifting the proper data into this register and reading the data output from this
register allows read and write access to internal components and buses through the Debug Port.
Please see “APACC Data Register” on page 160 for more information.
4.5.1.7
IDCODE Instruction
The IDCODE instruction connects the associated IDCODE Data Register chain between TDI and
TDO. This instruction provides information on the manufacturer, part number, and version of the
ARM core. This information can be used by testing equipment and debuggers to automatically
configure their input and output data streams. IDCODE is the default instruction that is loaded into
the JTAG Instruction Register when a Power-On-Reset (POR) is asserted, TRST is asserted, or the
Test-Logic-Reset state is entered. Please see “IDCODE Data Register” on page 159 for more
information.
4.5.1.8
BYPASS Instruction
The BYPASS instruction connects the associated BYPASS Data Register chain between TDI and
TDO. This instruction is used to create a minimum length serial path between the TDI and TDO ports.
The BYPASS Data Register is a single-bit shift register. This instruction improves test efficiency by
allowing components that are not needed for a specific test to be bypassed in the JTAG scan chain
by loading them with the BYPASS instruction. Please see “BYPASS Data Register” on page 159 for
more information.
158
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
4.5.2
Data Registers
The JTAG module contains six Data Registers. These include: IDCODE, BYPASS, Boundary Scan,
APACC, DPACC, and ABORT serial Data Register chains. Each of these Data Registers is discussed
in the following sections.
4.5.2.1
IDCODE Data Register
The format for the 32-bit IDCODE Data Register defined by the IEEE Standard 1149.1 is shown in
Figure 4-3 on page 159. The standard requires that every JTAG-compliant device implement either
the IDCODE instruction or the BYPASS instruction as the default instruction. The LSB of the IDCODE
Data Register is defined to be a 1 to distinguish it from the BYPASS instruction, which has an LSB
of 0. This allows auto configuration test tools to determine which instruction is the default instruction.
The major uses of the JTAG port are for manufacturer testing of component assembly, and program
development and debug. To facilitate the use of auto-configuration debug tools, the IDCODE
instruction outputs a value of 0x3BA0.0477. This allows the debuggers to automatically configure
themselves to work correctly with the Cortex-M3 during debug.
Figure 4-3. IDCODE Register Format
31
TDI
4.5.2.2
28 27
12 11
Version
Part Number
1 0
Manufacturer ID
1
TDO
BYPASS Data Register
The format for the 1-bit BYPASS Data Register defined by the IEEE Standard 1149.1 is shown in
Figure 4-4 on page 159. The standard requires that every JTAG-compliant device implement either
the BYPASS instruction or the IDCODE instruction as the default instruction. The LSB of the BYPASS
Data Register is defined to be a 0 to distinguish it from the IDCODE instruction, which has an LSB
of 1. This allows auto configuration test tools to determine which instruction is the default instruction.
Figure 4-4. BYPASS Register Format
0
TDI
4.5.2.3
0
TDO
Boundary Scan Data Register
The format of the Boundary Scan Data Register is shown in Figure 4-5 on page 160. Each GPIO
pin, starting with a GPIO pin next to the JTAG port pins, is included in the Boundary Scan Data
Register. Each GPIO pin has three associated digital signals that are included in the chain. These
signals are input, output, and output enable, and are arranged in that order as can be seen in the
figure.
When the Boundary Scan Data Register is accessed with the SAMPLE/PRELOAD instruction, the
input, output, and output enable from each digital pad are sampled and then shifted out of the chain
to be verified. The sampling of these values occurs on the rising edge of TCK in the Capture DR
state of the TAP controller. While the sampled data is being shifted out of the Boundary Scan chain
in the Shift DR state of the TAP controller, new data can be preloaded into the chain for use with
June 18, 2012
159
Texas Instruments-Production Data
JTAG Interface
the EXTEST and INTEST instructions. These instructions either force data out of the controller, with
the EXTEST instruction, or into the controller, with the INTEST instruction.
Figure 4-5. Boundary Scan Register Format
TDI
I
N
O
U
T
O
E
...
GPIO PB6
4.5.2.4
I
N
O
U
T
GPIO m
O
E
I
N
RST
I
N
O
U
T
GPIO m+1
O
E
...
I
N
O
U
T
O TDO
E
GPIO n
APACC Data Register
The format for the 35-bit APACC Data Register defined by ARM is described in the ARM® Debug
Interface V5 Architecture Specification.
4.5.2.5
DPACC Data Register
The format for the 35-bit DPACC Data Register defined by ARM is described in the ARM® Debug
Interface V5 Architecture Specification.
4.5.2.6
ABORT Data Register
The format for the 35-bit ABORT Data Register defined by ARM is described in the ARM® Debug
Interface V5 Architecture Specification.
160
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
5
System Control
System control determines the overall operation of the device. It provides information about the
device, controls the clocking to the core and individual peripherals, and handles reset detection and
reporting.
5.1
Signal Description
Table 5-1 on page 161 and Table 5-2 on page 161 list the external signals of the System Control
module and describe the function of each. The NMI signal is the alternate function for and functions
as a GPIO after reset. under commit protection and require a special process to be configured as
any alternate function or to subsequently return to the GPIO function, see “Commit
Control” on page 255. The column in the table below titled "Pin Assignment" lists the GPIO pin
placement for the NMI signal. The AFSEL bit in the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL)
register (page 268) should be set to choose the NMI function. For more information on configuring
GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)” on page 245. The remaining signals (with the
word "fixed" in the Pin Assignment column) have a fixed pin assignment and function.
Table 5-1. System Control & Clocks Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
CMOD0
65
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
CMOD1
76
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
OSC0
48
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference
input.
OSC1
49
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using
a single-ended clock source.
RST
64
I
TTL
System reset input.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 5-2. System Control & Clocks Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
CMOD0
E11
I
TTL
Description
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
CMOD1
B10
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
OSC0
L11
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference
input.
OSC1
M11
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using
a single-ended clock source.
RST
H11
I
TTL
System reset input.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
5.2
Functional Description
The System Control module provides the following capabilities:
■ Device identification (see “Device Identification” on page 162)
June 18, 2012
161
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
■ Local control, such as reset (see “Reset Control” on page 162), power (see “Power
Control” on page 166) and clock control (see “Clock Control” on page 167)
■ System control (Run, Sleep, and Deep-Sleep modes); see “System Control” on page 171
5.2.1
Device Identification
Several read-only registers provide software with information on the microcontroller, such as version,
part number, SRAM size, flash size, and other features. See the DID0, DID1, and DC0-DC4 registers.
5.2.2
Reset Control
This section discusses aspects of hardware functions during reset as well as system software
requirements following the reset sequence.
5.2.2.1
CMOD0 and CMOD1 Test-Mode Control Pins
Two pins, CMOD0 and CMOD1, are defined for internal use for testing the microcontroller during
manufacture. They have no end-user function and should not be used. The CMOD pins should be
connected to ground.
5.2.2.2
Reset Sources
The controller has five sources of reset:
1. External reset input pin (RST) assertion; see “External RST Pin” on page 163.
2. Power-on reset (POR); see “Power-On Reset (POR)” on page 163.
3. Internal brown-out (BOR) detector; see “Brown-Out Reset (BOR)” on page 164.
4. Software-initiated reset (with the software reset registers); see “Software Reset” on page 165.
5. A watchdog timer reset condition violation; see “Watchdog Timer Reset” on page 165.
Table 5-3 provides a summary of results of the various reset operations.
Table 5-3. Reset Sources
Reset Source
Core Reset?
JTAG Reset?
On-Chip Peripherals Reset?
Power-On Reset
Yes
Yes
Yes
RST
Yes
Pin Config Only
Yes
Brown-Out Reset
Yes
No
Yes
Software System Request
a
Reset
Yes
No
Yes
Software Peripheral Reset
No
No
Yes
Watchdog Reset
Yes
No
Yes
b
a. By using the SYSRESREQ bit in the ARM Cortex-M3 Application Interrupt and Reset Control (APINT) register
b. Programmable on a module-by-module basis using the Software Reset Control Registers.
After a reset, the Reset Cause (RESC) register is set with the reset cause. The bits in this register
are sticky and maintain their state across multiple reset sequences, except when an internal POR
is the cause, and then all the other bits in the RESC register are cleared except for the POR indicator.
162
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
5.2.2.3
Power-On Reset (POR)
Note:
The power-on reset also resets the JTAG controller. An external reset does not.
The internal Power-On Reset (POR) circuit monitors the power supply voltage (VDD) and generates
a reset signal to all of the internal logic including JTAG when the power supply ramp reaches a
threshold value (VTH). The microcontroller must be operating within the specified operating parameters
when the on-chip power-on reset pulse is complete. The 3.3-V power supply to the microcontroller
must reach 3.0 V within 10 msec of VDD crossing 2.0 V to guarantee proper operation. For applications
that require the use of an external reset signal to hold the microcontroller in reset longer than the
internal POR, the RST input may be used as discussed in “External RST Pin” on page 163.
The Power-On Reset sequence is as follows:
1. The microcontroller waits for internal POR to go inactive.
2. The internal reset is released and the core loads from memory the initial stack pointer, the initial
program counter, and the first instruction designated by the program counter, and then begins
execution.
The internal POR is only active on the initial power-up of the microcontroller. The Power-On Reset
timing is shown in Figure 17-6 on page 525.
5.2.2.4
External RST Pin
Note:
It is recommended that the trace for the RST signal must be kept as short as possible. Be
sure to place any components connected to the RST signal as close to the microcontroller
as possible.
If the application only uses the internal POR circuit, the RST input must be connected to the power
supply (VDD) through an optional pull-up resistor (0 to 100K Ω) as shown in Figure 5-1 on page 163.
Figure 5-1. Basic RST Configuration
VDD
Stellaris®
RPU
RST
RPU = 0 to 100 kΩ
The external reset pin (RST) resets the microcontroller including the core and all the on-chip
peripherals except the JTAG TAP controller (see “JTAG Interface” on page 148). The external reset
sequence is as follows:
1. The external reset pin (RST) is asserted for the duration specified by TMIN and then de-asserted
(see “Reset” on page 524).
2. The internal reset is released and the core loads from memory the initial stack pointer, the initial
program counter, and the first instruction designated by the program counter, and then begins
execution.
June 18, 2012
163
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
To improve noise immunity and/or to delay reset at power up, the RST input may be connected to
an RC network as shown in Figure 5-2 on page 164.
Figure 5-2. External Circuitry to Extend Power-On Reset
VDD
Stellaris®
RPU
RST
C1
RPU = 1 kΩ to 100 kΩ
C1 = 1 nF to 10 µF
If the application requires the use of an external reset switch, Figure 5-3 on page 164 shows the
proper circuitry to use.
Figure 5-3. Reset Circuit Controlled by Switch
VDD
Stellaris®
RPU
RST
C1
RS
Typical RPU = 10 kΩ
Typical RS = 470 Ω
C1 = 10 nF
The RPU and C1 components define the power-on delay.
The external reset timing is shown in Figure 17-5 on page 524.
5.2.2.5
Brown-Out Reset (BOR)
A drop in the input voltage resulting in the assertion of the internal brown-out detector can be used
to reset the controller. This is initially disabled and may be enabled by software.
The system provides a brown-out detection circuit that triggers if the power supply (VDD) drops
below a brown-out threshold voltage (VBTH). If a brown-out condition is detected, the system may
generate a controller interrupt or a system reset.
Brown-out resets are controlled with the Power-On and Brown-Out Reset Control (PBORCTL)
register. The BORIOR bit in the PBORCTL register must be set for a brown-out condition to trigger
a reset.
164
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
The brown-out reset is equivalent to an assertion of the external RST input and the reset is held
active until the proper VDD level is restored. The RESC register can be examined in the reset interrupt
handler to determine if a Brown-Out condition was the cause of the reset, thus allowing software to
determine what actions are required to recover.
The internal Brown-Out Reset timing is shown in Figure 17-7 on page 525.
5.2.2.6
Software Reset
Software can reset a specific peripheral or generate a reset to the entire system .
Peripherals can be individually reset by software via three registers that control reset signals to each
peripheral (see the SRCRn registers). If the bit position corresponding to a peripheral is set and
subsequently cleared, the peripheral is reset. The encoding of the reset registers is consistent with
the encoding of the clock gating control for peripherals and on-chip functions (see “System
Control” on page 171). Note that all reset signals for all clocks of the specified unit are asserted as
a result of a software-initiated reset.
The entire system can be reset by software by setting the SYSRESETREQ bit in the Cortex-M3
Application Interrupt and Reset Control register resets the entire system including the core. The
software-initiated system reset sequence is as follows:
1. A software system reset is initiated by writing the SYSRESETREQ bit in the ARM Cortex-M3
Application Interrupt and Reset Control register.
2. An internal reset is asserted.
3. The internal reset is deasserted and the controller loads from memory the initial stack pointer,
the initial program counter, and the first instruction designated by the program counter, and
then begins execution.
The software-initiated system reset timing is shown in Figure 17-8 on page 525.
5.2.2.7
Watchdog Timer Reset
The watchdog timer module's function is to prevent system hangs. The watchdog timer can be
configured to generate an interrupt to the controller on its first time-out, and to generate a reset
signal on its second time-out.
After the first time-out event, the 32-bit counter is reloaded with the value of the Watchdog Timer
Load (WDTLOAD) register, and the timer resumes counting down from that value. If the timer counts
down to its zero state again before the first time-out interrupt is cleared, and the reset signal has
been enabled, the watchdog timer asserts its reset signal to the system. The watchdog timer reset
sequence is as follows:
1. The watchdog timer times out for the second time without being serviced.
2. An internal reset is asserted.
3. The internal reset is released and the controller loads from memory the initial stack pointer, the
initial program counter, the first instruction designated by the program counter, and begins
execution.
The watchdog reset timing is shown in Figure 17-9 on page 525.
June 18, 2012
165
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
5.2.3
Power Control
®
The Stellaris microcontroller provides an integrated LDO regulator that is used to provide power
to the majority of the controller's internal logic. For power reduction, the LDO regulator provides
software a mechanism to adjust the regulated value, in small increments (VSTEP), over the range
of 2.25 V to 2.75 V (inclusive)—or 2.5 V ± 10%. The adjustment is made by changing the value of
the VADJ field in the LDO Power Control (LDOPCTL) register.
Figure 5-4 on page 166 shows the power architecture.
Note:
On the printed circuit board, use the LDO output as the source of VDD25 input. Do not use
an external regulator to supply the voltage to VDD25. In addition, the LDO requires decoupling
capacitors. See “On-Chip Low Drop-Out (LDO) Regulator Characteristics” on page 519.
VDDA must be supplied with 3.3 V, or the microcontroller does not function properly. VDDA
is the supply for all of the analog circuitry on the device, including the LDO and the clock
circuitry.
Figure 5-4. Power Architecture
VDD25
VDD25
VDD25
GND
Internal
Logic and PLL
VDD25
GND
GND
GND
LDO
Low-noise
LDO
+3.3V
VDDA
VDDA
GNDA
Analog circuits
VDD
GND
VDD
VDD
GNDA
GND
I/O Buffers
VDD
GND
GND
166
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
5.2.4
Clock Control
System control determines the control of clocks in this part.
5.2.4.1
Fundamental Clock Sources
There are multiple clock sources for use in the device:
■ Internal Oscillator (IOSC). The internal oscillator is an on-chip clock source. It does not require
the use of any external components. The frequency of the internal oscillator is 12 MHz ± 30%.
Applications that do not depend on accurate clock sources may use this clock source to reduce
system cost. The internal oscillator is the clock source the device uses during and following POR.
If the main oscillator is required, software must enable the main oscillator following reset and
allow the main oscillator to stabilize before changing the clock reference.
■ Main Oscillator (MOSC). The main oscillator provides a frequency-accurate clock source by
one of two means: an external single-ended clock source is connected to the OSC0 input pin, or
an external crystal is connected across the OSC0 input and OSC1 output pins. If the PLL is being
used, the crystal value must be one of the supported frequencies between 3.579545 MHz through
8.192 MHz (inclusive). If the PLL is not being used, the crystal may be any one of the supported
frequencies between 1 MHz and 8.192 MHz. The single-ended clock source range is from DC
through the specified speed of the device. The supported crystals are listed in the XTAL bit field
in the RCC register (see page 182).
■ Internal 30-kHz Oscillator. The internal 30-kHz oscillator is similar to the internal oscillator,
except that it provides an operational frequency of 30 kHz ± 50%. It is intended for use during
Deep-Sleep power-saving modes. This power-savings mode benefits from reduced internal
switching and also allows the main oscillator to be powered down.
The internal system clock (SysClk), is derived from any of the above sources plus two others: the
output of the main internal PLL, and the internal oscillator divided by four (3 MHz ± 30%). The
frequency of the PLL clock reference must be in the range of 3.579545 MHz to 8.192 MHz (inclusive).
Table 5-4 on page 167 shows how the various clock sources can be used in a system.
Table 5-4. Clock Source Options
5.2.4.2
Clock Source
Drive PLL?
Internal Oscillator (12 MHz)
No
BYPASS = 1
Used as SysClk?
Yes
BYPASS = 1, OSCSRC = 0x1
Internal Oscillator divide by 4 (3
MHz)
No
BYPASS = 1
Yes
BYPASS = 1, OSCSRC = 0x2
Main Oscillator
Yes
BYPASS = 0, OSCSRC = Yes
0x0
BYPASS = 1, OSCSRC = 0x0
Internal 30-kHz Oscillator
No
BYPASS = 1
BYPASS = 1, OSCSRC = 0x3
Yes
Clock Configuration
The Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) and Run-Mode Clock Configuration 2 (RCC2)
registers provide control for the system clock. The RCC2 register is provided to extend fields that
offer additional encodings over the RCC register. When used, the RCC2 register field values are
used by the logic over the corresponding field in the RCC register. In particular, RCC2 provides for
a larger assortment of clock configuration options. These registers control the following clock
functionality:
■ Source of clocks in sleep and deep-sleep modes
June 18, 2012
167
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
■ System clock derived from PLL or other clock source
■ Enabling/disabling of oscillators and PLL
■ Clock divisors
■ Crystal input selection
Figure 5-5 on page 168 shows the logic for the main clock tree. The peripheral blocks are driven by
the system clock signal and can be individually enabled/disabled.
Figure 5-5. Main Clock Tree
USEPWMDIV a
PWMDW a
PWM Clock
XTALa
PWRDN b
MOSCDIS a
PLL
(400 MHz)
Main OSC
USESYSDIV a,d
÷2
IOSCDIS a
System Clock
Internal
OSC
(12 MHz)
SYSDIV b,d
÷4
BYPASS
Internal
OSC
(30 kHz)
Hibernation
Module
(32.768 kHz)
b,d
OSCSRC b,d
PWRDN
ADC Clock
÷ 25
÷ 50
CAN Clock
a. Control provided by RCC register bit/field.
b. Control provided by RCC register bit/field or RCC2 register bit/field, if overridden with RCC2 register bit USERCC2.
c. Control provided by RCC2 register bit/field.
d. Also may be controlled by DSLPCLKCFG when in deep sleep mode.
Note:
The figure above shows all features available on all Stellaris® Fury-class devices. Not all peripherals may be
available on this device.
168
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
In the RCC register, the SYSDIV field specifies which divisor is used to generate the system clock
from either the PLL output or the oscillator source (depending on how the BYPASS bit in this register
is configured). When using the PLL, the VCO frequency of 400 MHz is predivided by 2 before the
divisor is applied. Table 5-5 shows how the SYSDIV encoding affects the system clock frequency,
depending on whether the PLL is used (BYPASS=0) or another clock source is used (BYPASS=1).
The divisor is equivalent to the SYSDIV encoding plus 1. For a list of possible clock sources, see
Table 5-4 on page 167.
Table 5-5. Possible System Clock Frequencies Using the SYSDIV Field
SYSDIV
Divisor
a
Frequency
(BYPASS=0)
Frequency (BYPASS=1)
StellarisWare Parameter
b
0x0
/1
reserved
Clock source frequency/2
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_1
0x1
/2
reserved
Clock source frequency/2
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_2
0x2
/3
reserved
Clock source frequency/3
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_3
0x3
/4
50 MHz
Clock source frequency/4
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_4
0x4
/5
40 MHz
Clock source frequency/5
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_5
0x5
/6
33.33 MHz
Clock source frequency/6
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_6
0x6
/7
28.57 MHz
Clock source frequency/7
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_7
0x7
/8
25 MHz
Clock source frequency/8
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_8
0x8
/9
22.22 MHz
Clock source frequency/9
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_9
0x9
/10
20 MHz
Clock source frequency/10
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_10
0xA
/11
18.18 MHz
Clock source frequency/11
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_11
0xB
/12
16.67 MHz
Clock source frequency/12
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_12
0xC
/13
15.38 MHz
Clock source frequency/13
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_13
0xD
/14
14.29 MHz
Clock source frequency/14
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_14
0xE
/15
13.33 MHz
Clock source frequency/15
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_15
0xF
/16
12.5 MHz (default)
Clock source frequency/16
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_16
a. This parameter is used in functions such as SysCtlClockSet() in the Stellaris Peripheral Driver Library.
b. SYSCTL_SYSDIV_1 does not set the USESYSDIV bit. As a result, using this parameter without enabling the PLL results
in the system clock having the same frequency as the clock source.
The SYSDIV2 field in the RCC2 register is 2 bits wider than the SYSDIV field in the RCC register
so that additional larger divisors up to /64 are possible, allowing a lower system clock frequency for
improved Deep Sleep power consumption. When using the PLL, the VCO frequency of 400 MHz is
predivided by 2 before the divisor is applied. The divisor is equivalent to the SYSDIV2 encoding
plus 1. Table 5-6 shows how the SYSDIV2 encoding affects the system clock frequency, depending
on whether the PLL is used (BYPASS2=0) or another clock source is used (BYPASS2=1). For a list
of possible clock sources, see Table 5-4 on page 167.
Table 5-6. Examples of Possible System Clock Frequencies Using the SYSDIV2 Field
SYSDIV2
Divisor
a
Frequency
(BYPASS2=0)
Frequency (BYPASS2=1)
StellarisWare Parameter
b
0x00
/1
reserved
Clock source frequency/2
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_1
0x01
/2
reserved
Clock source frequency/2
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_2
0x02
/3
reserved
Clock source frequency/3
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_3
0x03
/4
50 MHz
Clock source frequency/4
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_4
0x04
/5
40 MHz
Clock source frequency/5
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_5
June 18, 2012
169
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Table 5-6. Examples of Possible System Clock Frequencies Using the SYSDIV2 Field
(continued)
SYSDIV2
Divisor
a
Frequency
(BYPASS2=0)
Frequency (BYPASS2=1)
StellarisWare Parameter
0x05
/6
33.33 MHz
Clock source frequency/6
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_6
0x06
/7
28.57 MHz
Clock source frequency/7
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_7
0x07
/8
25 MHz
Clock source frequency/8
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_8
0x08
/9
22.22 MHz
Clock source frequency/9
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_9
0x09
/10
20 MHz
Clock source frequency/10
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_10
...
...
...
...
...
0x3F
/64
3.125 MHz
Clock source frequency/64
SYSCTL_SYSDIV_64
a. This parameter is used in functions such as SysCtlClockSet() in the Stellaris Peripheral Driver Library.
b. SYSCTL_SYSDIV_1 does not set the USESYSDIV bit. As a result, using this parameter without enabling the PLL results
in the system clock having the same frequency as the clock source.
5.2.4.3
Crystal Configuration for the Main Oscillator (MOSC)
The main oscillator supports the use of a select number of crystals. If the main oscillator is used by
the PLL as a reference clock, the supported range of crystals is 3.579545 to 8.192 MHz, otherwise,
the range of supported crystals is 1 to 8.192 MHz.
The XTAL bit in the RCC register (see page 182) describes the available crystal choices and default
programming values.
Software configures the RCC register XTAL field with the crystal number. If the PLL is used in the
design, the XTAL field value is internally translated to the PLL settings.
5.2.4.4
Main PLL Frequency Configuration
The main PLL is disabled by default during power-on reset and is enabled later by software if
required. Software specifies the output divisor to set the system clock frequency, and enables the
main PLL to drive the output. The PLL operates at 400 MHz, but is divided by two prior to the
application of the output divisor.
If the main oscillator provides the clock reference to the main PLL, the translation provided by
hardware and used to program the PLL is available for software in the XTAL to PLL Translation
(PLLCFG) register (see page 185). The internal translation provides a translation within ± 1% of the
targeted PLL VCO frequency. Table 17-8 on page 521 shows the actual PLL frequency and error for
a given crystal choice.
The Crystal Value field (XTAL) in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register (see page 182)
describes the available crystal choices and default programming of the PLLCFG register. Any time
the XTAL field changes, the new settings are translated and the internal PLL settings are updated.
5.2.4.5
PLL Modes
The PLL has two modes of operation: Normal and Power-Down
■ Normal: The PLL multiplies the input clock reference and drives the output.
■ Power-Down: Most of the PLL internal circuitry is disabled and the PLL does not drive the output.
The modes are programmed using the RCC/RCC2 register fields (see page 182 and page 186).
170
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
5.2.4.6
PLL Operation
If a PLL configuration is changed, the PLL output frequency is unstable until it reconverges (relocks)
to the new setting. The time between the configuration change and relock is TREADY (see Table
17-7 on page 521). During the relock time, the affected PLL is not usable as a clock reference.
PLL is changed by one of the following:
■ Change to the XTAL value in the RCC register—writes of the same value do not cause a relock.
■ Change in the PLL from Power-Down to Normal mode.
A counter is defined to measure the TREADY requirement. The counter is clocked by the main
oscillator. The range of the main oscillator has been taken into account and the down counter is set
to 0x1200 (that is, ~600 μs at an 8.192 MHz external oscillator clock). Hardware is provided to keep
the PLL from being used as a system clock until the TREADY condition is met after one of the two
changes above. It is the user's responsibility to have a stable clock source (like the main oscillator)
before the RCC/RCC2 register is switched to use the PLL.
If the main PLL is enabled and the system clock is switched to use the PLL in one step, the system
control hardware continues to clock the controller from the oscillator selected by the RCC/RCC2
register until the main PLL is stable (TREADY time met), after which it changes to the PLL. Software
can use many methods to ensure that the system is clocked from the main PLL, including periodically
polling the PLLLRIS bit in the Raw Interrupt Status (RIS) register, and enabling the PLL Lock
interrupt.
5.2.5
System Control
For power-savings purposes, the RCGCn , SCGCn , and DCGCn registers control the clock gating
logic for each peripheral or block in the system while the controller is in Run, Sleep, and Deep-Sleep
mode, respectively.
There are four levels of operation for the device defined as:
■ Run Mode. In Run mode, the controller actively executes code. Run mode provides normal
operation of the processor and all of the peripherals that are currently enabled by the RCGCn
registers. The system clock can be any of the available clock sources including the PLL.
■ Sleep Mode. In Sleep mode, the clock frequency of the active peripherals is unchanged, but the
processor and the memory subsystem are not clocked and therefore no longer execute code.
Sleep mode is entered by the Cortex-M3 core executing a WFI(Wait for Interrupt)
instruction. Any properly configured interrupt event in the system will bring the processor back
into Run mode. See “Power Management” on page 79 for more details.
Peripherals are clocked that are enabled in the SCGCn register when auto-clock gating is enabled
(see the RCC register) or the RCGCn register when the auto-clock gating is disabled. The system
clock has the same source and frequency as that during Run mode.
■ Deep-Sleep Mode. In Deep-Sleep mode, the clock frequency of the active peripherals may
change (depending on the Run mode clock configuration) in addition to the processor clock being
stopped. An interrupt returns the device to Run mode from one of the sleep modes; the sleep
modes are entered on request from the code. Deep-Sleep mode is entered by first writing the
Deep Sleep Enable bit in the ARM Cortex-M3 NVIC system control register and then executing
a WFI instruction. Any properly configured interrupt event in the system will bring the processor
back into Run mode. See “Power Management” on page 79 for more details.
June 18, 2012
171
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
The Cortex-M3 processor core and the memory subsystem are not clocked. Peripherals are
clocked that are enabled in the DCGCn register when auto-clock gating is enabled (see the RCC
register) or the RCGCn register when auto-clock gating is disabled. The system clock source is
the main oscillator by default or the internal oscillator specified in the DSLPCLKCFG register if
one is enabled. When the DSLPCLKCFG register is used, the internal oscillator is powered up,
if necessary, and the main oscillator is powered down. If the PLL is running at the time of the
WFI instruction, hardware will power the PLL down and override the SYSDIV field of the active
RCC/RCC2 register, to be determined by the DSDIVORIDE setting in the DSLPCLKCFG register,
up to /16 or /64 respectively. When the Deep-Sleep exit event occurs, hardware brings the system
clock back to the source and frequency it had at the onset of Deep-Sleep mode before enabling
the clocks that had been stopped during the Deep-Sleep duration.
Caution – If the Cortex-M3 Debug Access Port (DAP) has been enabled, and the device wakes from a
low power sleep or deep-sleep mode, the core may start executing code before all clocks to peripherals
have been restored to their run mode configuration. The DAP is usually enabled by software tools
accessing the JTAG or SWD interface when debugging or flash programming. If this condition occurs,
a Hard Fault is triggered when software accesses a peripheral with an invalid clock.
A software delay loop can be used at the beginning of the interrupt routine that is used to wake up a
system from a WFI (Wait For Interrupt) instruction. This stalls the execution of any code that accesses
a peripheral register that might cause a fault. This loop can be removed for production software as the
DAP is most likely not enabled during normal execution.
Because the DAP is disabled by default (power on reset), the user can also power-cycle the device. The
DAP is not enabled unless it is enabled through the JTAG or SWD interface.
5.3
Initialization and Configuration
The PLL is configured using direct register writes to the RCC/RCC2 register. If the RCC2 register
is being used, the USERCC2 bit must be set and the appropriate RCC2 bit/field is used. The steps
required to successfully change the PLL-based system clock are:
1. Bypass the PLL and system clock divider by setting the BYPASS bit and clearing the USESYS
bit in the RCC register. This configures the system to run off a “raw” clock source and allows
for the new PLL configuration to be validated before switching the system clock to the PLL.
2. Select the crystal value (XTAL) and oscillator source (OSCSRC), and clear the PWRDN bit in
RCC/RCC2. Setting the XTAL field automatically pulls valid PLL configuration data for the
appropriate crystal, and clearing the PWRDN bit powers and enables the PLL and its output.
3. Select the desired system divider (SYSDIV) in RCC/RCC2 and set the USESYS bit in RCC. The
SYSDIV field determines the system frequency for the microcontroller.
4. Wait for the PLL to lock by polling the PLLLRIS bit in the Raw Interrupt Status (RIS) register.
5. Enable use of the PLL by clearing the BYPASS bit in RCC/RCC2.
5.4
Register Map
Table 5-7 on page 173 lists the System Control registers, grouped by function. The offset listed is a
hexadecimal increment to the register's address, relative to the System Control base address of
0x400F.E000.
Note:
Spaces in the System Control register space that are not used are reserved for future or
internal use. Software should not modify any reserved memory address.
172
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 5-7. System Control Register Map
Name
Type
Reset
0x000
DID0
RO
-
Device Identification 0
174
0x004
DID1
RO
-
Device Identification 1
189
0x008
DC0
RO
0x00FF.003F
Device Capabilities 0
191
0x010
DC1
RO
0x0100.309F
Device Capabilities 1
192
0x014
DC2
RO
0x0307.0011
Device Capabilities 2
194
0x018
DC3
RO
0x8F00.0FC0
Device Capabilities 3
196
0x01C
DC4
RO
0x0000.00FF
Device Capabilities 4
198
0x030
PBORCTL
R/W
0x0000.7FFD
Brown-Out Reset Control
176
0x034
LDOPCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
LDO Power Control
177
0x040
SRCR0
R/W
0x00000000
Software Reset Control 0
216
0x044
SRCR1
R/W
0x00000000
Software Reset Control 1
217
0x048
SRCR2
R/W
0x00000000
Software Reset Control 2
218
0x050
RIS
RO
0x0000.0000
Raw Interrupt Status
178
0x054
IMC
R/W
0x0000.0000
Interrupt Mask Control
179
0x058
MISC
R/W1C
0x0000.0000
Masked Interrupt Status and Clear
180
0x05C
RESC
R/W
-
Reset Cause
181
0x060
RCC
R/W
0x0780.3AD1
Run-Mode Clock Configuration
182
0x064
PLLCFG
RO
-
XTAL to PLL Translation
185
0x070
RCC2
R/W
0x0780.2810
Run-Mode Clock Configuration 2
186
0x100
RCGC0
R/W
0x00000040
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0
199
0x104
RCGC1
R/W
0x00000000
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1
204
0x108
RCGC2
R/W
0x00000000
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2
210
0x110
SCGC0
R/W
0x00000040
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0
200
0x114
SCGC1
R/W
0x00000000
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1
206
0x118
SCGC2
R/W
0x00000000
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2
212
0x120
DCGC0
R/W
0x00000040
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0
202
0x124
DCGC1
R/W
0x00000000
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1
208
0x128
DCGC2
R/W
0x00000000
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2
214
0x144
DSLPCLKCFG
R/W
0x0780.0000
Deep Sleep Clock Configuration
188
5.5
Description
See
page
Offset
Register Descriptions
All addresses given are relative to the System Control base address of 0x400F.E000.
June 18, 2012
173
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 1: Device Identification 0 (DID0), offset 0x000
This register identifies the version of the microcontroller. Each microcontroller is uniquely identified
by the combined values of the CLASS field in the DID0 register and the PARTNO field in the DID1
register.
Device Identification 0 (DID0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x000
Type RO, reset 31
30
28
27
26
VER
reserved
Type
Reset
29
25
24
23
22
21
20
reserved
18
17
16
CLASS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
MAJOR
Type
Reset
19
MINOR
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
reserved
RO
0
30:28
VER
RO
0x1
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
DID0 Version
This field defines the DID0 register format version. The version number
is numeric. The value of the VER field is encoded as follows:
Value Description
0x1
Second version of the DID0 register format.
27:24
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
23:16
CLASS
RO
0x1
Device Class
The CLASS field value identifies the internal design from which all mask
sets are generated for all devices in a particular product line. The CLASS
field value is changed for new product lines, for changes in fab process
(for example, a remap or shrink), or any case where the MAJOR or MINOR
fields require differentiation from prior devices. The value of the CLASS
field is encoded as follows (all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0x1
Stellaris® Fury-class devices.
174
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
15:8
MAJOR
RO
-
Description
Major Revision
This field specifies the major revision number of the device. The major
revision reflects changes to base layers of the design. The major revision
number is indicated in the part number as a letter (A for first revision, B
for second, and so on). This field is encoded as follows:
Value Description
0x0
Revision A (initial device)
0x1
Revision B (first base layer revision)
0x2
Revision C (second base layer revision)
and so on.
7:0
MINOR
RO
-
Minor Revision
This field specifies the minor revision number of the device. The minor
revision reflects changes to the metal layers of the design. The MINOR
field value is reset when the MAJOR field is changed. This field is numeric
and is encoded as follows:
Value Description
0x0
Initial device, or a major revision update.
0x1
First metal layer change.
0x2
Second metal layer change.
and so on.
June 18, 2012
175
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 2: Brown-Out Reset Control (PBORCTL), offset 0x030
This register is responsible for controlling reset conditions after initial power-on reset.
Brown-Out Reset Control (PBORCTL)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x030
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.7FFD
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BORIOR
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:2
reserved
RO
0x0
1
BORIOR
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
BOR Interrupt or Reset
This bit controls how a BOR event is signaled to the controller. If set, a
reset is signaled. Otherwise, an interrupt is signaled.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
176
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: LDO Power Control (LDOPCTL), offset 0x034
The VADJ field in this register adjusts the on-chip output voltage (VOUT).
LDO Power Control (LDOPCTL)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x034
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
VADJ
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:6
reserved
RO
0
5:0
VADJ
R/W
0x0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
LDO Output Voltage
This field sets the on-chip output voltage. The programming values for
the VADJ field are provided below.
Value
VOUT (V)
0x00
2.50
0x01
2.45
0x02
2.40
0x03
2.35
0x04
2.30
0x05
2.25
0x06-0x3F Reserved
0x1B
2.75
0x1C
2.70
0x1D
2.65
0x1E
2.60
0x1F
2.55
June 18, 2012
177
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 4: Raw Interrupt Status (RIS), offset 0x050
Central location for system control raw interrupts. These are set and cleared by hardware.
Raw Interrupt Status (RIS)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x050
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BORRIS
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PLLLRIS
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
PLLLRIS
RO
0
PLL Lock Raw Interrupt Status
This bit is set when the PLL TREADY Timer asserts.
5:2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
BORRIS
RO
0
Brown-Out Reset Raw Interrupt Status
This bit is the raw interrupt status for any brown-out conditions. If set,
a brown-out condition is currently active. This is an unregistered signal
from the brown-out detection circuit. An interrupt is reported if the BORIM
bit in the IMC register is set and the BORIOR bit in the PBORCTL register
is cleared.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
178
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: Interrupt Mask Control (IMC), offset 0x054
Central location for system control interrupt masks.
Interrupt Mask Control (IMC)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x054
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BORIM
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PLLLIM
RO
0
R/W
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
PLLLIM
R/W
0
PLL Lock Interrupt Mask
This bit specifies whether a PLL Lock interrupt is promoted to a controller
interrupt. If set, an interrupt is generated if PLLLRIS in RIS is set;
otherwise, an interrupt is not generated.
5:2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
BORIM
R/W
0
Brown-Out Reset Interrupt Mask
This bit specifies whether a brown-out condition is promoted to a
controller interrupt. If set, an interrupt is generated if BORRIS is set;
otherwise, an interrupt is not generated.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
179
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 6: Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (MISC), offset 0x058
On a read, this register gives the current masked status value of the corresponding interrupt. All of
the bits are R/W1C and this action also clears the corresponding raw interrupt bit in the RIS register
(see page 178).
Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (MISC)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x058
Type R/W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BORMIS
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W1C
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PLLLMIS
RO
0
R/W1C
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
PLLLMIS
R/W1C
0
PLL Lock Masked Interrupt Status
This bit is set when the PLL TREADY timer asserts. The interrupt is cleared
by writing a 1 to this bit.
5:2
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
BORMIS
R/W1C
0
BOR Masked Interrupt Status
The BORMIS is simply the BORRIS ANDed with the mask value, BORIM.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
180
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 7: Reset Cause (RESC), offset 0x05C
This register is set with the reset cause after reset. The bits in this register are sticky and maintain
their state across multiple reset sequences, except when an power-on reset is the cause, in which
case, all bits other than POR in the RESC register are cleared.
Reset Cause (RESC)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x05C
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SW
WDT
BOR
POR
EXT
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SW
R/W
-
Software Reset
When set, indicates a software reset is the cause of the reset event.
3
WDT
R/W
-
Watchdog Timer Reset
When set, indicates a watchdog reset is the cause of the reset event.
2
BOR
R/W
-
Brown-Out Reset
When set, indicates a brown-out reset is the cause of the reset event.
1
POR
R/W
-
Power-On Reset
When set, indicates a power-on reset is the cause of the reset event.
0
EXT
R/W
-
External Reset
When set, indicates an external reset (RST assertion) is the cause of
the reset event.
June 18, 2012
181
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 8: Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC), offset 0x060
This register is defined to provide source control and frequency speed.
Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x060
Type R/W, reset 0x0780.3AD1
31
30
29
28
26
25
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
PWRDN
reserved
BYPASS
reserved
R/W
1
RO
1
R/W
1
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
27
24
23
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
0
ACG
21
20
19
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
0
R/W
1
RO
0
SYSDIV
22
Name
Type
Reset
31:28
reserved
RO
0x0
27
ACG
R/W
0
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
reserved
USESYSDIV
XTAL
Bit/Field
18
OSCSRC
reserved
RO
0
IOSCDIS MOSCDIS
R/W
0
R/W
1
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Auto Clock Gating
This bit specifies whether the system uses the Sleep-Mode Clock
Gating Control (SCGCn) registers and Deep-Sleep-Mode Clock
Gating Control (DCGCn) registers if the controller enters a Sleep or
Deep-Sleep mode (respectively). If set, the SCGCn or DCGCn registers
are used to control the clocks distributed to the peripherals when the
controller is in a sleep mode. Otherwise, the Run-Mode Clock Gating
Control (RCGCn) registers are used when the controller enters a sleep
mode.
The RCGCn registers are always used to control the clocks in Run
mode.
This allows peripherals to consume less power when the controller is
in a sleep mode and the peripheral is unused.
26:23
SYSDIV
R/W
0xF
System Clock Divisor
Specifies which divisor is used to generate the system clock from either
the PLL output or the oscillator source (depending on how the BYPASS
bit in this register is configured). See Table 5-5 on page 169 for bit
encodings.
If the SYSDIV value is less than MINSYSDIV (see page 192), and the
PLL is being used, then the MINSYSDIV value is used as the divisor.
If the PLL is not being used, the SYSDIV value can be less than
MINSYSDIV.
22
USESYSDIV
R/W
0
Enable System Clock Divider
Use the system clock divider as the source for the system clock. The
system clock divider is forced to be used when the PLL is selected as
the source.
If the USERCC2 bit in the RCC2 register is set, then the SYSDIV2 field
in the RCC2 register is used as the system clock divider rather than the
SYSDIV field in this register.
182
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
21:14
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
13
PWRDN
R/W
1
PLL Power Down
This bit connects to the PLL PWRDN input. The reset value of 1 powers
down the PLL.
12
reserved
RO
1
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
11
BYPASS
R/W
1
PLL Bypass
Chooses whether the system clock is derived from the PLL output or
the OSC source. If set, the clock that drives the system is the OSC
source. Otherwise, the clock that drives the system is the PLL output
clock divided by the system divider.
See Table 5-5 on page 169 for programming guidelines.
10
reserved
RO
0
9:6
XTAL
R/W
0xB
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Crystal Value
This field specifies the crystal value attached to the main oscillator. The
encoding for this field is provided below. Depending on the crystal used,
the PLL frequency may not be exactly 400 MHz (see Table
17-8 on page 521 for more information).
Value Crystal Frequency (MHz) Not
Using the PLL
Crystal Frequency (MHz) Using
the PLL
0x0
1.000
reserved
0x1
1.8432
reserved
0x2
2.000
reserved
0x3
2.4576
reserved
0x4
3.579545 MHz
0x5
3.6864 MHz
0x6
4 MHz
0x7
4.096 MHz
0x8
4.9152 MHz
0x9
5 MHz
0xA
5.12 MHz
0xB
6 MHz (reset value)
0xC
6.144 MHz
0xD
7.3728 MHz
0xE
8 MHz
0xF
8.192 MHz
June 18, 2012
183
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
5:4
OSCSRC
R/W
0x1
Description
Oscillator Source
Selects the input source for the OSC. The values are:
Value Input Source
0x0
MOSC
Main oscillator
0x1
IOSC
Internal oscillator (default)
0x2
IOSC/4
Internal oscillator / 4
0x3
30 kHz
30-KHz internal oscillator
For additional oscillator sources, see the RCC2 register.
3:2
reserved
RO
0x0
1
IOSCDIS
R/W
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Internal Oscillator Disable
0: Internal oscillator (IOSC) is enabled.
1: Internal oscillator is disabled.
0
MOSCDIS
R/W
1
Main Oscillator Disable
0: Main oscillator is enabled .
1: Main oscillator is disabled (default).
184
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: XTAL to PLL Translation (PLLCFG), offset 0x064
This register provides a means of translating external crystal frequencies into the appropriate PLL
settings. This register is initialized during the reset sequence and updated anytime that the XTAL
field changes in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register (see page 182).
The PLL frequency is calculated using the PLLCFG field values, as follows:
PLLFreq = OSCFreq * F / (R + 1)
XTAL to PLL Translation (PLLCFG)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x064
Type RO, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
F
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:14
reserved
RO
0x0
13:5
F
RO
-
R
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
PLL F Value
This field specifies the value supplied to the PLL’s F input.
4:0
R
RO
-
PLL R Value
This field specifies the value supplied to the PLL’s R input.
June 18, 2012
185
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 10: Run-Mode Clock Configuration 2 (RCC2), offset 0x070
This register overrides the RCC equivalent register fields, as shown in Table 5-8, when the USERCC2
bit is set, allowing the extended capabilities of the RCC2 register to be used while also providing a
means to be backward-compatible to previous parts. Each RCC2 field that supersedes an RCC
field is located at the same LSB bit position; however, some RCC2 fields are larger than the
corresponding RCC field.
Table 5-8. RCC2 Fields that Override RCC fields
RCC2 Field...
Overrides RCC Field
SYSDIV2, bits[28:23]
SYSDIV, bits[26:23]
PWRDN2, bit[13]
PWRDN, bit[13]
BYPASS2, bit[11]
BYPASS, bit[11]
OSCSRC2, bits[6:4]
OSCSRC, bits[5:4]
Run-Mode Clock Configuration 2 (RCC2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x070
Type R/W, reset 0x0780.2810
31
30
USERCC2
Type
Reset
R/W
0
RO
0
15
14
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
29
28
27
26
reserved
RO
0
25
24
23
22
21
20
SYSDIV2
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
RO
0
10
9
8
7
6
13
12
11
PWRDN2
reserved
BYPASS2
R/W
1
RO
0
R/W
1
reserved
RO
0
19
18
17
16
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
OSCSRC2
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31
USERCC2
R/W
0
Use RCC2
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
R/W
1
RO
0
RO
0
When set, overrides the RCC register fields.
30:29
reserved
RO
0x0
28:23
SYSDIV2
R/W
0x0F
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
System Clock Divisor
Specifies which divisor is used to generate the system clock from either
the PLL output or the oscillator source (depending on how the BYPASS2
bit is configured). SYSDIV2 is used for the divisor when both the
USESYSDIV bit in the RCC register and the USERCC2 bit in this register
are set. See Table 5-6 on page 169 for programming guidelines.
22:14
reserved
RO
0x0
13
PWRDN2
R/W
1
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Power-Down PLL
When set, powers down the PLL.
12
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
186
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
11
BYPASS2
R/W
1
Bypass PLL
When set, bypasses the PLL for the clock source.
See Table 5-6 on page 169 for programming guidelines.
10:7
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6:4
OSCSRC2
R/W
0x1
Oscillator Source
Selects the input source for the OSC. The values are:
Value Description
0x0
MOSC
Main oscillator
0x1
IOSC
Internal oscillator
0x2
IOSC/4
Internal oscillator / 4
0x3
30 kHz
30-kHz internal oscillator
3:0
reserved
RO
0
0x4
Reserved
0x5
Reserved
0x6
Reserved
0x7
Reserved
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
187
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 11: Deep Sleep Clock Configuration (DSLPCLKCFG), offset 0x144
This register provides configuration information for the hardware control of Deep Sleep Mode.
Deep Sleep Clock Configuration (DSLPCLKCFG)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x144
Type R/W, reset 0x0780.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
reserved
Type
Reset
25
24
23
22
21
20
DSDIVORIDE
18
17
16
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
19
DSOSCSRC
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:29
reserved
RO
0x0
28:23
DSDIVORIDE
R/W
0x0F
R/W
0
reserved
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Divider Field Override
6-bit system divider field to override when Deep-Sleep occurs with PLL
running.
22:7
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6:4
DSOSCSRC
R/W
0x0
Clock Source
Specifies the clock source during Deep-Sleep mode.
Value Description
0x0
MOSC
Use main oscillator as source.
0x1
IOSC
Use internal 12-MHz oscillator as source.
0x2
Reserved
0x3
30 kHz
Use 30-kHz internal oscillator as source.
3:0
reserved
RO
0x0
0x4
Reserved
0x5
Reserved
0x6
Reserved
0x7
Reserved
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
188
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 12: Device Identification 1 (DID1), offset 0x004
This register identifies the device family, part number, temperature range, pin count, and package
type. Each microcontroller is uniquely identified by the combined values of the CLASS field in the
DID0 register and the PARTNO field in the DID1 register.
Device Identification 1 (DID1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x004
Type RO, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
RO
0
15
25
24
23
22
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
-
RO
-
RO
-
VER
Type
Reset
FAM
PINCOUNT
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
1
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
PARTNO
reserved
RO
0
19
TEMP
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:28
VER
RO
0x1
RO
-
PKG
ROHS
RO
-
RO
1
QUAL
RO
-
RO
-
Description
DID1 Version
This field defines the DID1 register format version. The version number
is numeric. The value of the VER field is encoded as follows (all other
encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0x1
27:24
FAM
RO
0x0
Second version of the DID1 register format.
Family
This field provides the family identification of the device within the
Luminary Micro product portfolio. The value is encoded as follows (all
other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0x0
23:16
PARTNO
RO
0xA4
Stellaris family of microcontollers, that is, all devices with
external part numbers starting with LM3S.
Part Number
This field provides the part number of the device within the family. The
value is encoded as follows (all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0xA4 LM3S2730
15:13
PINCOUNT
RO
0x2
Package Pin Count
This field specifies the number of pins on the device package. The value
is encoded as follows (all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0x2
100-pin or 108-ball package
June 18, 2012
189
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
12:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:5
TEMP
RO
-
Temperature Range
This field specifies the temperature rating of the device. The value is
encoded as follows (all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
4:3
PKG
RO
-
0x0
Commercial temperature range (0°C to 70°C)
0x1
Industrial temperature range (-40°C to 85°C)
0x2
Extended temperature range (-40°C to 105°C)
Package Type
This field specifies the package type. The value is encoded as follows
(all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
2
ROHS
RO
1
0x0
SOIC package
0x1
LQFP package
0x2
BGA package
RoHS-Compliance
This bit specifies whether the device is RoHS-compliant. A 1 indicates
the part is RoHS-compliant.
1:0
QUAL
RO
-
Qualification Status
This field specifies the qualification status of the device. The value is
encoded as follows (all other encodings are reserved):
Value Description
0x0
Engineering Sample (unqualified)
0x1
Pilot Production (unqualified)
0x2
Fully Qualified
190
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 13: Device Capabilities 0 (DC0), offset 0x008
This register is predefined by the part and can be used to verify features.
Device Capabilities 0 (DC0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x008
Type RO, reset 0x00FF.003F
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
SRAMSZ
Type
Reset
FLASHSZ
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
SRAMSZ
RO
0x00FF
SRAM Size
Indicates the size of the on-chip SRAM memory.
Value
Description
0x00FF 64 KB of SRAM
15:0
FLASHSZ
RO
0x003F
Flash Size
Indicates the size of the on-chip flash memory.
Value
Description
0x003F 128 KB of Flash
June 18, 2012
191
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 14: Device Capabilities 1 (DC1), offset 0x010
This register provides a list of features available in the system. The Stellaris family uses this register
format to indicate the availability of the following family features in the specific device: CANs, PWM,
ADC, Watchdog timer, Hibernation module, and debug capabilities. This register also indicates the
maximum clock frequency and maximum ADC sample rate. The format of this register is consistent
with the RCGC0, SCGC0, and DCGC0 clock control registers and the SRCR0 software reset control
register.
Device Capabilities 1 (DC1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x010
Type RO, reset 0x0100.309F
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
25
23
22
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
1
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
2
1
0
PLL
WDT
SWO
SWD
JTAG
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
CAN0
MINSYSDIV
Type
Reset
24
reserved
19
reserved
MPU
RO
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:25
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
24
CAN0
RO
1
CAN Module 0 Present
When set, indicates that CAN unit 0 is present.
23:16
reserved
RO
0
15:12
MINSYSDIV
RO
0x3
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
System Clock Divider
Minimum 4-bit divider value for system clock. The reset value is
hardware-dependent. See the RCC register for how to change the
system clock divisor using the SYSDIV bit.
Value Description
0x3
Specifies a 50-MHz CPU clock with a PLL divider of 4.
11:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
MPU
RO
1
MPU Present
When set, indicates that the Cortex-M3 Memory Protection Unit (MPU)
module is present. See the "Cortex-M3 Peripherals" chapter in the
Stellaris Data Sheet for details on the MPU.
6:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
192
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
4
PLL
RO
1
PLL Present
When set, indicates that the on-chip Phase Locked Loop (PLL) is
present.
3
WDT
RO
1
Watchdog Timer Present
When set, indicates that a watchdog timer is present.
2
SWO
RO
1
SWO Trace Port Present
When set, indicates that the Serial Wire Output (SWO) trace port is
present.
1
SWD
RO
1
SWD Present
When set, indicates that the Serial Wire Debugger (SWD) is present.
0
JTAG
RO
1
JTAG Present
When set, indicates that the JTAG debugger interface is present.
June 18, 2012
193
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 15: Device Capabilities 2 (DC2), offset 0x014
This register provides a list of features available in the system. The Stellaris family uses this register
format to indicate the availability of the following family features in the specific device: Analog
Comparators, General-Purpose Timers, I2Cs, QEIs, SSIs, and UARTs. The format of this register
is consistent with the RCGC1, SCGC1, and DCGC1 clock control registers and the SRCR1 software
reset control register.
Device Capabilities 2 (DC2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x014
Type RO, reset 0x0307.0011
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
25
24
23
22
COMP1
COMP0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
21
20
19
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
SSI0
RO
1
18
17
16
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
2
1
0
reserved
RO
0
UART0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
25
COMP1
RO
1
Analog Comparator 1 Present
When set, indicates that analog comparator 1 is present.
24
COMP0
RO
1
Analog Comparator 0 Present
When set, indicates that analog comparator 0 is present.
23:19
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
TIMER2
RO
1
Timer 2 Present
When set, indicates that General-Purpose Timer module 2 is present.
17
TIMER1
RO
1
Timer 1 Present
When set, indicates that General-Purpose Timer module 1 is present.
16
TIMER0
RO
1
Timer 0 Present
When set, indicates that General-Purpose Timer module 0 is present.
15:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SSI0
RO
1
SSI0 Present
When set, indicates that SSI module 0 is present.
3:1
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
194
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
0
UART0
RO
1
Description
UART0 Present
When set, indicates that UART module 0 is present.
June 18, 2012
195
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 16: Device Capabilities 3 (DC3), offset 0x018
This register provides a list of features available in the system. The Stellaris family uses this register
format to indicate the availability of the following family features in the specific device: Analog
Comparator I/Os, CCP I/Os, ADC I/Os, and PWM I/Os.
Device Capabilities 3 (DC3)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x018
Type RO, reset 0x8F00.0FC0
31
30
32KHZ
Type
Reset
29
28
reserved
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
CCP3
CCP2
CCP1
CCP0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
27
C1O
RO
0
RO
0
C1PLUS C1MINUS
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
32KHZ
RO
1
C0O
RO
1
reserved
C0PLUS C0MINUS
RO
1
RO
1
reserved
Description
32KHz Input Clock Available
When set, indicates an even CCP pin is present and can be used as a
32-KHz input clock.
30:28
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
27
CCP3
RO
1
CCP3 Pin Present
When set, indicates that Capture/Compare/PWM pin 3 is present.
26
CCP2
RO
1
CCP2 Pin Present
When set, indicates that Capture/Compare/PWM pin 2 is present.
25
CCP1
RO
1
CCP1 Pin Present
When set, indicates that Capture/Compare/PWM pin 1 is present.
24
CCP0
RO
1
CCP0 Pin Present
When set, indicates that Capture/Compare/PWM pin 0 is present.
23:12
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
11
C1O
RO
1
C1o Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 1 output pin is present.
10
C1PLUS
RO
1
C1+ Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 1 (+) input pin is present.
9
C1MINUS
RO
1
C1- Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 1 (-) input pin is present.
8
C0O
RO
1
C0o Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 0 output pin is present.
196
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
7
C0PLUS
RO
1
Description
C0+ Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 0 (+) input pin is present.
6
C0MINUS
RO
1
C0- Pin Present
When set, indicates that the analog comparator 0 (-) input pin is present.
5:0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
197
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 17: Device Capabilities 4 (DC4), offset 0x01C
This register provides a list of features available in the system. The Stellaris family uses this register
format to indicate the availability of the following family features in the specific device: Ethernet MAC
and PHY, GPIOs, and CCP I/Os. The format of this register is consistent with the RCGC2, SCGC2,
and DCGC2 clock control registers and the SRCR2 software reset control register.
Device Capabilities 4 (DC4)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x01C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00FF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
GPIOH
RO
1
GPIO Port H Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port H is present.
6
GPIOG
RO
1
GPIO Port G Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port G is present.
5
GPIOF
RO
1
GPIO Port F Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port F is present.
4
GPIOE
RO
1
GPIO Port E Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port E is present.
3
GPIOD
RO
1
GPIO Port D Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port D is present.
2
GPIOC
RO
1
GPIO Port C Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port C is present.
1
GPIOB
RO
1
GPIO Port B Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port B is present.
0
GPIOA
RO
1
GPIO Port A Present
When set, indicates that GPIO Port A is present.
198
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (RCGC0), offset 0x100
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC0 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC0 for Sleep operation, and DCGC0 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (RCGC0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x100
Type R/W, reset 0x00000040
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
25
23
22
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
24
CAN0
reserved
RO
0
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
19
RO
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
WDT
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:25
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
24
CAN0
R/W
0
CAN0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for CAN unit 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled.
23:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
reserved
RO
1
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
WDT
R/W
0
WDT Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for the WDT module. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, a read or write to the unit generates
a bus fault.
2:0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
199
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 19: Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (SCGC0), offset
0x110
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC0 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC0 for Sleep operation, and DCGC0 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (SCGC0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x110
Type R/W, reset 0x00000040
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
11
10
9
8
7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
22
CAN0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
WDT
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:25
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
24
CAN0
R/W
0
CAN0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for CAN unit 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled.
23:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
reserved
RO
1
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
WDT
R/W
0
WDT Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for the WDT module. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, a read or write to the unit generates
a bus fault.
200
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2:0
reserved
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
201
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 20: Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (DCGC0),
offset 0x120
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC0 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC0 for Sleep operation, and DCGC0 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 0 (DCGC0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x120
Type R/W, reset 0x00000040
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
11
10
9
8
7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
22
CAN0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
WDT
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:25
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
24
CAN0
R/W
0
CAN0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for CAN unit 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled.
23:7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
reserved
RO
1
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
WDT
R/W
0
WDT Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for the WDT module. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, a read or write to the unit generates
a bus fault.
202
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2:0
reserved
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
203
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 21: Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (RCGC1), offset 0x104
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC1 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC1 for Sleep operation, and DCGC1 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (RCGC1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x104
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
25
24
23
22
COMP1
COMP0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
21
20
19
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
SSI0
R/W
0
18
17
16
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
2
1
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
UART0
RO
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
25
COMP1
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 1 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 1. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
24
COMP0
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 0 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
23:19
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
TIMER2
R/W
0
Timer 2 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 2.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
204
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
17
TIMER1
R/W
0
Description
Timer 1 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 1.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
16
TIMER0
R/W
0
Timer 0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 0.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
15:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SSI0
R/W
0
SSI0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for SSI module 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
3:1
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
UART0
R/W
0
UART0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for UART module 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
205
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 22: Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (SCGC1), offset
0x114
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC1 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC1 for Sleep operation, and DCGC1 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (SCGC1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x114
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
COMP1
COMP0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
23
22
21
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
20
19
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
SSI0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
18
17
16
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
2
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
0
UART0
RO
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
25
COMP1
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 1 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 1. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
24
COMP0
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 0 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
23:19
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
TIMER2
R/W
0
Timer 2 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 2.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
206
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
17
TIMER1
R/W
0
Description
Timer 1 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 1.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
16
TIMER0
R/W
0
Timer 0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 0.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
15:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SSI0
R/W
0
SSI0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for SSI module 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
3:1
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
UART0
R/W
0
UART0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for UART module 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
207
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 23: Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (DCGC1),
offset 0x124
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC1 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC1 for Sleep operation, and DCGC1 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 1 (DCGC1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x124
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
COMP1
COMP0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
23
22
21
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
20
19
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
4
3
SSI0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
18
17
16
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
2
1
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
0
UART0
RO
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
25
COMP1
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 1 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 1. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
24
COMP0
R/W
0
Analog Comparator 0 Clock Gating
This bit controls the clock gating for analog comparator 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
23:19
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
TIMER2
R/W
0
Timer 2 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 2.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
208
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
17
TIMER1
R/W
0
Description
Timer 1 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 1.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
16
TIMER0
R/W
0
Timer 0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for General-Purpose Timer module 0.
If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is
unclocked and disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the
unit will generate a bus fault.
15:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SSI0
R/W
0
SSI0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for SSI module 0. If set, the unit receives
a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
3:1
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
UART0
R/W
0
UART0 Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for UART module 0. If set, the unit
receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled. If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate
a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
209
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 24: Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (RCGC2), offset 0x108
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC2 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC2 for Sleep operation, and DCGC2 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Run Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (RCGC2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x108
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
GPIOH
R/W
0
Port H Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port H. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
6
GPIOG
R/W
0
Port G Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port G. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
5
GPIOF
R/W
0
Port F Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port F. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
4
GPIOE
R/W
0
Port E Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port E. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
3
GPIOD
R/W
0
Port D Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port D. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
210
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2
GPIOC
R/W
0
Description
Port C Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port C. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
1
GPIOB
R/W
0
Port B Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port B. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
0
GPIOA
R/W
0
Port A Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port A. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
211
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 25: Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (SCGC2), offset
0x118
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC2 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC2 for Sleep operation, and DCGC2 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (SCGC2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x118
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
GPIOH
R/W
0
Port H Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port H. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
6
GPIOG
R/W
0
Port G Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port G. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
5
GPIOF
R/W
0
Port F Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port F. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
4
GPIOE
R/W
0
Port E Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port E. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
212
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
GPIOD
R/W
0
Description
Port D Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port D. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
2
GPIOC
R/W
0
Port C Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port C. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
1
GPIOB
R/W
0
Port B Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port B. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
0
GPIOA
R/W
0
Port A Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port A. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
213
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 26: Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (DCGC2),
offset 0x128
This register controls the clock gating logic. Each bit controls a clock enable for a given interface,
function, or unit. If set, the unit receives a clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and
disabled (saving power). If the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
The reset state of these bits is 0 (unclocked) unless otherwise noted, so that all functional units are
disabled. It is the responsibility of software to enable the ports necessary for the application. Note
that these registers may contain more bits than there are interfaces, functions, or units to control.
This is to assure reasonable code compatibility with other family and future parts. RCGC2 is the
clock configuration register for running operation, SCGC2 for Sleep operation, and DCGC2 for
Deep-Sleep operation. Setting the ACG bit in the Run-Mode Clock Configuration (RCC) register
specifies that the system uses sleep modes.
Deep Sleep Mode Clock Gating Control Register 2 (DCGC2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x128
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
GPIOH
R/W
0
Port H Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port H. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
6
GPIOG
R/W
0
Port G Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port G. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
5
GPIOF
R/W
0
Port F Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port F. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
4
GPIOE
R/W
0
Port E Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port E. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
214
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
GPIOD
R/W
0
Description
Port D Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port D. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
2
GPIOC
R/W
0
Port C Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port C. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
1
GPIOB
R/W
0
Port B Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port B. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
0
GPIOA
R/W
0
Port A Clock Gating Control
This bit controls the clock gating for Port A. If set, the unit receives a
clock and functions. Otherwise, the unit is unclocked and disabled. If
the unit is unclocked, reads or writes to the unit will generate a bus fault.
June 18, 2012
215
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 27: Software Reset Control 0 (SRCR0), offset 0x040
Writes to this register are masked by the bits in the Device Capabilities 1 (DC1) register.
Software Reset Control 0 (SRCR0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x040
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
25
23
22
21
20
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
24
CAN0
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
19
WDT
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:25
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
24
CAN0
R/W
0
CAN0 Reset Control
Reset control for CAN unit 0.
23:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
WDT
R/W
0
WDT Reset Control
Reset control for Watchdog unit.
2:0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
216
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 28: Software Reset Control 1 (SRCR1), offset 0x044
Writes to this register are masked by the bits in the Device Capabilities 2 (DC2) register.
Software Reset Control 1 (SRCR1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x044
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
28
27
26
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
25
24
23
22
COMP1
COMP0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
RO
0
9
8
7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
21
20
19
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
6
5
4
3
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
SSI0
R/W
0
18
17
16
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
2
1
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
UART0
RO
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:26
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
25
COMP1
R/W
0
Analog Comp 1 Reset Control
Reset control for analog comparator 1.
24
COMP0
R/W
0
Analog Comp 0 Reset Control
Reset control for analog comparator 0.
23:19
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
18
TIMER2
R/W
0
Timer 2 Reset Control
Reset control for General-Purpose Timer module 2.
17
TIMER1
R/W
0
Timer 1 Reset Control
Reset control for General-Purpose Timer module 1.
16
TIMER0
R/W
0
Timer 0 Reset Control
Reset control for General-Purpose Timer module 0.
15:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
SSI0
R/W
0
SSI0 Reset Control
Reset control for SSI unit 0.
3:1
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
UART0
R/W
0
UART0 Reset Control
Reset control for UART unit 0.
June 18, 2012
217
Texas Instruments-Production Data
System Control
Register 29: Software Reset Control 2 (SRCR2), offset 0x048
Writes to this register are masked by the bits in the Device Capabilities 4 (DC4) register.
Software Reset Control 2 (SRCR2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x048
Type R/W, reset 0x00000000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
GPIOH
R/W
0
Port H Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port H.
6
GPIOG
R/W
0
Port G Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port G.
5
GPIOF
R/W
0
Port F Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port F.
4
GPIOE
R/W
0
Port E Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port E.
3
GPIOD
R/W
0
Port D Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port D.
2
GPIOC
R/W
0
Port C Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port C.
1
GPIOB
R/W
0
Port B Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port B.
0
GPIOA
R/W
0
Port A Reset Control
Reset control for GPIO Port A.
218
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
6
Internal Memory
The LM3S2730 microcontroller comes with 64 KB of bit-banded SRAM and 128 KB of flash memory.
The flash controller provides a user-friendly interface, making flash programming a simple task.
Flash protection can be applied to the flash memory on a 2-KB block basis.
6.1
Block Diagram
Figure 6-1 on page 219 illustrates the Flash functions. The dashed boxes in the figure indicate
registers residing in the System Control module rather than the Flash Control module.
Figure 6-1. Flash Block Diagram
Flash Control
Icode Bus
Cortex-M3
System
Bus
Dcode Bus
FMA
FMD
FMC
FCRIS
FCIM
FCMISC
Flash Array
Flash Protection
Bridge
FMPREn
FMPPEn
Flash Timing
USECRL
User Registers
USER_DBG
USER_REG0
USER_REG1
SRAM Array
6.2
Functional Description
This section describes the functionality of the SRAM and Flash memories.
6.2.1
SRAM Memory
®
The internal SRAM of the Stellaris devices is located at address 0x2000.0000 of the device memory
map. To reduce the number of time consuming read-modify-write (RMW) operations, ARM has
introduced bit-banding technology in the Cortex-M3 processor. With a bit-band-enabled processor,
certain regions in the memory map (SRAM and peripheral space) can use address aliases to access
individual bits in a single, atomic operation.
The bit-band alias is calculated by using the formula:
bit-band alias = bit-band base + (byte offset * 32) + (bit number * 4)
For example, if bit 3 at address 0x2000.1000 is to be modified, the bit-band alias is calculated as:
June 18, 2012
219
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
0x2200.0000 + (0x1000 * 32) + (3 * 4) = 0x2202.000C
With the alias address calculated, an instruction performing a read/write to address 0x2202.000C
allows direct access to only bit 3 of the byte at address 0x2000.1000.
For details about bit-banding, see “Bit-Banding” on page 65.
6.2.2
Flash Memory
The flash is organized as a set of 1-KB blocks that can be individually erased. Erasing a block
causes the entire contents of the block to be reset to all 1s. An individual 32-bit word can be
programmed to change bits that are currently 1 to a 0. These blocks are paired into a set of 2-KB
blocks that can be individually protected. The protection allows blocks to be marked as read-only
or execute-only, providing different levels of code protection. Read-only blocks cannot be erased
or programmed, protecting the contents of those blocks from being modified. Execute-only blocks
cannot be erased or programmed, and can only be read by the controller instruction fetch mechanism,
protecting the contents of those blocks from being read by either the controller or by a debugger.
See also “Serial Flash Loader” on page 529 for a preprogrammed flash-resident utility used to
download code to the flash memory of a device without the use of a debug interface.
6.2.2.1
Flash Memory Timing
The timing for the flash is automatically handled by the flash controller. However, in order to do so,
it must know the clock rate of the system in order to time its internal signals properly. The number
of clock cycles per microsecond must be provided to the flash controller for it to accomplish this
timing. It is software's responsibility to keep the flash controller updated with this information via the
USec Reload (USECRL) register.
On reset, the USECRL register is loaded with a value that configures the flash timing so that it works
with the maximum clock rate of the part. If software changes the system operating frequency, the
new operating frequency minus 1 (in MHz) must be loaded into USECRL before any flash
modifications are attempted. For example, if the device is operating at a speed of 20 MHz, a value
of 0x13 (20-1) must be written to the USECRL register.
6.2.2.2
Flash Memory Protection
The user is provided two forms of flash protection per 2-KB flash blocks in two pairs of 32-bit wide
registers. The protection policy for each form is controlled by individual bits (per policy per block)
in the FMPPEn and FMPREn registers.
■ Flash Memory Protection Program Enable (FMPPEn): If set, the block may be programmed
(written) or erased. If cleared, the block may not be changed.
■ Flash Memory Protection Read Enable (FMPREn): If a bit is set, the corresponding block may
be executed or read by software or debuggers. If a bit is cleared, the corresponding block may
only be executed, and contents of the memory block are prohibited from being read as data.
The policies may be combined as shown in Table 6-1 on page 220.
Table 6-1. Flash Protection Policy Combinations
FMPPEn
FMPREn
0
0
Protection
Execute-only protection. The block may only be executed and may not be written or erased.
This mode is used to protect code.
220
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 6-1. Flash Protection Policy Combinations (continued)
FMPPEn
FMPREn
Protection
1
0
The block may be written, erased or executed, but not read. This combination is unlikely to
be used.
0
1
Read-only protection. The block may be read or executed but may not be written or erased.
This mode is used to lock the block from further modification while allowing any read or
execute access.
1
1
No protection. The block may be written, erased, executed or read.
A Flash memory access that attempts to read a read-protected block (FMPREn bit is set) is prohibited
and generates a bus fault. A Flash memory access that attempts to program or erase a
program-protected block (FMPPEn bit is set) is prohibited and can optionally generate an interrupt
(by setting the AMASK bit in the Flash Controller Interrupt Mask (FCIM) register) to alert software
developers of poorly behaving software during the development and debug phases.
The factory settings for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for all implemented
banks. These settings create a policy of open access and programmability. The register bits may
be changed by clearing the specific register bit. The changes are not permanent until the register
is committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent. If a bit is changed from a 1 to a
0 and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on reset sequence. The changes
are committed using the Flash Memory Control (FMC) register. Details on programming these bits
are discussed in “Nonvolatile Register Programming” on page 222.
6.2.2.3
Interrupts
The Flash memory controller can generate interrupts when the following conditions are observed:
■ Programming Interrupt - signals when a program or erase action is complete.
■ Access Interrupt - signals when a program or erase action has been attempted on a 2-kB block
of memory that is protected by its corresponding FMPPEn bit.
The interrupt events that can trigger a controller-level interrupt are defined in the Flash Controller
Masked Interrupt Status (FCMIS) register (see page 230) by setting the corresponding MASK bits.
If interrupts are not used, the raw interrupt status is always visible via the Flash Controller Raw
Interrupt Status (FCRIS) register (see page 229).
Interrupts are always cleared (for both the FCMIS and FCRIS registers) by writing a 1 to the
corresponding bit in the Flash Controller Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (FCMISC) register
(see page 231).
6.3
Flash Memory Initialization and Configuration
6.3.1
Flash Programming
The Stellaris devices provide a user-friendly interface for flash programming. All erase/program
operations are handled via three registers: FMA, FMD, and FMC.
During a Flash memory operation (write, page erase, or mass erase) access to the Flash memory
is inhibited. As a result, instruction and literal fetches are held off until the Flash memory operation
is complete. If instruction execution is required during a Flash memory operation, the code that is
executing must be placed in SRAM and executed from there while the flash operation is in progress.
June 18, 2012
221
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
6.3.1.1
To program a 32-bit word
1. Write source data to the FMD register.
2. Write the target address to the FMA register.
3. Write the flash write key and the WRITE bit (a value of 0xA442.0001) to the FMC register.
4. Poll the FMC register until the WRITE bit is cleared.
6.3.1.2
To perform an erase of a 1-KB page
1. Write the page address to the FMA register.
2. Write the flash write key and the ERASE bit (a value of 0xA442.0002) to the FMC register.
3. Poll the FMC register until the ERASE bit is cleared.
6.3.1.3
To perform a mass erase of the flash
1. Write the flash write key and the MERASE bit (a value of 0xA442.0004) to the FMC register.
2. Poll the FMC register until the MERASE bit is cleared.
6.3.2
Nonvolatile Register Programming
This section discusses how to update registers that are resident within the Flash memory itself.
These registers exist in a separate space from the main Flash memory array and are not affected
by an ERASE or MASS ERASE operation. The bits in these registers can be changed from 1 to 0
with a write operation. Prior to being committed, the register contents are unaffected by any reset
condition except power-on reset, which returns the register contents to the original value. By
committing the register values using the COMT bit in the FMC register, the register contents become
nonvolatile and are therefore retained following power cycling. Once the register contents are
committed, the contents are permanent, and they cannot be restored to their factory default values.
With the exception of the USER_DBG register, the settings in these registers can be tested before
committing them to Flash memory. For the USER_DBG register, the data to be written is loaded
into the FMD register before it is committed. The FMD register is read only and does not allow the
USER_DBG operation to be tried before committing it to nonvolatile memory.
Important: The Flash memory registers can only have bits changed from 1 to 0 by user programming
and can only be committed once. After being committed, these registers cannot be
restored to their factory default values.
In addition, the USER_REG0, USER_REG1, USER_REG2, USER_REG3, and USER_DBG registers
each use bit 31 (NW) to indicate that they have not been committed and bits in the register may be
changed from 1 to 0. These five registers can only be committed once whereas the Flash memory
protection registers may be committed multiple times. Table 6-2 on page 223 provides the FMA
address required for commitment of each of the registers and the source of the data to be written
when the FMC register is written with a value of 0xA442.0008. After writing the COMT bit, the user
may poll the FMC register to wait for the commit operation to complete.
222
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 6-2. User-Programmable Flash Memory Resident Registers
Register to be Committed
6.4
FMA Value
Data Source
FMPRE0
0x0000.0000
FMPRE0
FMPRE1
0x0000.0002
FMPRE1
FMPPE0
0x0000.0001
FMPPE0
FMPPE1
0x0000.0003
FMPPE1
USER_REG0
0x8000.0000
USER_REG0
USER_REG1
0x8000.0001
USER_REG1
USER_REG2
0x8000.0002
USER_REG2
USER_REG3
0x8000.0003
USER_REG3
USER_DBG
0x7510.0000
FMD
Register Map
Table 6-3 on page 223 lists the Flash memory and control registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal
increment to the register's address. The FMA, FMD, FMC, FCRIS, FCIM, and FCMISC register
offsets are relative to the Flash memory control base address of 0x400F.D000. The Flash memory
protection register offsets are relative to the System Control base address of 0x400F.E000.
Table 6-3. Flash Register Map
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
Description
See
page
Flash Memory Control Registers (Flash Control Offset)
0x000
FMA
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Address
225
0x004
FMD
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Data
226
0x008
FMC
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Control
227
0x00C
FCRIS
RO
0x0000.0000
Flash Controller Raw Interrupt Status
229
0x010
FCIM
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Controller Interrupt Mask
230
0x014
FCMISC
R/W1C
0x0000.0000
Flash Controller Masked Interrupt Status and Clear
231
Flash Memory Protection Registers (System Control Offset)
0x130
FMPRE0
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 0
234
0x200
FMPRE0
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 0
234
0x134
FMPPE0
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 0
235
0x400
FMPPE0
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 0
235
0x140
USECRL
R/W
0x31
USec Reload
233
0x1D0
USER_DBG
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFE
User Debug
236
0x1E0
USER_REG0
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
User Register 0
237
0x1E4
USER_REG1
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
User Register 1
238
0x204
FMPRE1
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 1
239
0x208
FMPRE2
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 2
240
June 18, 2012
223
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Table 6-3. Flash Register Map (continued)
Name
Type
Reset
0x20C
FMPRE3
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 3
241
0x404
FMPPE1
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 1
242
0x408
FMPPE2
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 2
243
0x40C
FMPPE3
R/W
0x0000.0000
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 3
244
6.5
Description
See
page
Offset
Flash Register Descriptions (Flash Control Offset)
This section lists and describes the Flash Memory registers, in numerical order by address offset.
Registers in this section are relative to the Flash control base address of 0x400F.D000.
224
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: Flash Memory Address (FMA), offset 0x000
During a write operation, this register contains a 4-byte-aligned address and specifies where the
data is written. During erase operations, this register contains a 1 KB-aligned address and specifies
which page is erased. Note that the alignment requirements must be met by software or the results
of the operation are unpredictable.
Flash Memory Address (FMA)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
16
OFFSET
OFFSET
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:17
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
16:0
OFFSET
R/W
0x0
Address Offset
Address offset in flash where operation is performed, except for
nonvolatile registers (see “Nonvolatile Register
Programming” on page 222 for details on values for this field).
June 18, 2012
225
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 2: Flash Memory Data (FMD), offset 0x004
This register contains the data to be written during the programming cycle or read during the read
cycle. Note that the contents of this register are undefined for a read access of an execute-only
block. This register is not used during the erase cycles.
Flash Memory Data (FMD)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x004
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
DATA
Type
Reset
DATA
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:0
DATA
R/W
0x0
Data Value
Data value for write operation.
226
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: Flash Memory Control (FMC), offset 0x008
When this register is written, the flash controller initiates the appropriate access cycle for the location
specified by the Flash Memory Address (FMA) register (see page 225). If the access is a write
access, the data contained in the Flash Memory Data (FMD) register (see page 226) is written.
This is the final register written and initiates the memory operation. There are four control bits in the
lower byte of this register that, when set, initiate the memory operation. The most used of these
register bits are the ERASE and WRITE bits.
It is a programming error to write multiple control bits and the results of such an operation are
unpredictable.
Flash Memory Control (FMC)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x008
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
COMT
MERASE
ERASE
WRITE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
WRKEY
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
WRKEY
WO
0x0
Description
Flash Write Key
This field contains a write key, which is used to minimize the incidence
of accidental flash writes. The value 0xA442 must be written into this
field for a write to occur. Writes to the FMC register without this WRKEY
value are ignored. A read of this field returns the value 0.
15:4
reserved
RO
0x0
3
COMT
R/W
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Commit Register Value
Commit (write) of register value to nonvolatile storage. A write of 0 has
no effect on the state of this bit.
If read, the state of the previous commit access is provided. If the
previous commit access is complete, a 0 is returned; otherwise, if the
commit access is not complete, a 1 is returned.
This can take up to 50 μs.
2
MERASE
R/W
0
Mass Erase Flash Memory
If this bit is set, the flash main memory of the device is all erased. A
write of 0 has no effect on the state of this bit.
If read, the state of the previous mass erase access is provided. If the
previous mass erase access is complete, a 0 is returned; otherwise, if
the previous mass erase access is not complete, a 1 is returned.
This can take up to 250 ms.
June 18, 2012
227
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
ERASE
R/W
0
Description
Erase a Page of Flash Memory
If this bit is set, the page of flash main memory as specified by the
contents of FMA is erased. A write of 0 has no effect on the state of this
bit.
If read, the state of the previous erase access is provided. If the previous
erase access is complete, a 0 is returned; otherwise, if the previous
erase access is not complete, a 1 is returned.
This can take up to 25 ms.
0
WRITE
R/W
0
Write a Word into Flash Memory
If this bit is set, the data stored in FMD is written into the location as
specified by the contents of FMA. A write of 0 has no effect on the state
of this bit.
If read, the state of the previous write update is provided. If the previous
write access is complete, a 0 is returned; otherwise, if the write access
is not complete, a 1 is returned.
This can take up to 50 µs.
228
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 4: Flash Controller Raw Interrupt Status (FCRIS), offset 0x00C
This register indicates that the flash controller has an interrupt condition. An interrupt is only signaled
if the corresponding FCIM register bit is set.
Flash Controller Raw Interrupt Status (FCRIS)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x00C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
PRIS
ARIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:2
reserved
RO
0x0
1
PRIS
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Programming Raw Interrupt Status
This bit provides status on programming cycles which are write or erase
actions generated through the FMC register bits (see page 227).
Value Description
1
The programming cycle has completed.
0
The programming cycle has not completed.
This status is sent to the interrupt controller when the PMASK bit in the
FCIM register is set.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to the PMISC bit in the FCMISC register.
0
ARIS
RO
0
Access Raw Interrupt Status
Value Description
1
A program or erase action was attempted on a block of Flash
memory that contradicts the protection policy for that block as
set in the FMPPEn registers.
0
No access has tried to improperly program or erase the Flash
memory.
This status is sent to the interrupt controller when the AMASK bit in the
FCIM register is set.
This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to the AMISC bit in the FCMISC register.
June 18, 2012
229
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 5: Flash Controller Interrupt Mask (FCIM), offset 0x010
This register controls whether the flash controller generates interrupts to the controller.
Flash Controller Interrupt Mask (FCIM)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x010
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
PMASK
AMASK
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:2
reserved
RO
0x0
1
PMASK
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Programming Interrupt Mask
This bit controls the reporting of the programming raw interrupt status
to the interrupt controller.
Value Description
0
AMASK
R/W
0
1
An interrupt is sent to the interrupt controller when the PRIS bit
is set.
0
The PRIS interrupt is suppressed and not sent to the interrupt
controller.
Access Interrupt Mask
This bit controls the reporting of the access raw interrupt status to the
interrupt controller.
Value Description
1
An interrupt is sent to the interrupt controller when the ARIS bit
is set.
0
The ARIS interrupt is suppressed and not sent to the interrupt
controller.
230
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 6: Flash Controller Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (FCMISC),
offset 0x014
This register provides two functions. First, it reports the cause of an interrupt by indicating which
interrupt source or sources are signalling the interrupt. Second, it serves as the method to clear the
interrupt reporting.
Flash Controller Masked Interrupt Status and Clear (FCMISC)
Base 0x400F.D000
Offset 0x014
Type R/W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:2
reserved
RO
0x0
1
PMISC
R/W1C
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
1
0
PMISC
AMISC
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Programming Masked Interrupt Status and Clear
Value Description
1
When read, a 1 indicates that an unmasked interrupt was
signaled because a programming cycle completed.
Writing a 1 to this bit clears PMISC and also the PRIS bit in the
FCRIS register (see page 229).
0
When read, a 0 indicates that a programming cycle complete
interrupt has not occurred.
A write of 0 has no effect on the state of this bit.
0
AMISC
R/W1C
0
Access Masked Interrupt Status and Clear
Value Description
1
When read, a 1 indicates that an unmasked interrupt was
signaled because a program or erase action was attempted on
a block of Flash memory that contradicts the protection policy
for that block as set in the FMPPEn registers.
Writing a 1 to this bit clears AMISC and also the ARIS bit in the
FCRIS register (see page 229).
0
When read, a 0 indicates that no improper accesses have
occurred.
A write of 0 has no effect on the state of this bit.
June 18, 2012
231
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
6.6
Flash Register Descriptions (System Control Offset)
The remainder of this section lists and describes the Flash Memory registers, in numerical order by
address offset. Registers in this section are relative to the System Control base address of
0x400F.E000.
232
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 7: USec Reload (USECRL), offset 0x140
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400F.E000
This register is provided as a means of creating a 1-μs tick divider reload value for the flash controller.
The internal flash has specific minimum and maximum requirements on the length of time the high
voltage write pulse can be applied. It is required that this register contain the operating frequency
(in MHz -1) whenever the flash is being erased or programmed. The user is required to change this
value if the clocking conditions are changed for a flash erase/program operation.
USec Reload (USECRL)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x140
Type R/W, reset 0x31
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
USEC
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
USEC
R/W
0x31
Microsecond Reload Value
MHz -1 of the controller clock when the flash is being erased or
programmed.
If the maximum system frequency is being used, USEC should be set to
0x31 (50 MHz) whenever the flash is being erased or programmed.
June 18, 2012
233
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 8: Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 0 (FMPRE0), offset 0x130
and 0x200
Note:
This register is aliased for backwards compatability.
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the read-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPPEn stores the
execute-only bits). Flash memory up to a total of 64 KB is controlled by this register. Other FMPREn
registers (if any) provide protection for other 64K blocks. This register is loaded during the power-on
reset sequence. The factory settings for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for
all implemented banks. This achieves a policy of open access and programmability. The register
bits may be changed by writing the specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can
only change the protection bit from a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are
not permanent until the register is committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent.
If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0 and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on
reset sequence. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does
not affect this register. For additional information, see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 0 (FMPRE0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x130 and 0x200
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
READ_ENABLE
R/W
R/W
1
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Flash Read Enable. Enables 2-KB Flash memory blocks to be executed
or read. The policies may be combined as shown in the table “Flash
Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Bits [31:0] each enable protection on a 2-KB block of
Flash memory up to the total of 64 KB.
234
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 0 (FMPPE0), offset
0x134 and 0x400
Note:
This register is aliased for backwards compatability.
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the execute-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPREn stores the
execute-only bits). Flash memory up to a total of 64 KB is controlled by this register. Other FMPPEn
registers (if any) provide protection for other 64K blocks. This register is loaded during the power-on
reset sequence. The factory settings for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for
all implemented banks. This achieves a policy of open access and programmability. The register
bits may be changed by writing the specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can
only change the protection bit from a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are
not permanent until the register is committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent.
If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0 and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on
reset sequence. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does
not affect this register. For additional information, see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 0 (FMPPE0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x134 and 0x400
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
PROG_ENABLE
R/W
R/W
1
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Flash Programming Enable
Configures 2-KB flash blocks to be execute only. The policies may be
combined as shown in the table “Flash Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Bits [31:0] each enable protection on a 2-KB block of
Flash memory up to the total of 64 KB.
June 18, 2012
235
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 10: User Debug (USER_DBG), offset 0x1D0
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register provides a write-once mechanism to disable external debugger access to the device
in addition to 27 additional bits of user-defined data. The DBG0 bit (bit 0) is set to 0 from the factory
and the DBG1 bit (bit 1) is set to 1, which enables external debuggers. Changing the DBG1 bit to
0 disables any external debugger access to the device permanently, starting with the next power-up
cycle of the device. The NW bit (bit 31) indicates that the register has not yet been committed and
is controlled through hardware to ensure that the register is only committed once. Prior to being
committed, bits can only be changed from 1 to 0. The reset value shown only applies to power-on
reset; any other type of reset does not affect this register. Once committed, this register cannot be
restored to the factory default value.
User Debug (USER_DBG)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x1D0
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFE
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
NW
Type
Reset
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
DATA
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
DATA
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31
NW
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
1
0
DBG1
DBG0
R/W
1
R/W
0
Description
User Debug Not Written
When set, this bit indicates that this 32-bit register has not been
committed. When clear, this bit specifies that this register has been
committed and may not be committed again.
30:2
DATA
R/W
0x1FFFFFFF User Data
Contains the user data value. This field is initialized to all 1s and can
only be committed once.
1
DBG1
R/W
1
Debug Control 1
The DBG1 bit must be 1 and DBG0 must be 0 for debug to be available.
0
DBG0
R/W
0
Debug Control 0
The DBG1 bit must be 1 and DBG0 must be 0 for debug to be available.
236
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 11: User Register 0 (USER_REG0), offset 0x1E0
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register provides 31 bits of user-defined data that is non-volatile and can only be committed
once. Bit 31 indicates that the register is available to be committed and is controlled through hardware
to ensure that the register is only committed once. Prior to being committed, bits can only be changed
from 1 to 0. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does not
affect this register. The write-once characteristics of this register are useful for keeping static
information like communication addresses that need to be unique per part and would otherwise
require an external EEPROM or other non-volatile device. Once committed, this register cannot be
restored to the factory default value.
User Register 0 (USER_REG0)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x1E0
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
NW
Type
Reset
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
DATA
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
DATA
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31
NW
R/W
1
Not Written
When set, this bit indicates that this 32-bit register has not been
committed. When clear, this bit specifies that this register has been
committed and may not be committed again.
30:0
DATA
R/W
0x7FFFFFFF User Data
Contains the user data value. This field is initialized to all 1s and can
only be committed once.
June 18, 2012
237
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 12: User Register 1 (USER_REG1), offset 0x1E4
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register provides 31 bits of user-defined data that is non-volatile and can only be committed
once. Bit 31 indicates that the register is available to be committed and is controlled through hardware
to ensure that the register is only committed once. Prior to being committed, bits can only be changed
from 1 to 0. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does not
affect this register. The write-once characteristics of this register are useful for keeping static
information like communication addresses that need to be unique per part and would otherwise
require an external EEPROM or other non-volatile device. Once committed, this register cannot be
restored to the factory default value.
User Register 1 (USER_REG1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x1E4
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
NW
Type
Reset
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
DATA
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
DATA
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31
NW
R/W
1
Not Written
When set, this bit indicates that this 32-bit register has not been
committed. When clear, this bit specifies that this register has been
committed and may not be committed again.
30:0
DATA
R/W
0x7FFFFFFF User Data
Contains the user data value. This field is initialized to all 1s and can
only be committed once.
238
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 13: Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 1 (FMPRE1), offset 0x204
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the read-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPPEn stores the
execute-only bits). Flash memory up to a total of 64 KB is controlled by this register. Other FMPREn
registers (if any) provide protection for other 64K blocks. This register is loaded during the power-on
reset sequence. The factory settings for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for
all implemented banks. This achieves a policy of open access and programmability. The register
bits may be changed by writing the specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can
only change the protection bit from a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are
not permanent until the register is committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent.
If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0 and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on
reset sequence. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does
not affect this register. If the Flash memory size on the device is less than 64 KB, this register usually
reads as zeroes, but software should not rely on these bits to be zero. For additional information,
see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 1 (FMPRE1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x204
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
READ_ENABLE
R/W
R/W
1
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Flash Read Enable. Enables 2-KB Flash memory blocks to be executed
or read. The policies may be combined as shown in the table “Flash
Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Bits [31:0] each enable protection on a 2-KB block of
Flash memory in memory range from 65 to 128 KB.
June 18, 2012
239
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 14: Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 2 (FMPRE2), offset 0x208
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the read-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPPEn stores the
execute-only bits). This register is loaded during the power-on reset sequence. The factory settings
for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for all implemented banks. This achieves
a policy of open access and programmability. The register bits may be changed by writing the
specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can only change the protection bit from
a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). For additional information, see the "Flash Memory
Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 2 (FMPRE2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x208
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
READ_ENABLE
R/W
R/W
0
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
0x00000000 Flash Read Enable
Enables 2-KB flash blocks to be executed or read. The policies may be
combined as shown in the table “Flash Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0x00000000 Enables 128 KB of flash.
240
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 15: Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 3 (FMPRE3), offset 0x20C
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the read-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPPEn stores the
execute-only bits). This register is loaded during the power-on reset sequence. The factory settings
for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for all implemented banks. This achieves
a policy of open access and programmability. The register bits may be changed by writing the
specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can only change the protection bit from
a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are not permanent until the register is
committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent. If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0
and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on reset sequence. For additional
information, see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Read Enable 3 (FMPRE3)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x20C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
READ_ENABLE
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
READ_ENABLE
R/W
R/W
0
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
0x00000000 Flash Read Enable
Enables 2-KB flash blocks to be executed or read. The policies may be
combined as shown in the table “Flash Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0x00000000 Enables 128 KB of flash.
June 18, 2012
241
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 16: Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 1 (FMPPE1), offset
0x404
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the execute-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPREn stores the
execute-only bits). Flash memory up to a total of 64 KB is controlled by this register. Other FMPPEn
registers (if any) provide protection for other 64K blocks. This register is loaded during the power-on
reset sequence. The factory settings for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for
all implemented banks. This achieves a policy of open access and programmability. The register
bits may be changed by writing the specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can
only change the protection bit from a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are
not permanent until the register is committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent.
If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0 and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on
reset sequence. The reset value shown only applies to power-on reset; any other type of reset does
not affect this register. If the Flash memory size on the device is less than 64 KB, this register usually
reads as zeroes, but software should not rely on these bits to be zero. For additional information,
see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 1 (FMPPE1)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x404
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
PROG_ENABLE
R/W
Reset
R/W
1
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Flash Programming Enable
Value
Description
0xFFFFFFFF Bits [31:0] each enable protection on a 2-KB block of
Flash memory in memory range from 65 to 128 KB.
242
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 17: Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 2 (FMPPE2), offset
0x408
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the execute-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPREn stores the
execute-only bits). This register is loaded during the power-on reset sequence. The factory settings
for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for all implemented banks. This achieves
a policy of open access and programmability. The register bits may be changed by writing the
specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can only change the protection bit from
a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are not permanent until the register is
committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent. If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0
and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on reset sequence. For additional
information, see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 2 (FMPPE2)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x408
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
PROG_ENABLE
R/W
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
0x00000000 Flash Programming Enable
Configures 2-KB flash blocks to be execute only. The policies may be
combined as shown in the table “Flash Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0x00000000 Enables 128 KB of flash.
June 18, 2012
243
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Internal Memory
Register 18: Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 3 (FMPPE3), offset
0x40C
Note:
Offset is relative to System Control base address of 0x400FE000.
This register stores the execute-only protection bits for each 2-KB flash block (FMPREn stores the
execute-only bits). This register is loaded during the power-on reset sequence. The factory settings
for the FMPREn and FMPPEn registers are a value of 1 for all implemented banks. This achieves
a policy of open access and programmability. The register bits may be changed by writing the
specific register bit. However, this register is R/W0; the user can only change the protection bit from
a 1 to a 0 (and may NOT change a 0 to a 1). The changes are not permanent until the register is
committed (saved), at which point the bit change is permanent. If a bit is changed from a 1 to a 0
and not committed, it may be restored by executing a power-on reset sequence. For additional
information, see the "Flash Memory Protection" section.
Flash Memory Protection Program Enable 3 (FMPPE3)
Base 0x400F.E000
Offset 0x40C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
PROG_ENABLE
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
PROG_ENABLE
R/W
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
0x00000000 Flash Programming Enable
Configures 2-KB flash blocks to be execute only. The policies may be
combined as shown in the table “Flash Protection Policy Combinations”.
Value
Description
0x00000000 Enables 128 KB of flash.
244
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
7
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
The GPIO module is composed of eight physical GPIO blocks, each corresponding to an individual
GPIO port (Port A, Port B, Port C, Port D, Port E, Port F, Port G, Port H). The GPIO module supports
37-60 programmable input/output pins, depending on the peripherals being used.
The GPIO module has the following features:
■ 37-60 GPIOs, depending on configuration
■ 5-V-tolerant in input configuration
■ Fast toggle capable of a change every two clock cycles
■ Programmable control for GPIO interrupts
– Interrupt generation masking
– Edge-triggered on rising, falling, or both
– Level-sensitive on High or Low values
■ Bit masking in both read and write operations through address lines
■ Pins configured as digital inputs are Schmitt-triggered.
■ Programmable control for GPIO pad configuration
– Weak pull-up or pull-down resistors
– 2-mA, 4-mA, and 8-mA pad drive for digital communication; up to four pads can be configured
with an 18-mA pad drive for high-current applications
– Slew rate control for the 8-mA drive
– Open drain enables
– Digital input enables
7.1
Signal Description
GPIO signals have alternate hardware functions. Table 7-4 on page 249 and Table 7-5 on page 250
list the GPIO pins and the digital alternate functions. Other analog signals are 5-V tolerant and are
connected directly to their circuitry (C0-, C0+, C1-, C1+). These signals are configured by clearing
the DEN bit in the GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN) register. The digital alternate hardware functions
are enabled by setting the appropriate bit in the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL)
and GPIODEN registers and configuring the PMCx bit field in the GPIO Port Control (GPIOPCTL)
register to the numeric enoding shown in the table below. Note that each pin must be programmed
individually; no type of grouping is implied by the columns in the table.
Important: All GPIO pins are configured as GPIOs and tri-stated by default (GPIOAFSEL=0,
GPIODEN=0, GPIOPDR=0, GPIOPUR=0, and GPIOPCTL=0, with the exception of the
four JTAG/SWD pins (shown in the table below). A Power-On-Reset (POR) or asserting
RST puts the pins back to their default state.
June 18, 2012
245
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-1. GPIO Pins With Non-Zero Reset Values
GPIO Pins
Default State
PA[1:0]
UART0
GPIOAFSEL GPIODEN GPIOPDR GPIOPUR
1
1
0
0
GPIOPCTL
0x1
PA[5:2]
SSI0
1
1
0
0
0x1
PC[3:0]
JTAG/SWD
1
1
0
1
0x3
Table 7-2. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (100LQFP)
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PA0
26
U0Rx
PA1
27
U0Tx
PA2
28
SSI0Clk
PA3
29
SSI0Fss
PA4
30
SSI0Rx
PA5
31
SSI0Tx
PA6
34
CCP1
PA7
35
PB0
66
CCP0
PB1
67
CCP2
PB2
70
PB3
71
PB4
92
C0-
PB5
91
C1-
Multiplexed Function
PB6
90
C0+
PB7
89
TRST
PC0
80
TCK
SWCLK
PC1
79
TMS
SWDIO
PC2
78
TDI
PC3
77
TDO
PC4
25
PC5
24
C1+
PC6
23
CCP3
PC7
22
PD0
10
CAN0Rx
PD1
11
CAN0Tx
PD2
12
PD3
13
PD4
95
PD5
96
PD6
99
PD7
100
PE0
72
PE1
73
SWO
C0o
246
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 7-2. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (100LQFP) (continued)
IO
Pin Number
PE2
74
PE3
75
PE4
6
PE5
5
PE6
2
PE7
1
PF0
47
PF1
61
PF2
60
PF3
59
PF4
58
PF5
46
PF6
43
PF7
42
PG0
19
PG1
18
PG2
17
PG3
16
PG4
41
PG5
40
PG6
37
PG7
36
PH0
86
PH1
85
PH2
84
PH3
83
Multiplexed Function
Multiplexed Function
C1o
Table 7-3. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (108BGA)
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PA0
L3
U0Rx
PA1
M3
U0Tx
PA2
M4
SSI0Clk
PA3
L4
SSI0Fss
PA4
L5
SSI0Rx
PA5
M5
SSI0Tx
PA6
L6
CCP1
PA7
M6
PB0
E12
CCP0
PB1
D12
CCP2
PB2
C11
PB3
C12
June 18, 2012
Multiplexed Function
247
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-3. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (108BGA) (continued)
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PB4
A6
C0-
PB5
B7
C1-
PB6
A7
C0+
PB7
A8
TRST
PC0
A9
TCK
SWCLK
PC1
B9
TMS
SWDIO
PC2
B8
TDI
PC3
A10
TDO
PC4
L1
PC5
M1
C1+
PC6
M2
CCP3
PC7
L2
PD0
G1
CAN0Rx
PD1
G2
CAN0Tx
PD2
H2
PD3
H1
PD4
E1
PD5
E2
PD6
F2
PD7
F1
PE0
A11
PE1
B12
PE2
B11
PE3
A12
PE4
D1
PE5
D2
PE6
C2
PE7
C1
PF0
M9
PF1
H12
PF2
J11
PF3
J12
PF4
L9
PF5
L8
PF6
M8
PF7
K4
PG0
K1
PG1
K2
PG2
J1
PG3
J2
PG4
K3
Multiplexed Function
SWO
C0o
C1o
248
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 7-3. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (108BGA) (continued)
IO
Pin Number
PG5
M7
PG6
L7
PG7
C10
PH0
C9
PH1
C8
PH2
D11
PH3
D10
Multiplexed Function
Multiplexed Function
Table 7-4. GPIO Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PA0
26
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 0.
PA1
27
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
PA2
28
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
PA3
29
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
PA4
30
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
PA5
31
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
PA6
34
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
PA7
35
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
PB0
66
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
PB1
67
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
PB2
70
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
PB3
71
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
PB4
92
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 4.
PB5
91
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 5.
PB6
90
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 6.
PB7
89
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
PC0
80
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
PC1
79
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
PC2
78
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
PC3
77
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
PC4
25
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
PC5
24
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 5.
PC6
23
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
PC7
22
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
PD0
10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
PD1
11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
PD2
12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
PD3
13
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
PD4
95
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
PD5
96
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
PD6
99
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 6.
June 18, 2012
249
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-4. GPIO Signals (100LQFP) (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PD7
100
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
PE0
72
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
PE1
73
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
PE2
74
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
PE3
75
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
PE4
6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
PE5
5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
PE6
2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
PE7
1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PF0
47
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
PF1
61
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
PF2
60
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
PF3
59
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
PF4
58
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
PF5
46
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
PF6
43
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
PF7
42
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
PG0
19
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
PG1
18
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
PG2
17
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
PG3
16
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
PG4
41
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
PG5
40
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
PG6
37
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
PG7
36
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
PH0
86
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
PH1
85
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
PH2
84
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
PH3
83
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 7-5. GPIO Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
PA0
L3
I/O
TTL
Description
GPIO port A bit 0.
PA1
M3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
PA2
M4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
PA3
L4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
PA4
L5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
PA5
M5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
PA6
L6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
PA7
M6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
250
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 7-5. GPIO Signals (108BGA) (continued)
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PB0
E12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
PB1
D12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
PB2
C11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
PB3
C12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
PB4
A6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 4.
PB5
B7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 5.
PB6
A7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 6.
PB7
A8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
PC0
A9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
PC1
B9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
PC2
B8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
PC3
A10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
PC4
L1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
PC5
M1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 5.
PC6
M2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
PC7
L2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
PD0
G1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
PD1
G2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
PD2
H2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
PD3
H1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
PD4
E1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
PD5
E2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
PD6
F2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 6.
PD7
F1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
PE0
A11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
PE1
B12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
PE2
B11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
PE3
A12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
PE4
D1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
PE5
D2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
PE6
C2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
PE7
C1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PF0
M9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
PF1
H12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
PF2
J11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
PF3
J12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
PF4
L9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
PF5
L8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
PF6
M8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
PF7
K4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
PG0
K1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
June 18, 2012
251
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-5. GPIO Signals (108BGA) (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PG1
K2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
PG2
J1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
PG3
J2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
PG4
K3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
PG5
M7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
PG6
L7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
PG7
C10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
PH0
C9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
PH1
C8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
PH2
D11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
PH3
D10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
7.2
Functional Description
Important: All GPIO pins are tri-stated by default (GPIOAFSEL=0, GPIODEN=0, GPIOPDR=0,
and GPIOPUR=0), with the exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]).
The JTAG/SWD pins default to their JTAG/SWD functionality (GPIOAFSEL=1,
GPIODEN=1 and GPIOPUR=1). A Power-On-Reset (POR) or asserting RST puts both
groups of pins back to their default state.
While debugging systems where PB7 is being used as a GPIO, care must be taken to
ensure that a low value is not applied to the pin when the part is reset. Because PB7
reverts to the TRST function after reset, a Low value on the pin causes the JTAG
controller to be reset, resulting in a loss of JTAG communication.
Each GPIO port is a separate hardware instantiation of the same physical block (see Figure
7-1 on page 253). The LM3S2730 microcontroller contains eight ports and thus eight of these physical
GPIO blocks.
252
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 7-1. GPIO Port Block Diagram
Commit
Control
Mode
Control
GPIOLOCK
GPIOCR
GPIOAFSEL
DEMUX
Alternate Input
Alternate Output
Pad Input
Alternate Output Enable
Pad Output
MUX
Pad Output Enable
Digital
I/O Pad
Package I/O Pin
GPIO Output
GPIODATA
GPIODIR
Interrupt
MUX
GPIO Input
Data
Control
GPIO Output Enable
Interrupt
Control
Pad
Control
GPIOIS
GPIOIBE
GPIOIEV
GPIOIM
GPIORIS
GPIOMIS
GPIOICR
GPIODR2R
GPIODR4R
GPIODR8R
GPIOSLR
GPIOPUR
GPIOPDR
GPIOODR
GPIODEN
Identification Registers
GPIOPeriphID0
GPIOPeriphID1
GPIOPeriphID2
GPIOPeriphID3
7.2.1
GPIOPeriphID4
GPIOPeriphID5
GPIOPeriphID6
GPIOPeriphID7
GPIOPCellID0
GPIOPCellID1
GPIOPCellID2
GPIOPCellID3
Data Control
The data control registers allow software to configure the operational modes of the GPIOs. The data
direction register configures the GPIO as an input or an output while the data register either captures
incoming data or drives it out to the pads.
7.2.1.1
Data Direction Operation
The GPIO Direction (GPIODIR) register (see page 260) is used to configure each individual pin as
an input or output. When the data direction bit is set to 0, the GPIO is configured as an input and
the corresponding data register bit will capture and store the value on the GPIO port. When the data
direction bit is set to 1, the GPIO is configured as an output and the corresponding data register bit
will be driven out on the GPIO port.
7.2.1.2
Data Register Operation
To aid in the efficiency of software, the GPIO ports allow for the modification of individual bits in the
GPIO Data (GPIODATA) register (see page 259) by using bits [9:2] of the address bus as a mask.
This allows software drivers to modify individual GPIO pins in a single instruction, without affecting
the state of the other pins. This is in contrast to the "typical" method of doing a read-modify-write
operation to set or clear an individual GPIO pin. To accommodate this feature, the GPIODATA
register covers 256 locations in the memory map.
June 18, 2012
253
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
During a write, if the address bit associated with that data bit is set to 1, the value of the GPIODATA
register is altered. If it is cleared to 0, it is left unchanged.
For example, writing a value of 0xEB to the address GPIODATA + 0x098 would yield as shown in
Figure 7-2 on page 254, where u is data unchanged by the write.
Figure 7-2. GPIODATA Write Example
ADDR[9:2]
0x098
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0xEB
1
1
1
0
1
0
1
1
GPIODATA
u
u
1
u
u
0
1
u
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
During a read, if the address bit associated with the data bit is set to 1, the value is read. If the
address bit associated with the data bit is set to 0, it is read as a zero, regardless of its actual value.
For example, reading address GPIODATA + 0x0C4 yields as shown in Figure 7-3 on page 254.
Figure 7-3. GPIODATA Read Example
7.2.2
ADDR[9:2]
0x0C4
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
GPIODATA
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
Returned Value
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Interrupt Control
The interrupt capabilities of each GPIO port are controlled by a set of seven registers. With these
registers, it is possible to select the source of the interrupt, its polarity, and the edge properties.
When one or more GPIO inputs cause an interrupt, a single interrupt output is sent to the interrupt
controller for the entire GPIO port. For edge-triggered interrupts, software must clear the interrupt
to enable any further interrupts. For a level-sensitive interrupt, it is assumed that the external source
holds the level constant for the interrupt to be recognized by the controller.
Three registers are required to define the edge or sense that causes interrupts:
■ GPIO Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS) register (see page 261)
■ GPIO Interrupt Both Edges (GPIOIBE) register (see page 262)
■ GPIO Interrupt Event (GPIOIEV) register (see page 263)
Interrupts are enabled/disabled via the GPIO Interrupt Mask (GPIOIM) register (see page 264).
When an interrupt condition occurs, the state of the interrupt signal can be viewed in two locations:
the GPIO Raw Interrupt Status (GPIORIS) and GPIO Masked Interrupt Status (GPIOMIS) registers
(see page 265 and page 266). As the name implies, the GPIOMIS register only shows interrupt
254
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
conditions that are allowed to be passed to the controller. The GPIORIS register indicates that a
GPIO pin meets the conditions for an interrupt, but has not necessarily been sent to the controller.
Interrupts are cleared by writing a 1 to the appropriate bit of the GPIO Interrupt Clear (GPIOICR)
register (see page 267).
When programming the following interrupt control registers, the interrupts should be masked (GPIOIM
set to 0). Writing any value to an interrupt control register (GPIOIS, GPIOIBE, or GPIOIEV) can
generate a spurious interrupt if the corresponding bits are enabled.
7.2.3
Mode Control
The GPIO pins can be controlled by either hardware or software. When hardware control is enabled
via the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (see page 268), the pin state is
controlled by its alternate function (that is, the peripheral). Software control corresponds to GPIO
mode, where the GPIODATA register is used to read/write the corresponding pins.
7.2.4
Commit Control
The GPIO commit control registers provide a layer of protection against accidental programming of
critical hardware peripherals. Protection is currently provided for the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and
PC[3:0]). Writes to protected bits of the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register
(see page 268) are not committed to storage unless the GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK) register (see
page 278) has been unlocked and the appropriate bits of the GPIO Commit (GPIOCR) register (see
page 279) have been set to 1.
7.2.5
Pad Control
The pad control registers allow for GPIO pad configuration by software based on the application
requirements. The pad control registers include the GPIODR2R, GPIODR4R, GPIODR8R, GPIOODR,
GPIOPUR, GPIOPDR, GPIOSLR, and GPIODEN registers. These registers control drive strength,
open-drain configuration, pull-up and pull-down resistors, slew-rate control and digital enable.
For special high-current applications, the GPIO output buffers may be used with the following
restrictions. With the GPIO pins configured as 8-mA output drivers, a total of four GPIO outputs may
be used to sink current loads up to 18 mA each. At 18-mA sink current loading, the VOL value is
specified as 1.2 V. The high-current GPIO package pins must be selected such that there are only
a maximum of two per side of the physical package or BGA pin group with the total number of
high-current GPIO outputs not exceeding four for the entire package.
7.2.6
Identification
The identification registers configured at reset allow software to detect and identify the module as
a GPIO block. The identification registers include the GPIOPeriphID0-GPIOPeriphID7 registers as
well as the GPIOPCellID0-GPIOPCellID3 registers.
7.3
Initialization and Configuration
To use the GPIO, the peripheral clock must be enabled by setting the appropriate GPIO Port bit
field (GPIOn) in the RCGC2 register.
On reset, all GPIO pins (except for the five JTAG pins) are configured out of reset to be undriven
(tristate): GPIOAFSEL=0, GPIODEN=0, GPIOPDR=0, and GPIOPUR=0. Table 7-6 on page 256
shows all possible configurations of the GPIO pads and the control register settings required to
achieve them. Table 7-7 on page 256 shows how a rising edge interrupt would be configured for pin
2 of a GPIO port.
June 18, 2012
255
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-6. GPIO Pad Configuration Examples
a
GPIO Register Bit Value
Configuration
AFSEL
Digital Input (GPIO)
DIR
0
ODR
0
DEN
0
PUR
1
PDR
?
?
DR2R
DR4R
DR8R
X
X
X
SLR
X
Digital Output (GPIO)
0
1
0
1
?
?
?
?
?
?
Open Drain Output
(GPIO)
0
1
1
1
X
X
?
?
?
?
Digital Input (Timer
CCP)
1
X
0
1
?
?
X
X
X
X
Digital Output (Timer
PWM)
1
X
0
1
?
?
?
?
?
?
Digital Input/Output
(SSI)
1
X
0
1
?
?
?
?
?
?
Digital Input/Output
(UART)
1
X
0
1
?
?
?
?
?
?
Analog Input
(Comparator)
0
0
0
0
0
0
X
X
X
X
Digital Output
(Comparator)
1
X
0
1
?
?
?
?
?
?
a. X=Ignored (don’t care bit)
?=Can be either 0 or 1, depending on the configuration
Table 7-7. GPIO Interrupt Configuration Example
Register
Desired
Interrupt
Event
Trigger
GPIOIS
0=edge
GPIOIBE
0=single
edge
a
Pin 2 Bit Value
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
1
X
X
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1=level
1=both
edges
GPIOIEV
0=Low level,
or negative
edge
1=High level,
or positive
edge
GPIOIM
0=masked
1=not
masked
a. X=Ignored (don’t care bit)
7.4
Register Map
Table 7-8 on page 257 lists the GPIO registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to the
register’s address, relative to that GPIO port’s base address:
■ GPIO Port A: 0x4000.4000
■ GPIO Port B: 0x4000.5000
256
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■
■
■
■
■
■
GPIO Port C: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H: 0x4002.7000
Note that the GPIO module clock must be enabled before the registers can be programmed (see
page 210). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the GPIO module clock is enabled before
any GPIO module registers are accessed.
Important: The GPIO registers in this chapter are duplicated in each GPIO block; however,
depending on the block, all eight bits may not be connected to a GPIO pad. In those
cases, writing to those unconnected bits has no effect, and reading those unconnected
bits returns no meaningful data.
Note:
The default reset value for the GPIOAFSEL, GPIOPUR, and GPIODEN registers are
0x0000.0000 for all GPIO pins, with the exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and
PC[3:0]). These five pins default to JTAG/SWD functionality. Because of this, the default
reset value of these registers for GPIO Port B is 0x0000.0080 while the default reset value
for Port C is 0x0000.000F.
The default register type for the GPIOCR register is RO for all GPIO pins with the exception
of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]). These five pins are currently the only
GPIOs that are protected by the GPIOCR register. Because of this, the register type for
GPIO Port B7 and GPIO Port C[3:0] is R/W.
The default reset value for the GPIOCR register is 0x0000.00FF for all GPIO pins, with the
exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]). To ensure that the JTAG port
is not accidentally programmed as a GPIO, these five pins default to non-committable.
Because of this, the default reset value of GPIOCR for GPIO Port B is 0x0000.007F while
the default reset value of GPIOCR for Port C is 0x0000.00F0.
Table 7-8. GPIO Register Map
Description
See
page
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
0x000
GPIODATA
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Data
259
0x400
GPIODIR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Direction
260
0x404
GPIOIS
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Interrupt Sense
261
0x408
GPIOIBE
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Interrupt Both Edges
262
0x40C
GPIOIEV
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Interrupt Event
263
0x410
GPIOIM
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Interrupt Mask
264
0x414
GPIORIS
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Raw Interrupt Status
265
0x418
GPIOMIS
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Masked Interrupt Status
266
0x41C
GPIOICR
W1C
0x0000.0000
GPIO Interrupt Clear
267
0x420
GPIOAFSEL
R/W
-
GPIO Alternate Function Select
268
0x500
GPIODR2R
R/W
0x0000.00FF
GPIO 2-mA Drive Select
270
June 18, 2012
257
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Table 7-8. GPIO Register Map (continued)
Name
Type
Reset
0x504
GPIODR4R
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO 4-mA Drive Select
271
0x508
GPIODR8R
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO 8-mA Drive Select
272
0x50C
GPIOODR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Open Drain Select
273
0x510
GPIOPUR
R/W
-
GPIO Pull-Up Select
274
0x514
GPIOPDR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Pull-Down Select
275
0x518
GPIOSLR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPIO Slew Rate Control Select
276
0x51C
GPIODEN
R/W
-
GPIO Digital Enable
277
0x520
GPIOLOCK
R/W
0x0000.0001
GPIO Lock
278
0x524
GPIOCR
-
-
GPIO Commit
279
0xFD0
GPIOPeriphID4
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Peripheral Identification 4
281
0xFD4
GPIOPeriphID5
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Peripheral Identification 5
282
0xFD8
GPIOPeriphID6
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Peripheral Identification 6
283
0xFDC
GPIOPeriphID7
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Peripheral Identification 7
284
0xFE0
GPIOPeriphID0
RO
0x0000.0061
GPIO Peripheral Identification 0
285
0xFE4
GPIOPeriphID1
RO
0x0000.0000
GPIO Peripheral Identification 1
286
0xFE8
GPIOPeriphID2
RO
0x0000.0018
GPIO Peripheral Identification 2
287
0xFEC
GPIOPeriphID3
RO
0x0000.0001
GPIO Peripheral Identification 3
288
0xFF0
GPIOPCellID0
RO
0x0000.000D
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 0
289
0xFF4
GPIOPCellID1
RO
0x0000.00F0
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 1
290
0xFF8
GPIOPCellID2
RO
0x0000.0005
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 2
291
0xFFC
GPIOPCellID3
RO
0x0000.00B1
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 3
292
7.5
Description
See
page
Offset
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the GPIO registers, in numerical order by address
offset.
258
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: GPIO Data (GPIODATA), offset 0x000
The GPIODATA register is the data register. In software control mode, values written in the
GPIODATA register are transferred onto the GPIO port pins if the respective pins have been
configured as outputs through the GPIO Direction (GPIODIR) register (see page 260).
In order to write to GPIODATA, the corresponding bits in the mask, resulting from the address bus
bits [9:2], must be High. Otherwise, the bit values remain unchanged by the write.
Similarly, the values read from this register are determined for each bit by the mask bit derived from
the address used to access the data register, bits [9:2]. Bits that are 1 in the address mask cause
the corresponding bits in GPIODATA to be read, and bits that are 0 in the address mask cause the
corresponding bits in GPIODATA to be read as 0, regardless of their value.
A read from GPIODATA returns the last bit value written if the respective pins are configured as
outputs, or it returns the value on the corresponding input pin when these are configured as inputs.
All bits are cleared by a reset.
GPIO Data (GPIODATA)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
DATA
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DATA
R/W
0x00
GPIO Data
This register is virtually mapped to 256 locations in the address space.
To facilitate the reading and writing of data to these registers by
independent drivers, the data read from and the data written to the
registers are masked by the eight address lines ipaddr[9:2]. Reads
from this register return its current state. Writes to this register only affect
bits that are not masked by ipaddr[9:2] and are configured as
outputs. See “Data Register Operation” on page 253 for examples of
reads and writes.
June 18, 2012
259
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 2: GPIO Direction (GPIODIR), offset 0x400
The GPIODIR register is the data direction register. Bits set to 1 in the GPIODIR register configure
the corresponding pin to be an output, while bits set to 0 configure the pins to be inputs. All bits are
cleared by a reset, meaning all GPIO pins are inputs by default.
GPIO Direction (GPIODIR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x400
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
DIR
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DIR
R/W
0x00
GPIO Data Direction
The DIR values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Pins are inputs.
1
Pins are outputs.
260
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: GPIO Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS), offset 0x404
The GPIOIS register is the interrupt sense register. Bits set to 1 in GPIOIS configure the
corresponding pins to detect levels, while bits set to 0 configure the pins to detect edges. All bits
are cleared by a reset.
GPIO Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x404
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
IS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
IS
R/W
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Sense
The IS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Edge on corresponding pin is detected (edge-sensitive).
1
Level on corresponding pin is detected (level-sensitive).
June 18, 2012
261
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 4: GPIO Interrupt Both Edges (GPIOIBE), offset 0x408
The GPIOIBE register is the interrupt both-edges register. When the corresponding bit in the GPIO
Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS) register (see page 261) is set to detect edges, bits set to High in GPIOIBE
configure the corresponding pin to detect both rising and falling edges, regardless of the
corresponding bit in the GPIO Interrupt Event (GPIOIEV) register (see page 263). Clearing a bit
configures the pin to be controlled by GPIOIEV. All bits are cleared by a reset.
GPIO Interrupt Both Edges (GPIOIBE)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x408
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
IBE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
IBE
R/W
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Both Edges
The IBE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Interrupt generation is controlled by the GPIO Interrupt Event
(GPIOIEV) register (see page 263).
1
Both edges on the corresponding pin trigger an interrupt.
Note:
Single edge is determined by the corresponding bit
in GPIOIEV.
262
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: GPIO Interrupt Event (GPIOIEV), offset 0x40C
The GPIOIEV register is the interrupt event register. Bits set to High in GPIOIEV configure the
corresponding pin to detect rising edges or high levels, depending on the corresponding bit value
in the GPIO Interrupt Sense (GPIOIS) register (see page 261). Clearing a bit configures the pin to
detect falling edges or low levels, depending on the corresponding bit value in GPIOIS. All bits are
cleared by a reset.
GPIO Interrupt Event (GPIOIEV)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x40C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
IEV
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
IEV
R/W
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Event
The IEV values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Falling edge or Low levels on corresponding pins trigger
interrupts.
1
Rising edge or High levels on corresponding pins trigger
interrupts.
June 18, 2012
263
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 6: GPIO Interrupt Mask (GPIOIM), offset 0x410
The GPIOIM register is the interrupt mask register. Bits set to High in GPIOIM allow the corresponding
pins to trigger their individual interrupts and the combined GPIOINTR line. Clearing a bit disables
interrupt triggering on that pin. All bits are cleared by a reset.
GPIO Interrupt Mask (GPIOIM)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x410
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
IME
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
IME
R/W
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Mask Enable
The IME values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Corresponding pin interrupt is masked.
1
Corresponding pin interrupt is not masked.
264
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 7: GPIO Raw Interrupt Status (GPIORIS), offset 0x414
The GPIORIS register is the raw interrupt status register. Bits read High in GPIORIS reflect the
status of interrupt trigger conditions detected (raw, prior to masking), indicating that all the
requirements have been met, before they are finally allowed to trigger by the GPIO Interrupt Mask
(GPIOIM) register (see page 264). Bits read as zero indicate that corresponding input pins have not
initiated an interrupt. All bits are cleared by a reset.
GPIO Raw Interrupt Status (GPIORIS)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x414
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
RIS
RO
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Raw Status
Reflects the status of interrupt trigger condition detection on pins (raw,
prior to masking).
The RIS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Corresponding pin interrupt requirements not met.
1
Corresponding pin interrupt has met requirements.
June 18, 2012
265
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 8: GPIO Masked Interrupt Status (GPIOMIS), offset 0x418
The GPIOMIS register is the masked interrupt status register. Bits read High in GPIOMIS reflect
the status of input lines triggering an interrupt. Bits read as Low indicate that either no interrupt has
been generated, or the interrupt is masked.
GPIOMIS is the state of the interrupt after masking.
GPIO Masked Interrupt Status (GPIOMIS)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x418
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
MIS
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
MIS
RO
0x00
GPIO Masked Interrupt Status
Masked value of interrupt due to corresponding pin.
The MIS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Corresponding GPIO line interrupt not active.
1
Corresponding GPIO line asserting interrupt.
266
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: GPIO Interrupt Clear (GPIOICR), offset 0x41C
The GPIOICR register is the interrupt clear register. Writing a 1 to a bit in this register clears the
corresponding interrupt edge detection logic register. Writing a 0 has no effect.
GPIO Interrupt Clear (GPIOICR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x41C
Type W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
IC
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
IC
W1C
0x00
GPIO Interrupt Clear
The IC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Corresponding interrupt is unaffected.
1
Corresponding interrupt is cleared.
June 18, 2012
267
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 10: GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL), offset 0x420
The GPIOAFSEL register is the mode control select register. Writing a 1 to any bit in this register
selects the hardware control for the corresponding GPIO line. All bits are cleared by a reset, therefore
no GPIO line is set to hardware control by default.
The GPIO commit control registers provide a layer of protection against accidental programming of
critical hardware peripherals. Protection is currently provided for the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and
PC[3:0]). Writes to protected bits of the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register
(see page 268) are not committed to storage unless the GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK) register (see
page 278) has been unlocked and the appropriate bits of the GPIO Commit (GPIOCR) register (see
page 279) have been set to 1.
Important: All GPIO pins are tri-stated by default (GPIOAFSEL=0, GPIODEN=0, GPIOPDR=0,
and GPIOPUR=0), with the exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]).
The JTAG/SWD pins default to their JTAG/SWD functionality (GPIOAFSEL=1,
GPIODEN=1 and GPIOPUR=1). A Power-On-Reset (POR) or asserting RST puts both
groups of pins back to their default state.
While debugging systems where PB7 is being used as a GPIO, care must be taken to
ensure that a low value is not applied to the pin when the part is reset. Because PB7
reverts to the TRST function after reset, a Low value on the pin causes the JTAG
controller to be reset, resulting in a loss of JTAG communication.
Caution – It is possible to create a software sequence that prevents the debugger from connecting to
the Stellaris® microcontroller. If the program code loaded into flash immediately changes the JTAG
pins to their GPIO functionality, the debugger may not have enough time to connect and halt the
controller before the JTAG pin functionality switches. This may lock the debugger out of the part. This
can be avoided with a software routine that restores JTAG functionality based on an external or software
trigger.
GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x420
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
AFSEL
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
268
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
7:0
AFSEL
R/W
-
Description
GPIO Alternate Function Select
The AFSEL values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Software control of corresponding GPIO line (GPIO mode).
1
Hardware control of corresponding GPIO line (alternate
hardware function).
Note:
The default reset value for the GPIOAFSEL,
GPIOPUR, and GPIODEN registers are 0x0000.0000
for all GPIO pins, with the exception of the five
JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]). These five pins
default to JTAG/SWD functionality. Because of this,
the default reset value of these registers for GPIO
Port B is 0x0000.0080 while the default reset value
for Port C is 0x0000.000F.
June 18, 2012
269
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 11: GPIO 2-mA Drive Select (GPIODR2R), offset 0x500
The GPIODR2R register is the 2-mA drive control register. It allows for each GPIO signal in the port
to be individually configured without affecting the other pads. When writing a DRV2 bit for a GPIO
signal, the corresponding DRV4 bit in the GPIODR4R register and the DRV8 bit in the GPIODR8R
register are automatically cleared by hardware.
GPIO 2-mA Drive Select (GPIODR2R)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x500
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.00FF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
DRV2
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DRV2
R/W
0xFF
Output Pad 2-mA Drive Enable
A write of 1 to either GPIODR4[n] or GPIODR8[n] clears the
corresponding 2-mA enable bit. The change is effective on the second
clock cycle after the write.
270
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 12: GPIO 4-mA Drive Select (GPIODR4R), offset 0x504
The GPIODR4R register is the 4-mA drive control register. It allows for each GPIO signal in the port
to be individually configured without affecting the other pads. When writing the DRV4 bit for a GPIO
signal, the corresponding DRV2 bit in the GPIODR2R register and the DRV8 bit in the GPIODR8R
register are automatically cleared by hardware.
GPIO 4-mA Drive Select (GPIODR4R)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x504
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
DRV4
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DRV4
R/W
0x00
Output Pad 4-mA Drive Enable
A write of 1 to either GPIODR2[n] or GPIODR8[n] clears the
corresponding 4-mA enable bit. The change is effective on the second
clock cycle after the write.
June 18, 2012
271
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 13: GPIO 8-mA Drive Select (GPIODR8R), offset 0x508
The GPIODR8R register is the 8-mA drive control register. It allows for each GPIO signal in the port
to be individually configured without affecting the other pads. When writing the DRV8 bit for a GPIO
signal, the corresponding DRV2 bit in the GPIODR2R register and the DRV4 bit in the GPIODR4R
register are automatically cleared by hardware.
GPIO 8-mA Drive Select (GPIODR8R)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x508
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
DRV8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DRV8
R/W
0x00
Output Pad 8-mA Drive Enable
A write of 1 to either GPIODR2[n] or GPIODR4[n] clears the
corresponding 8-mA enable bit. The change is effective on the second
clock cycle after the write.
272
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 14: GPIO Open Drain Select (GPIOODR), offset 0x50C
The GPIOODR register is the open drain control register. Setting a bit in this register enables the
open drain configuration of the corresponding GPIO pad. When open drain mode is enabled, the
corresponding bit should also be set in the GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN) register (see page 277).
Corresponding bits in the drive strength registers (GPIODR2R, GPIODR4R, GPIODR8R, and
GPIOSLR ) can be set to achieve the desired rise and fall times. The GPIO acts as an open-drain
input if the corresponding bit in the GPIODIR register is cleared. If open drain is selected while the
GPIO is configured as an input, the GPIO will remain an input and the open-drain selection has no
effect until the GPIO is changed to an output.
GPIO Open Drain Select (GPIOODR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x50C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
ODE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
ODE
R/W
0x00
Output Pad Open Drain Enable
The ODE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Open drain configuration is disabled.
1
Open drain configuration is enabled.
June 18, 2012
273
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 15: GPIO Pull-Up Select (GPIOPUR), offset 0x510
The GPIOPUR register is the pull-up control register. When a bit is set to 1, it enables a weak pull-up
resistor on the corresponding GPIO signal. Setting a bit in GPIOPUR automatically clears the
corresponding bit in the GPIO Pull-Down Select (GPIOPDR) register (see page 275).
GPIO Pull-Up Select (GPIOPUR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x510
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PUE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PUE
R/W
-
Pad Weak Pull-Up Enable
Value Description
0
The corresponding pin's weak pull-up resistor is disabled.
1
The corresponding pin's weak pull-up resistor is enabled.
A write of 1 to GPIOPDR[n] clears the corresponding GPIOPUR[n]
enables. The change is effective on the second clock cycle after the
write.
Note:
The default reset value for the GPIOAFSEL, GPIOPUR, and
GPIODEN registers are 0x0000.0000 for all GPIO pins, with
the exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]).
These five pins default to JTAG/SWD functionality. Because
of this, the default reset value of these registers for GPIO Port
B is 0x0000.0080 while the default reset value for Port C is
0x0000.000F.
274
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 16: GPIO Pull-Down Select (GPIOPDR), offset 0x514
The GPIOPDR register is the pull-down control register. When a bit is set to 1, it enables a weak
pull-down resistor on the corresponding GPIO signal. Setting a bit in GPIOPDR automatically clears
the corresponding bit in the GPIO Pull-Up Select (GPIOPUR) register (see page 274).
GPIO Pull-Down Select (GPIOPDR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x514
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PDE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PDE
R/W
0x00
Pad Weak Pull-Down Enable
Value Description
0
The corresponding pin's weak pull-down resistor is disabled.
1
The corresponding pin's weak pull-down resistor is enabled.
A write of 1 to GPIOPUR[n] clears the corresponding GPIOPDR[n]
enables. The change is effective on the second clock cycle after the
write.
June 18, 2012
275
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 17: GPIO Slew Rate Control Select (GPIOSLR), offset 0x518
The GPIOSLR register is the slew rate control register. Slew rate control is only available when
using the 8-mA drive strength option via the GPIO 8-mA Drive Select (GPIODR8R) register (see
page 272).
GPIO Slew Rate Control Select (GPIOSLR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x518
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
SRL
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
SRL
R/W
0x00
Slew Rate Limit Enable (8-mA drive only)
The SRL values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Slew rate control disabled.
1
Slew rate control enabled.
276
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN), offset 0x51C
Note:
Pins configured as digital inputs are Schmitt-triggered.
The GPIODEN register is the digital enable register. By default, with the exception of the GPIO
signals used for JTAG/SWD function, all other GPIO signals are configured out of reset to be undriven
(tristate). Their digital function is disabled; they do not drive a logic value on the pin and they do not
allow the pin voltage into the GPIO receiver. To use the pin in a digital function (either GPIO or
alternate function), the corresponding GPIODEN bit must be set.
GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x51C
Type R/W, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
R/W
-
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
DEN
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DEN
R/W
-
Digital Enable
The DEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Digital functions disabled.
1
Digital functions enabled.
Note:
The default reset value for the GPIOAFSEL,
GPIOPUR, and GPIODEN registers are 0x0000.0000
for all GPIO pins, with the exception of the five
JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]). These five pins
default to JTAG/SWD functionality. Because of this,
the default reset value of these registers for GPIO
Port B is 0x0000.0080 while the default reset value
for Port C is 0x0000.000F.
June 18, 2012
277
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 19: GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK), offset 0x520
The GPIOLOCK register enables write access to the GPIOCR register (see page 279). Writing
0x1ACC.E551 to the GPIOLOCK register will unlock the GPIOCR register. Writing any other value
to the GPIOLOCK register re-enables the locked state. Reading the GPIOLOCK register returns
the lock status rather than the 32-bit value that was previously written. Therefore, when write accesses
are disabled, or locked, reading the GPIOLOCK register returns 0x00000001. When write accesses
are enabled, or unlocked, reading the GPIOLOCK register returns 0x00000000.
GPIO Lock (GPIOLOCK)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x520
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
LOCK
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
LOCK
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
LOCK
R/W
R/W
0
Reset
R/W
0
Description
0x0000.0001 GPIO Lock
A write of the value 0x1ACC.E551 unlocks the GPIO Commit (GPIOCR)
register for write access.
A write of any other value or a write to the GPIOCR register reapplies
the lock, preventing any register updates. A read of this register returns
the following values:
Value
Description
0x0000.0001 Locked
0x0000.0000 Unlocked
278
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 20: GPIO Commit (GPIOCR), offset 0x524
The GPIOCR register is the commit register. The value of the GPIOCR register determines which
bits of the GPIOAFSEL register are committed when a write to the GPIOAFSEL register is performed.
If a bit in the GPIOCR register is a zero, the data being written to the corresponding bit in the
GPIOAFSEL register will not be committed and will retain its previous value. If a bit in the GPIOCR
register is a one, the data being written to the corresponding bit of the GPIOAFSEL register will be
committed to the register and will reflect the new value.
The contents of the GPIOCR register can only be modified if the GPIOLOCK register is unlocked.
Writes to the GPIOCR register are ignored if the GPIOLOCK register is locked.
Important: This register is designed to prevent accidental programming of the registers that control
connectivity to the JTAG/SWD debug hardware. By initializing the bits of the GPIOCR
register to 0 for PB7 and PC[3:0], the JTAG/SWD debug port can only be converted
to GPIOs through a deliberate set of writes to the GPIOLOCK, GPIOCR, and the
corresponding registers.
Because this protection is currently only implemented on the JTAG/SWD pins on PB7
and PC[3:0], all of the other bits in the GPIOCR registers cannot be written with 0x0.
These bits are hardwired to 0x1, ensuring that it is always possible to commit new
values to the GPIOAFSELregister bits of these other pins.
GPIO Commit (GPIOCR)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0x524
Type -, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CR
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
279
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
7:0
CR
-
-
Description
GPIO Commit
On a bit-wise basis, any bit set allows the corresponding GPIOAFSEL
bit to be set to its alternate function.
Note:
The default register type for the GPIOCR register is RO for
all GPIO pins with the exception of the five JTAG/SWD pins
(PB7 and PC[3:0]). These five pins are currently the only
GPIOs that are protected by the GPIOCR register. Because
of this, the register type for GPIO Port B7 and GPIO Port
C[3:0] is R/W.
The default reset value for the GPIOCR register is
0x0000.00FF for all GPIO pins, with the exception of the five
JTAG/SWD pins (PB7 and PC[3:0]). To ensure that the
JTAG port is not accidentally programmed as a GPIO, these
five pins default to non-committable. Because of this, the
default reset value of GPIOCR for GPIO Port B is
0x0000.007F while the default reset value of GPIOCR for Port
C is 0x0000.00F0.
280
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 21: GPIO Peripheral Identification 4 (GPIOPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0
The GPIOPeriphID4, GPIOPeriphID5, GPIOPeriphID6, and GPIOPeriphID7 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 4 (GPIOPeriphID4)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFD0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID4
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID4
RO
0x00
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
June 18, 2012
281
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 22: GPIO Peripheral Identification 5 (GPIOPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4
The GPIOPeriphID4, GPIOPeriphID5, GPIOPeriphID6, and GPIOPeriphID7 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 5 (GPIOPeriphID5)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFD4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID5
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID5
RO
0x00
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
282
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 23: GPIO Peripheral Identification 6 (GPIOPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8
The GPIOPeriphID4, GPIOPeriphID5, GPIOPeriphID6, and GPIOPeriphID7 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 6 (GPIOPeriphID6)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFD8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID6
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID6
RO
0x00
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
June 18, 2012
283
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 24: GPIO Peripheral Identification 7 (GPIOPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC
The GPIOPeriphID4, GPIOPeriphID5, GPIOPeriphID6, and GPIOPeriphID7 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 7 (GPIOPeriphID7)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFDC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID7
RO
0x00
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
284
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 25: GPIO Peripheral Identification 0 (GPIOPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0
The GPIOPeriphID0, GPIOPeriphID1, GPIOPeriphID2, and GPIOPeriphID3 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 0 (GPIOPeriphID0)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFE0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0061
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID0
RO
0x61
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
285
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 26: GPIO Peripheral Identification 1 (GPIOPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4
The GPIOPeriphID0, GPIOPeriphID1, GPIOPeriphID2, and GPIOPeriphID3 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 1 (GPIOPeriphID1)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFE4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID1
RO
0x00
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
286
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 27: GPIO Peripheral Identification 2 (GPIOPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8
The GPIOPeriphID0, GPIOPeriphID1, GPIOPeriphID2, and GPIOPeriphID3 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 2 (GPIOPeriphID2)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFE8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0018
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID2
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID2
RO
0x18
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
287
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 28: GPIO Peripheral Identification 3 (GPIOPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC
The GPIOPeriphID0, GPIOPeriphID1, GPIOPeriphID2, and GPIOPeriphID3 registers can
conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register; each register contains eight bits of the 32-bit register,
used by software to identify the peripheral.
GPIO Peripheral Identification 3 (GPIOPeriphID3)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFEC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID3
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID3
RO
0x01
GPIO Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
288
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 29: GPIO PrimeCell Identification 0 (GPIOPCellID0), offset 0xFF0
The GPIOPCellID0, GPIOPCellID1, GPIOPCellID2, and GPIOPCellID3 registers are four 8-bit wide
registers, that can conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register. The register is used as a standard
cross-peripheral identification system.
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 0 (GPIOPCellID0)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFF0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.000D
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CID0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID0
RO
0x0D
GPIO PrimeCell ID Register[7:0]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
289
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 30: GPIO PrimeCell Identification 1 (GPIOPCellID1), offset 0xFF4
The GPIOPCellID0, GPIOPCellID1, GPIOPCellID2, and GPIOPCellID3 registers are four 8-bit wide
registers, that can conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register. The register is used as a standard
cross-peripheral identification system.
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 1 (GPIOPCellID1)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFF4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00F0
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CID1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID1
RO
0xF0
GPIO PrimeCell ID Register[15:8]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
290
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 31: GPIO PrimeCell Identification 2 (GPIOPCellID2), offset 0xFF8
The GPIOPCellID0, GPIOPCellID1, GPIOPCellID2, and GPIOPCellID3 registers are four 8-bit wide
registers, that can conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register. The register is used as a standard
cross-peripheral identification system.
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 2 (GPIOPCellID2)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFF8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0005
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CID2
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID2
RO
0x05
GPIO PrimeCell ID Register[23:16]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
291
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
Register 32: GPIO PrimeCell Identification 3 (GPIOPCellID3), offset 0xFFC
The GPIOPCellID0, GPIOPCellID1, GPIOPCellID2, and GPIOPCellID3 registers are four 8-bit wide
registers, that can conceptually be treated as one 32-bit register. The register is used as a standard
cross-peripheral identification system.
GPIO PrimeCell Identification 3 (GPIOPCellID3)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
Offset 0xFFC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00B1
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CID3
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID3
RO
0xB1
GPIO PrimeCell ID Register[31:24]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
292
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
8
General-Purpose Timers
Programmable timers can be used to count or time external events that drive the Timer input pins.
®
The Stellaris General-Purpose Timer Module (GPTM) contains three GPTM blocks (Timer0, Timer1,
and Timer 2). Each GPTM block provides two 16-bit timers/counters (referred to as TimerA and
TimerB) that can be configured to operate independently as timers or event counters, or configured
to operate as one 32-bit timer or one 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC).
The GPT Module is one timing resource available on the Stellaris microcontrollers. Other timer
resources include the System Timer (SysTick) (see 84).
The General-Purpose Timers provide the following features:
■ Three General-Purpose Timer Modules (GPTM), each of which provides two 16-bit
timers/counters. Each GPTM can be configured to operate independently:
– As a single 32-bit timer
– As one 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) to event capture
– For Pulse Width Modulation (PWM)
■ 32-bit Timer modes
– Programmable one-shot timer
– Programmable periodic timer
– Real-Time Clock when using an external 32.768-KHz clock as the input
– User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts CPU Halt flag during debug
■ 16-bit Timer modes
– General-purpose timer function with an 8-bit prescaler (for one-shot and periodic modes only)
– Programmable one-shot timer
– Programmable periodic timer
– User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts CPU Halt flag during debug
■ 16-bit Input Capture modes
– Input edge count capture
– Input edge time capture
■ 16-bit PWM mode
– Simple PWM mode with software-programmable output inversion of the PWM signal
8.1
Block Diagram
Note:
In Figure 8-1 on page 294, the specific CCP pins available depend on the Stellaris device.
See Table 8-1 on page 294 for the available CCPs.
June 18, 2012
293
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Figure 8-1. GPTM Module Block Diagram
0x0000 (Down Counter Modes)
TimerA Control
GPTMTAPMR
TA Comparator
GPTMTAPR
Clock / Edge
Detect
GPTMTAMATCHR
Interrupt / Config
TimerA
Interrupt
GPTMTAILR
GPTMAR
En
GPTMTAMR
GPTMCFG
GPTMCTL
GPTMIMR
TimerB
Interrupt
32 KHz or
Even CCP Pin
RTC Divider
GPTMRIS
GPTMMIS
TimerB Control
GPTMICR
GPTMTBR En
GPTMTBPMR
Clock / Edge
Detect
GPTMTBPR
GPTMTBMATCHR
Odd CCP Pin
TB Comparator
GPTMTBILR
GPTMTBMR
0x0000 (Down Counter Modes)
System
Clock
Table 8-1. Available CCP Pins
Timer
16-Bit Up/Down Counter
Even CCP Pin
Odd CCP Pin
Timer 0
TimerA
CCP0
-
TimerB
-
CCP1
TimerA
CCP2
-
TimerB
-
CCP3
TimerA
-
-
TimerB
-
-
Timer 1
Timer 2
8.2
Signal Description
Table 8-2 on page 294 and Table 8-3 on page 295 list the external signals of the GP Timer module
and describe the function of each. The GP Timer signals are alternate functions for some GPIO
signals and default to be GPIO signals at reset. The column in the table below titled "Pin Assignment"
lists the possible GPIO pin placements for these GP Timer signals. The AFSEL bit in the GPIO
Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) should be set to choose the GP Timer
function. For more information on configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs
(GPIOs)” on page 245.
Table 8-2. General-Purpose Timers Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
CCP0
66
I/O
TTL
Description
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
34
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
294
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 8-2. General-Purpose Timers Signals (100LQFP) (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
CCP2
67
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
23
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 8-3. General-Purpose Timers Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
CCP0
E12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
L6
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
CCP2
D12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
M2
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
8.3
Functional Description
The main components of each GPTM block are two free-running 16-bit up/down counters (referred
to as TimerA and TimerB), two 16-bit match registers, two prescaler match registers, and two 16-bit
load/initialization registers and their associated control functions. The exact functionality of each
GPTM is controlled by software and configured through the register interface.
Software configures the GPTM using the GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG) register (see page 305),
the GPTM TimerA Mode (GPTMTAMR) register (see page 306), and the GPTM TimerB Mode
(GPTMTBMR) register (see page 308). When in one of the 32-bit modes, the timer can only act as
a 32-bit timer. However, when configured in 16-bit mode, the GPTM can have its two 16-bit timers
configured in any combination of the 16-bit modes.
8.3.1
GPTM Reset Conditions
After reset has been applied to the GPTM module, the module is in an inactive state, and all control
registers are cleared and in their default states. Counters TimerA and TimerB are initialized to
0xFFFF, along with their corresponding load registers: the GPTM TimerA Interval Load
(GPTMTAILR) register (see page 319) and the GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR) register
(see page 320). The prescale counters are initialized to 0x00: the GPTM TimerA Prescale
(GPTMTAPR) register (see page 323) and the GPTM TimerB Prescale (GPTMTBPR) register (see
page 324).
8.3.2
32-Bit Timer Operating Modes
This section describes the three GPTM 32-bit timer modes (One-Shot, Periodic, and RTC) and their
configuration.
The GPTM is placed into 32-bit mode by writing a 0 (One-Shot/Periodic 32-bit timer mode) or a 1
(RTC mode) to the GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG) register. In both configurations, certain GPTM
registers are concatenated to form pseudo 32-bit registers. These registers include:
■ GPTM TimerA Interval Load (GPTMTAILR) register [15:0], see page 319
■ GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR) register [15:0], see page 320
■ GPTM TimerA (GPTMTAR) register [15:0], see page 327
■ GPTM TimerB (GPTMTBR) register [15:0], see page 328
June 18, 2012
295
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
In the 32-bit modes, the GPTM translates a 32-bit write access to GPTMTAILR into a write access
to both GPTMTAILR and GPTMTBILR. The resulting word ordering for such a write operation is:
GPTMTBILR[15:0]:GPTMTAILR[15:0]
Likewise, a read access to GPTMTAR returns the value:
GPTMTBR[15:0]:GPTMTAR[15:0]
8.3.2.1
32-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode
In 32-bit one-shot and periodic timer modes, the concatenated versions of the TimerA and TimerB
registers are configured as a 32-bit down-counter. The selection of one-shot or periodic mode is
determined by the value written to the TAMR field of the GPTM TimerA Mode (GPTMTAMR) register
(see page 306), and there is no need to write to the GPTM TimerB Mode (GPTMTBMR) register.
When software writes the TAEN bit in the GPTM Control (GPTMCTL) register (see page 310), the
timer begins counting down from its preloaded value. Once the 0x0000.0000 state is reached, the
timer reloads its start value from the concatenated GPTMTAILR on the next cycle. If configured to
be a one-shot timer, the timer stops counting and clears the TAEN bit in the GPTMCTL register. If
configured as a periodic timer, it continues counting.
In addition to reloading the count value, the GPTM generates interrupts and triggers when it reaches
the 0x000.0000 state. The GPTM sets the TATORIS bit in the GPTM Raw Interrupt Status
(GPTMRIS) register (see page 315), and holds it until it is cleared by writing the GPTM Interrupt
Clear (GPTMICR) register (see page 317). If the time-out interrupt is enabled in the GPTM Interrupt
Mask (GPTMIMR) register (see page 313), the GPTM also sets the TATOMIS bit in the GPTM Masked
Interrupt Status (GPTMMIS) register (see page 316).
If software reloads the GPTMTAILR register while the counter is running, the counter loads the new
value on the next clock cycle and continues counting from the new value.
If the TASTALL bit in the GPTMCTL register is set, the timer freezes counting while the processor
is halted by the debugger. The timer resumes counting when the processor resumes execution.
8.3.2.2
32-Bit Real-Time Clock Timer Mode
In Real-Time Clock (RTC) mode, the concatenated versions of the TimerA and TimerB registers
are configured as a 32-bit up-counter. When RTC mode is selected for the first time, the counter is
loaded with a value of 0x0000.0001. All subsequent load values must be written to the GPTM TimerA
Match (GPTMTAMATCHR) register (see page 321) by the controller.
The input clock on an even CCP input is required to be 32.768 KHz in RTC mode. The clock signal
is then divided down to a 1 Hz rate and is passed along to the input of the 32-bit counter.
When software writes the TAEN bit inthe GPTMCTL register, the counter starts counting up from its
preloaded value of 0x0000.0001. When the current count value matches the preloaded value in the
GPTMTAMATCHR register, it rolls over to a value of 0x0000.0000 and continues counting until
either a hardware reset, or it is disabled by software (clearing the TAEN bit). When a match occurs,
the GPTM asserts the RTCRIS bit in GPTMRIS. If the RTC interrupt is enabled in GPTMIMR, the
GPTM also sets the RTCMIS bit in GPTMMIS and generates a controller interrupt. The status flags
are cleared by writing the RTCCINT bit in GPTMICR.
If the TASTALL and/or TBSTALL bits in the GPTMCTL register are set, the timer does not freeze if
the RTCEN bit is set in GPTMCTL.
296
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
8.3.3
16-Bit Timer Operating Modes
The GPTM is placed into global 16-bit mode by writing a value of 0x4 to the GPTM Configuration
(GPTMCFG) register (see page 305). This section describes each of the GPTM 16-bit modes of
operation. TimerA and TimerB have identical modes, so a single description is given using an n to
reference both.
8.3.3.1
16-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode
In 16-bit one-shot and periodic timer modes, the timer is configured as a 16-bit down-counter with
an optional 8-bit prescaler that effectively extends the counting range of the timer to 24 bits. The
selection of one-shot or periodic mode is determined by the value written to the TnMR field of the
GPTMTnMR register. The optional prescaler is loaded into the GPTM Timern Prescale (GPTMTnPR)
register.
When software writes the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register, the timer begins counting down from
its preloaded value. Once the 0x0000 state is reached, the timer reloads its start value from
GPTMTnILR and GPTMTnPR on the next cycle. If configured to be a one-shot timer, the timer stops
counting and clears the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register. If configured as a periodic timer, it
continues counting.
In addition to reloading the count value, the timer generates interrupts and triggers when it reaches
the 0x0000 state. The GPTM sets the TnTORIS bit in the GPTMRIS register, and holds it until it is
cleared by writing the GPTMICR register. If the time-out interrupt is enabled in GPTMIMR, the GPTM
also sets the TnTOMIS bit in GPTMISR and generates a controller interrupt.
If software reloads the GPTMTAILR register while the counter is running, the counter loads the new
value on the next clock cycle and continues counting from the new value.
If the TnSTALL bit in the GPTMCTL register is set, the timer freezes counting while the processor
is halted by the debugger. The timer resumes counting when the processor resumes execution.
The following example shows a variety of configurations for a 16-bit free running timer while using
the prescaler. All values assume a 50-MHz clock with Tc=20 ns (clock period).
Table 8-4. 16-Bit Timer With Prescaler Configurations
a
Prescale
#Clock (T c)
Max Time
Units
00000000
1
1.3107
mS
00000001
2
2.6214
mS
00000010
3
3.9322
mS
------------
--
--
--
11111101
254
332.9229
mS
11111110
255
334.2336
mS
11111111
256
335.5443
mS
a. Tc is the clock period.
8.3.3.2
16-Bit Input Edge Count Mode
Note:
For rising-edge detection, the input signal must be High for at least two system clock periods
following the rising edge. Similarly, for falling-edge detection, the input signal must be Low
for at least two system clock periods following the falling edge. Based on this criteria, the
maximum input frequency for edge detection is 1/4 of the system frequency.
Note:
The prescaler is not available in 16-Bit Input Edge Count mode.
June 18, 2012
297
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
In Edge Count mode, the timer is configured as a down-counter capable of capturing three types
of events: rising edge, falling edge, or both. To place the timer in Edge Count mode, the TnCMR bit
of the GPTMTnMR register must be set to 0. The type of edge that the timer counts is determined
by the TnEVENT fields of the GPTMCTL register. During initialization, the GPTM Timern Match
(GPTMTnMATCHR) register is configured so that the difference between the value in the
GPTMTnILR register and the GPTMTnMATCHR register equals the number of edge events that
must be counted.
When software writes the TnEN bit in the GPTM Control (GPTMCTL) register, the timer is enabled
for event capture. Each input event on the CCP pin decrements the counter by 1 until the event count
matches GPTMTnMATCHR. When the counts match, the GPTM asserts the CnMRIS bit in the
GPTMRIS register (and the CnMMIS bit, if the interrupt is not masked).
The counter is then reloaded using the value in GPTMTnILR, and stopped since the GPTM
automatically clears the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register. Once the event count has been reached,
all further events are ignored until TnEN is re-enabled by software.
Figure 8-2 on page 298 shows how input edge count mode works. In this case, the timer start value
is set to GPTMTnILR =0x000A and the match value is set to GPTMTnMATCHR =0x0006 so that
four edge events are counted. The counter is configured to detect both edges of the input signal.
Note that the last two edges are not counted since the timer automatically clears the TnEN bit after
the current count matches the value in the GPTMTnMATCHR register.
Figure 8-2. 16-Bit Input Edge Count Mode Example
Timer stops,
flags
asserted
Count
Timer reload
on next cycle
Ignored
Ignored
0x000A
0x0009
0x0008
0x0007
0x0006
Input Signal
8.3.3.3
16-Bit Input Edge Time Mode
Note:
For rising-edge detection, the input signal must be High for at least two system clock periods
following the rising edge. Similarly, for falling edge detection, the input signal must be Low
for at least two system clock periods following the falling edge. Based on this criteria, the
maximum input frequency for edge detection is 1/4 of the system frequency.
Note:
The prescaler is not available in 16-Bit Input Edge Time mode.
298
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
In Edge Time mode, the timer is configured as a free-running down-counter initialized to the value
loaded in the GPTMTnILR register (or 0xFFFF at reset). The timer is capable of capturing three
types of events: rising edge, falling edge, or both. The timer is placed into Edge Time mode by
setting the TnCMR bit in the GPTMTnMR register, and the type of event that the timer captures is
determined by the TnEVENT fields of the GPTMCTL register.
When software writes the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register, the timer is enabled for event capture.
When the selected input event is detected, the current Tn counter value is captured in the GPTMTnR
register and is available to be read by the controller. The GPTM then asserts the CnERIS bit (and
the CnEMIS bit, if the interrupt is not masked).
After an event has been captured, the timer does not stop counting. It continues to count until the
TnEN bit is cleared. When the timer reaches the 0x0000 state, it is reloaded with the value from the
GPTMTnILR register.
Figure 8-3 on page 299 shows how input edge timing mode works. In the diagram, it is assumed that
the start value of the timer is the default value of 0xFFFF, and the timer is configured to capture
rising edge events.
Each time a rising edge event is detected, the current count value is loaded into the GPTMTnR
register, and is held there until another rising edge is detected (at which point the new count value
is loaded into GPTMTnR).
Figure 8-3. 16-Bit Input Edge Time Mode Example
Count
0xFFFF
GPTMTnR=X
GPTMTnR=Y
GPTMTnR=Z
Z
X
Y
Time
Input Signal
8.3.3.4
16-Bit PWM Mode
Note:
The prescaler is not available in 16-Bit PWM mode.
The GPTM supports a simple PWM generation mode. In PWM mode, the timer is configured as a
down-counter with a start value (and thus period) defined by GPTMTnILR. In this mode, the PWM
frequency and period are synchronous events and therefore guaranteed to be glitch free. PWM
mode is enabled with the GPTMTnMR register by setting the TnAMS bit to 0x1, the TnCMR bit to
0x0, and the TnMR field to 0x2.
When software writes the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register, the counter begins counting down
until it reaches the 0x0000 state. On the next counter cycle, the counter reloads its start value from
June 18, 2012
299
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
GPTMTnILR and continues counting until disabled by software clearing the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL
register. No interrupts or status bits are asserted in PWM mode.
The output PWM signal asserts when the counter is at the value of the GPTMTnILR register (its
start state), and is deasserted when the counter value equals the value in the GPTM Timern Match
Register (GPTMTnMATCHR). Software has the capability of inverting the output PWM signal by
setting the TnPWML bit in the GPTMCTL register.
Figure 8-4 on page 300 shows how to generate an output PWM with a 1-ms period and a 66% duty
cycle assuming a 50-MHz input clock and TnPWML =0 (duty cycle would be 33% for the TnPWML
=1 configuration). For this example, the start value is GPTMTnIRL=0xC350 and the match value is
GPTMTnMATCHR=0x411A.
Figure 8-4. 16-Bit PWM Mode Example
Count
GPTMTnR=GPTMnMR
GPTMTnR=GPTMnMR
0xC350
0x411A
Time
TnEN set
TnPWML = 0
Output
Signal
TnPWML = 1
8.4
Initialization and Configuration
To use the general-purpose timers, the peripheral clock must be enabled by setting the TIMER0,
TIMER1, and TIMER2 bits in the RCGC1 register.
This section shows module initialization and configuration examples for each of the supported timer
modes.
8.4.1
32-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode
The GPTM is configured for 32-bit One-Shot and Periodic modes by the following sequence:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TAEN bit in the GPTMCTL register is cleared) before making
any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration Register (GPTMCFG) with a value of 0x0.
300
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
3. Set the TAMR field in the GPTM TimerA Mode Register (GPTMTAMR):
a. Write a value of 0x1 for One-Shot mode.
b. Write a value of 0x2 for Periodic mode.
4. Load the start value into the GPTM TimerA Interval Load Register (GPTMTAILR).
5. If interrupts are required, set the TATOIM bit in the GPTM Interrupt Mask Register (GPTMIMR).
6. Set the TAEN bit in the GPTMCTL register to enable the timer and start counting.
7. Poll the TATORIS bit in the GPTMRIS register or wait for the interrupt to be generated (if enabled).
In both cases, the status flags are cleared by writing a 1 to the TATOCINT bit of the GPTM
Interrupt Clear Register (GPTMICR).
In One-Shot mode, the timer stops counting after step 7 on page 301. To re-enable the timer, repeat
the sequence. A timer configured in Periodic mode does not stop counting after it times out.
8.4.2
32-Bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) Mode
To use the RTC mode, the timer must have a 32.768-KHz input signal on an even CCP input. To
enable the RTC feature, follow these steps:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TAEN bit is cleared) before making any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration Register (GPTMCFG) with a value of 0x1.
3. Write the desired match value to the GPTM TimerA Match Register (GPTMTAMATCHR).
4. Set/clear the RTCEN bit in the GPTM Control Register (GPTMCTL) as desired.
5. If interrupts are required, set the RTCIM bit in the GPTM Interrupt Mask Register (GPTMIMR).
6. Set the TAEN bit in the GPTMCTL register to enable the timer and start counting.
When the timer count equals the value in the GPTMTAMATCHR register, the GPTM asserts the
RTCRIS bit in the GPTMRIS register and continues counting until Timer A is disabled or a hardware
reset. The interrupt is cleared by writing the RTCCINT bit in the GPTMICR register.
8.4.3
16-Bit One-Shot/Periodic Timer Mode
A timer is configured for 16-bit One-Shot and Periodic modes by the following sequence:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TnEN bit is cleared) before making any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration Register (GPTMCFG) with a value of 0x4.
3. Set the TnMR field in the GPTM Timer Mode (GPTMTnMR) register:
a. Write a value of 0x1 for One-Shot mode.
b. Write a value of 0x2 for Periodic mode.
4. If a prescaler is to be used, write the prescale value to the GPTM Timern Prescale Register
(GPTMTnPR).
June 18, 2012
301
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
5. Load the start value into the GPTM Timer Interval Load Register (GPTMTnILR).
6. If interrupts are required, set the TnTOIM bit in the GPTM Interrupt Mask Register (GPTMIMR).
7. Set the TnEN bit in the GPTM Control Register (GPTMCTL) to enable the timer and start
counting.
8. Poll the TnTORIS bit in the GPTMRIS register or wait for the interrupt to be generated (if enabled).
In both cases, the status flags are cleared by writing a 1 to the TnTOCINT bit of the GPTM
Interrupt Clear Register (GPTMICR).
In One-Shot mode, the timer stops counting after step 8 on page 302. To re-enable the timer, repeat
the sequence. A timer configured in Periodic mode does not stop counting after it times out.
8.4.4
16-Bit Input Edge Count Mode
A timer is configured to Input Edge Count mode by the following sequence:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TnEN bit is cleared) before making any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG) register with a value of 0x4.
3. In the GPTM Timer Mode (GPTMTnMR) register, write the TnCMR field to 0x0 and the TnMR
field to 0x3.
4. Configure the type of event(s) that the timer captures by writing the TnEVENT field of the GPTM
Control (GPTMCTL) register.
5. Load the timer start value into the GPTM Timern Interval Load (GPTMTnILR) register.
6. Load the desired event count into the GPTM Timern Match (GPTMTnMATCHR) register.
7. If interrupts are required, set the CnMIM bit in the GPTM Interrupt Mask (GPTMIMR) register.
8. Set the TnEN bit in the GPTMCTL register to enable the timer and begin waiting for edge events.
9. Poll the CnMRIS bit in the GPTMRIS register or wait for the interrupt to be generated (if enabled).
In both cases, the status flags are cleared by writing a 1 to the CnMCINT bit of the GPTM
Interrupt Clear (GPTMICR) register.
In Input Edge Count Mode, the timer stops after the desired number of edge events has been
detected. To re-enable the timer, ensure that the TnEN bit is cleared and repeat step 4 on page 302
through step 9 on page 302.
8.4.5
16-Bit Input Edge Timing Mode
A timer is configured to Input Edge Timing mode by the following sequence:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TnEN bit is cleared) before making any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG) register with a value of 0x4.
3. In the GPTM Timer Mode (GPTMTnMR) register, write the TnCMR field to 0x1 and the TnMR
field to 0x3.
302
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
4. Configure the type of event that the timer captures by writing the TnEVENT field of the GPTM
Control (GPTMCTL) register.
5. Load the timer start value into the GPTM Timern Interval Load (GPTMTnILR) register.
6. If interrupts are required, set the CnEIM bit in the GPTM Interrupt Mask (GPTMIMR) register.
7. Set the TnEN bit in the GPTM Control (GPTMCTL) register to enable the timer and start counting.
8. Poll the CnERIS bit in the GPTMRIS register or wait for the interrupt to be generated (if enabled).
In both cases, the status flags are cleared by writing a 1 to the CnECINT bit of the GPTM
Interrupt Clear (GPTMICR) register. The time at which the event happened can be obtained
by reading the GPTM Timern (GPTMTnR) register.
In Input Edge Timing mode, the timer continues running after an edge event has been detected,
but the timer interval can be changed at any time by writing the GPTMTnILR register. The change
takes effect at the next cycle after the write.
8.4.6
16-Bit PWM Mode
A timer is configured to PWM mode using the following sequence:
1. Ensure the timer is disabled (the TnEN bit is cleared) before making any changes.
2. Write the GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG) register with a value of 0x4.
3. In the GPTM Timer Mode (GPTMTnMR) register, set the TnAMS bit to 0x1, the TnCMR bit to
0x0, and the TnMR field to 0x2.
4. Configure the output state of the PWM signal (whether or not it is inverted) in the TnPWML field
of the GPTM Control (GPTMCTL) register.
5. Load the timer start value into the GPTM Timern Interval Load (GPTMTnILR) register.
6. Load the GPTM Timern Match (GPTMTnMATCHR) register with the desired value.
7. Set the TnEN bit in the GPTM Control (GPTMCTL) register to enable the timer and begin
generation of the output PWM signal.
In PWM Timing mode, the timer continues running after the PWM signal has been generated. The
PWM period can be adjusted at any time by writing the GPTMTnILR register, and the change takes
effect at the next cycle after the write.
8.5
Register Map
Table 8-5 on page 304 lists the GPTM registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to the
register’s address, relative to that timer’s base address:
■ Timer0: 0x4003.0000
■ Timer1: 0x4003.1000
■ Timer2: 0x4003.2000
Note that the Timer module clock must be enabled before the registers can be programmed (see
page 204). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the Timer module clock is enabled before
any Timer module registers are accessed.
June 18, 2012
303
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Table 8-5. Timers Register Map
Name
Type
Reset
0x000
GPTMCFG
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM Configuration
305
0x004
GPTMTAMR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerA Mode
306
0x008
GPTMTBMR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerB Mode
308
0x00C
GPTMCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM Control
310
0x018
GPTMIMR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM Interrupt Mask
313
0x01C
GPTMRIS
RO
0x0000.0000
GPTM Raw Interrupt Status
315
0x020
GPTMMIS
RO
0x0000.0000
GPTM Masked Interrupt Status
316
0x024
GPTMICR
W1C
0x0000.0000
GPTM Interrupt Clear
317
0x028
GPTMTAILR
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
GPTM TimerA Interval Load
319
0x02C
GPTMTBILR
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
GPTM TimerB Interval Load
320
0x030
GPTMTAMATCHR
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
GPTM TimerA Match
321
0x034
GPTMTBMATCHR
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
GPTM TimerB Match
322
0x038
GPTMTAPR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerA Prescale
323
0x03C
GPTMTBPR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerB Prescale
324
0x040
GPTMTAPMR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerA Prescale Match
325
0x044
GPTMTBPMR
R/W
0x0000.0000
GPTM TimerB Prescale Match
326
0x048
GPTMTAR
RO
0xFFFF.FFFF
GPTM TimerA
327
0x04C
GPTMTBR
RO
0x0000.FFFF
GPTM TimerB
328
8.6
Description
See
page
Offset
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the GPTM registers, in numerical order by address
offset.
304
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG), offset 0x000
This register configures the global operation of the GPTM module. The value written to this register
determines whether the GPTM is in 32- or 16-bit mode.
GPTM Configuration (GPTMCFG)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
GPTMCFG
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:3
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
2:0
GPTMCFG
R/W
0x0
GPTM Configuration
The GPTMCFG values are defined as follows:
Value
Description
0x0
32-bit timer configuration.
0x1
32-bit real-time clock (RTC) counter configuration.
0x2
Reserved
0x3
Reserved
0x4-0x7 16-bit timer configuration, function is controlled by bits 1:0 of
GPTMTAMR and GPTMTBMR.
June 18, 2012
305
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 2: GPTM TimerA Mode (GPTMTAMR), offset 0x004
This register configures the GPTM based on the configuration selected in the GPTMCFG register.
When in 16-bit PWM mode, set the TAAMS bit to 0x1, the TACMR bit to 0x0, and the TAMR field to
0x2.
GPTM TimerA Mode (GPTMTAMR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x004
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TAAMS
TACMR
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TAMR
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
TAAMS
R/W
0
GPTM TimerA Alternate Mode Select
The TAAMS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Capture mode is enabled.
1
PWM mode is enabled.
Note:
2
TACMR
R/W
0
To enable PWM mode, you must also clear the TACMR
bit and set the TAMR field to 0x2.
GPTM TimerA Capture Mode
The TACMR values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Edge-Count mode
1
Edge-Time mode
306
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1:0
TAMR
R/W
0x0
Description
GPTM TimerA Mode
The TAMR values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0x0 Reserved
0x1 One-Shot Timer mode
0x2 Periodic Timer mode
0x3 Capture mode
The Timer mode is based on the timer configuration defined by bits 2:0
in the GPTMCFG register (16-or 32-bit).
In 16-bit timer configuration, TAMR controls the 16-bit timer modes for
TimerA.
In 32-bit timer configuration, this register controls the mode and the
contents of GPTMTBMR are ignored.
June 18, 2012
307
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 3: GPTM TimerB Mode (GPTMTBMR), offset 0x008
This register configures the GPTM based on the configuration selected in the GPTMCFG register.
When in 16-bit PWM mode, set the TBAMS bit to 0x1, the TBCMR bit to 0x0, and the TBMR field to
0x2.
GPTM TimerB Mode (GPTMTBMR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x008
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TBAMS
TBCMR
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TBMR
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
TBAMS
R/W
0
GPTM TimerB Alternate Mode Select
The TBAMS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Capture mode is enabled.
1
PWM mode is enabled.
Note:
2
TBCMR
R/W
0
To enable PWM mode, you must also clear the TBCMR
bit and set the TBMR field to 0x2.
GPTM TimerB Capture Mode
The TBCMR values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Edge-Count mode
1
Edge-Time mode
308
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1:0
TBMR
R/W
0x0
Description
GPTM TimerB Mode
The TBMR values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0x0 Reserved
0x1 One-Shot Timer mode
0x2 Periodic Timer mode
0x3 Capture mode
The timer mode is based on the timer configuration defined by bits 2:0
in the GPTMCFG register.
In 16-bit timer configuration, these bits control the 16-bit timer modes
for TimerB.
In 32-bit timer configuration, this register’s contents are ignored and
GPTMTAMR is used.
June 18, 2012
309
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 4: GPTM Control (GPTMCTL), offset 0x00C
This register is used alongside the GPTMCFG and GMTMTnMR registers to fine-tune the timer
configuration, and to enable other features such as timer stall.
GPTM Control (GPTMCTL)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x00C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
10
9
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TBSTALL
TBEN
reserved
TAPWML
reserved
RTCEN
TASTALL
TAEN
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
Type
Reset
15
14
reserved
TBPWML
RO
0
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
TBEVENT
R/W
0
R/W
0
TAEVENT
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:15
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
14
TBPWML
R/W
0
GPTM TimerB PWM Output Level
The TBPWML values are defined as follows:
Value Description
13:12
reserved
RO
0
11:10
TBEVENT
R/W
0x0
0
Output is unaffected.
1
Output is inverted.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
GPTM TimerB Event Mode
The TBEVENT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0x0 Positive edge
0x1 Negative edge
0x2 Reserved
0x3 Both edges
310
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
9
TBSTALL
R/W
0
Description
GPTM Timer B Stall Enable
The TBSTALL values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Timer B continues counting while the processor is halted by the
debugger.
1
Timer B freezes counting while the processor is halted by the
debugger.
If the processor is executing normally, the TBSTALL bit is ignored.
8
TBEN
R/W
0
GPTM TimerB Enable
The TBEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
TimerB is disabled.
1
TimerB is enabled and begins counting or the capture logic is
enabled based on the GPTMCFG register.
7
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
6
TAPWML
R/W
0
GPTM TimerA PWM Output Level
The TAPWML values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Output is unaffected.
1
Output is inverted.
5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
RTCEN
R/W
0
GPTM RTC Enable
The RTCEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
3:2
TAEVENT
R/W
0x0
0
RTC counting is disabled.
1
RTC counting is enabled.
GPTM TimerA Event Mode
The TAEVENT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0x0 Positive edge
0x1 Negative edge
0x2 Reserved
0x3 Both edges
June 18, 2012
311
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
TASTALL
R/W
0
Description
GPTM Timer A Stall Enable
The TASTALL values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Timer A continues counting while the processor is halted by the
debugger.
1
Timer A freezes counting while the processor is halted by the
debugger.
If the processor is executing normally, the TASTALL bit is ignored.
0
TAEN
R/W
0
GPTM TimerA Enable
The TAEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
TimerA is disabled.
1
TimerA is enabled and begins counting or the capture logic is
enabled based on the GPTMCFG register.
312
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: GPTM Interrupt Mask (GPTMIMR), offset 0x018
This register allows software to enable/disable GPTM controller-level interrupts. Writing a 1 enables
the interrupt, while writing a 0 disables it.
GPTM Interrupt Mask (GPTMIMR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x018
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
CBEIM
CBMIM
TBTOIM
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RTCIM
CAEIM
CAMIM
TATOIM
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
CBEIM
R/W
0
GPTM CaptureB Event Interrupt Mask
The CBEIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
9
CBMIM
R/W
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
GPTM CaptureB Match Interrupt Mask
The CBMIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
8
TBTOIM
R/W
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
GPTM TimerB Time-Out Interrupt Mask
The TBTOIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
7:4
reserved
RO
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
313
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
RTCIM
R/W
0
Description
GPTM RTC Interrupt Mask
The RTCIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
2
CAEIM
R/W
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
GPTM CaptureA Event Interrupt Mask
The CAEIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
1
CAMIM
R/W
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
GPTM CaptureA Match Interrupt Mask
The CAMIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
TATOIM
R/W
0
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
GPTM TimerA Time-Out Interrupt Mask
The TATOIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Interrupt is disabled.
1
Interrupt is enabled.
314
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 6: GPTM Raw Interrupt Status (GPTMRIS), offset 0x01C
This register shows the state of the GPTM's internal interrupt signal. These bits are set whether or
not the interrupt is masked in the GPTMIMR register. Each bit can be cleared by writing a 1 to its
corresponding bit in GPTMICR.
GPTM Raw Interrupt Status (GPTMRIS)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x01C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RTCRIS
CAERIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
CBERIS
RO
0
CBMRIS TBTORIS
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
CAMRIS TATORIS
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
CBERIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureB Event Raw Interrupt
This is the CaptureB Event interrupt status prior to masking.
9
CBMRIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureB Match Raw Interrupt
This is the CaptureB Match interrupt status prior to masking.
8
TBTORIS
RO
0
GPTM TimerB Time-Out Raw Interrupt
This is the TimerB time-out interrupt status prior to masking.
7:4
reserved
RO
0x0
3
RTCRIS
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
GPTM RTC Raw Interrupt
This is the RTC Event interrupt status prior to masking.
2
CAERIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureA Event Raw Interrupt
This is the CaptureA Event interrupt status prior to masking.
1
CAMRIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureA Match Raw Interrupt
This is the CaptureA Match interrupt status prior to masking.
0
TATORIS
RO
0
GPTM TimerA Time-Out Raw Interrupt
This the TimerA time-out interrupt status prior to masking.
June 18, 2012
315
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 7: GPTM Masked Interrupt Status (GPTMMIS), offset 0x020
This register show the state of the GPTM's controller-level interrupt. If an interrupt is unmasked in
GPTMIMR, and there is an event that causes the interrupt to be asserted, the corresponding bit is
set in this register. All bits are cleared by writing a 1 to the corresponding bit in GPTMICR.
GPTM Masked Interrupt Status (GPTMMIS)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x020
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
CBEMIS CBMMIS TBTOMIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
RTCMIS
RO
0
CAEMIS CAMMIS TATOMIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
CBEMIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureB Event Masked Interrupt
This is the CaptureB event interrupt status after masking.
9
CBMMIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureB Match Masked Interrupt
This is the CaptureB match interrupt status after masking.
8
TBTOMIS
RO
0
GPTM TimerB Time-Out Masked Interrupt
This is the TimerB time-out interrupt status after masking.
7:4
reserved
RO
0x0
3
RTCMIS
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
GPTM RTC Masked Interrupt
This is the RTC event interrupt status after masking.
2
CAEMIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureA Event Masked Interrupt
This is the CaptureA event interrupt status after masking.
1
CAMMIS
RO
0
GPTM CaptureA Match Masked Interrupt
This is the CaptureA match interrupt status after masking.
0
TATOMIS
RO
0
GPTM TimerA Time-Out Masked Interrupt
This is the TimerA time-out interrupt status after masking.
316
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 8: GPTM Interrupt Clear (GPTMICR), offset 0x024
This register is used to clear the status bits in the GPTMRIS and GPTMMIS registers. Writing a 1
to a bit clears the corresponding bit in the GPTMRIS and GPTMMIS registers.
GPTM Interrupt Clear (GPTMICR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x024
Type W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CBECINT CBMCINT
RO
0
RO
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
reserved
TBTOCINT
W1C
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RTCCINT CAECINT CAMCINT
RO
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
0
TATOCINT
W1C
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
CBECINT
W1C
0
GPTM CaptureB Event Interrupt Clear
The CBECINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
9
CBMCINT
W1C
0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
GPTM CaptureB Match Interrupt Clear
The CBMCINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
8
TBTOCINT
W1C
0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
GPTM TimerB Time-Out Interrupt Clear
The TBTOCINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
7:4
reserved
RO
0x0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
317
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
RTCCINT
W1C
0
Description
GPTM RTC Interrupt Clear
The RTCCINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
2
CAECINT
W1C
0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
GPTM CaptureA Event Interrupt Clear
The CAECINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
1
CAMCINT
W1C
0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
GPTM CaptureA Match Interrupt Clear
The CAMCINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
TATOCINT
W1C
0
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
GPTM TimerA Time-Out Interrupt Clear
The TATOCINT values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
The interrupt is unaffected.
1
The interrupt is cleared.
318
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: GPTM TimerA Interval Load (GPTMTAILR), offset 0x028
This register is used to load the starting count value into the timer. When GPTM is configured to
one of the 32-bit modes, GPTMTAILR appears as a 32-bit register (the upper 16-bits correspond
to the contents of the GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR) register). In 16-bit mode, the
upper 16 bits of this register read as 0s and have no effect on the state of GPTMTBILR.
GPTM TimerA Interval Load (GPTMTAILR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x028
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
TAILRH
Type
Reset
TAILRL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
TAILRH
R/W
0xFFFF
Description
GPTM TimerA Interval Load Register High
When configured for 32-bit mode via the GPTMCFG register, the GPTM
TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR) register loads this value on a
write. A read returns the current value of GPTMTBILR.
In 16-bit mode, this field reads as 0 and does not have an effect on the
state of GPTMTBILR.
15:0
TAILRL
R/W
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerA Interval Load Register Low
For both 16- and 32-bit modes, writing this field loads the counter for
TimerA. A read returns the current value of GPTMTAILR.
June 18, 2012
319
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 10: GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR), offset 0x02C
This register is used to load the starting count value into TimerB. When the GPTM is configured to
a 32-bit mode, GPTMTBILR returns the current value of TimerB and ignores writes.
GPTM TimerB Interval Load (GPTMTBILR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x02C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
TBILRL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
TBILRL
R/W
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerB Interval Load Register
When the GPTM is not configured as a 32-bit timer, a write to this field
updates GPTMTBILR. In 32-bit mode, writes are ignored, and reads
return the current value of GPTMTBILR.
320
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 11: GPTM TimerA Match (GPTMTAMATCHR), offset 0x030
This register is used in 32-bit Real-Time Clock mode and 16-bit PWM and Input Edge Count modes.
GPTM TimerA Match (GPTMTAMATCHR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x030
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
TAMRH
Type
Reset
TAMRL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
TAMRH
R/W
0xFFFF
Description
GPTM TimerA Match Register High
When configured for 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) mode via the
GPTMCFG register, this value is compared to the upper half of
GPTMTAR, to determine match events.
In 16-bit mode, this field reads as 0 and does not have an effect on the
state of GPTMTBMATCHR.
15:0
TAMRL
R/W
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerA Match Register Low
When configured for 32-bit Real-Time Clock (RTC) mode via the
GPTMCFG register, this value is compared to the lower half of
GPTMTAR, to determine match events.
When configured for PWM mode, this value along with GPTMTAILR,
determines the duty cycle of the output PWM signal.
When configured for Edge Count mode, this value along with
GPTMTAILR, determines how many edge events are counted. The total
number of edge events counted is equal to the value in GPTMTAILR
minus this value.
June 18, 2012
321
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 12: GPTM TimerB Match (GPTMTBMATCHR), offset 0x034
This register is used in 16-bit PWM and Input Edge Count modes.
GPTM TimerB Match (GPTMTBMATCHR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x034
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
TBMRL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
TBMRL
R/W
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerB Match Register Low
When configured for PWM mode, this value along with GPTMTBILR,
determines the duty cycle of the output PWM signal.
When configured for Edge Count mode, this value along with
GPTMTBILR, determines how many edge events are counted. The total
number of edge events counted is equal to the value in GPTMTBILR
minus this value.
322
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 13: GPTM TimerA Prescale (GPTMTAPR), offset 0x038
This register allows software to extend the range of the 16-bit timers when operating in one-shot or
periodic mode.
GPTM TimerA Prescale (GPTMTAPR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x038
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TAPSR
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
TAPSR
R/W
0x00
GPTM TimerA Prescale
The register loads this value on a write. A read returns the current value
of the register.
Refer to Table 8-4 on page 297 for more details and an example.
June 18, 2012
323
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 14: GPTM TimerB Prescale (GPTMTBPR), offset 0x03C
This register allows software to extend the range of the 16-bit timers when operating in one-shot or
periodic mode.
GPTM TimerB Prescale (GPTMTBPR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x03C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TBPSR
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
TBPSR
R/W
0x00
GPTM TimerB Prescale
The register loads this value on a write. A read returns the current value
of this register.
Refer to Table 8-4 on page 297 for more details and an example.
324
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 15: GPTM TimerA Prescale Match (GPTMTAPMR), offset 0x040
This register effectively extends the range of GPTMTAMATCHR to 24 bits when operating in 16-bit
one-shot or periodic mode.
GPTM TimerA Prescale Match (GPTMTAPMR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x040
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TAPSMR
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
TAPSMR
R/W
0x00
GPTM TimerA Prescale Match
This value is used alongside GPTMTAMATCHR to detect timer match
events while using a prescaler.
June 18, 2012
325
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 16: GPTM TimerB Prescale Match (GPTMTBPMR), offset 0x044
This register effectively extends the range of GPTMTBMATCHR to 24 bits when operating in 16-bit
one-shot or periodic mode.
GPTM TimerB Prescale Match (GPTMTBPMR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x044
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
TBPSMR
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
TBPSMR
R/W
0x00
GPTM TimerB Prescale Match
This value is used alongside GPTMTBMATCHR to detect timer match
events while using a prescaler.
326
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 17: GPTM TimerA (GPTMTAR), offset 0x048
This register shows the current value of the TimerA counter in all cases except for Input Edge Count
mode. When in this mode, this register contains the number of edges that have occurred.
GPTM TimerA (GPTMTAR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x048
Type RO, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
TARH
Type
Reset
TARL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
TARH
RO
0xFFFF
Description
GPTM TimerA Register High
If the GPTMCFG is in a 32-bit mode, TimerB value is read. If the
GPTMCFG is in a 16-bit mode, this is read as zero.
15:0
TARL
RO
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerA Register Low
A read returns the current value of the GPTM TimerA Count Register,
except in Input Edge-Count mode, when it returns the number of edges
that have occurred.
June 18, 2012
327
Texas Instruments-Production Data
General-Purpose Timers
Register 18: GPTM TimerB (GPTMTBR), offset 0x04C
This register shows the current value of the TimerB counter in all cases except for Input Edge Count
mode. When in this mode, this register contains the number of edges that have occurred.
GPTM TimerB (GPTMTBR)
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
Offset 0x04C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
TBRL
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
TBRL
RO
0xFFFF
GPTM TimerB
A read returns the current value of the GPTM TimerB Count Register,
except in Input Edge-Count mode, when it returns the number of edges
that have occurred.
328
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
9
Watchdog Timer
A watchdog timer can generate nonmaskable interrupts (NMIs) or a reset when a time-out value is
reached. The watchdog timer is used to regain control when a system has failed due to a software
error or due to the failure of an external device to respond in the expected way.
®
The Stellaris Watchdog Timer module has the following features:
■ 32-bit down counter with a programmable load register
■ Separate watchdog clock with an enable
■ Programmable interrupt generation logic with interrupt masking
■ Lock register protection from runaway software
■ Reset generation logic with an enable/disable
■ User-enabled stalling when the controller asserts the CPU Halt flag during debug
The Watchdog Timer can be configured to generate an interrupt to the controller on its first time-out,
and to generate a reset signal on its second time-out. Once the Watchdog Timer has been configured,
the lock register can be written to prevent the timer configuration from being inadvertently altered.
June 18, 2012
329
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
9.1
Block Diagram
Figure 9-1. WDT Module Block Diagram
WDTLOAD
Control / Clock /
Interrupt
Generation
WDTCTL
WDTICR
Interrupt
WDTRIS
32-Bit Down
Counter
WDTMIS
0x00000000
WDTLOCK
System Clock
WDTTEST
Comparator
WDTVALUE
Identification Registers
9.2
WDTPCellID0
WDTPeriphID0
WDTPeriphID4
WDTPCellID1
WDTPeriphID1
WDTPeriphID5
WDTPCellID2
WDTPeriphID2
WDTPeriphID6
WDTPCellID3
WDTPeriphID3
WDTPeriphID7
Functional Description
The Watchdog Timer module generates the first time-out signal when the 32-bit counter reaches
the zero state after being enabled; enabling the counter also enables the watchdog timer interrupt.
After the first time-out event, the 32-bit counter is re-loaded with the value of the Watchdog Timer
Load (WDTLOAD) register, and the timer resumes counting down from that value. Once the
Watchdog Timer has been configured, the Watchdog Timer Lock (WDTLOCK) register is written,
which prevents the timer configuration from being inadvertently altered by software.
If the timer counts down to its zero state again before the first time-out interrupt is cleared, and the
reset signal has been enabled (via the WatchdogResetEnable function), the Watchdog timer
asserts its reset signal to the system. If the interrupt is cleared before the 32-bit counter reaches its
second time-out, the 32-bit counter is loaded with the value in the WDTLOAD register, and counting
resumes from that value.
If WDTLOAD is written with a new value while the Watchdog Timer counter is counting, then the
counter is loaded with the new value and continues counting.
330
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Writing to WDTLOAD does not clear an active interrupt. An interrupt must be specifically cleared
by writing to the Watchdog Interrupt Clear (WDTICR) register.
The Watchdog module interrupt and reset generation can be enabled or disabled as required. When
the interrupt is re-enabled, the 32-bit counter is preloaded with the load register value and not its
last state.
9.3
Initialization and Configuration
To use the WDT, its peripheral clock must be enabled by setting the WDT bit in the RCGC0 register.
The Watchdog Timer is configured using the following sequence:
1. Load the WDTLOAD register with the desired timer load value.
2. If the Watchdog is configured to trigger system resets, set the RESEN bit in the WDTCTL register.
3. Set the INTEN bit in the WDTCTL register to enable the Watchdog and lock the control register.
If software requires that all of the watchdog registers are locked, the Watchdog Timer module can
be fully locked by writing any value to the WDTLOCK register. To unlock the Watchdog Timer, write
a value of 0x1ACC.E551.
9.4
Register Map
Table 9-1 on page 331 lists the Watchdog registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to
the register’s address, relative to the Watchdog Timer base address of 0x4000.0000.
Table 9-1. Watchdog Timer Register Map
Description
See
page
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
0x000
WDTLOAD
R/W
0xFFFF.FFFF
Watchdog Load
333
0x004
WDTVALUE
RO
0xFFFF.FFFF
Watchdog Value
334
0x008
WDTCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Control
335
0x00C
WDTICR
WO
-
Watchdog Interrupt Clear
336
0x010
WDTRIS
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Raw Interrupt Status
337
0x014
WDTMIS
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Masked Interrupt Status
338
0x418
WDTTEST
R/W
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Test
339
0xC00
WDTLOCK
R/W
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Lock
340
0xFD0
WDTPeriphID4
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 4
341
0xFD4
WDTPeriphID5
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 5
342
0xFD8
WDTPeriphID6
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 6
343
0xFDC
WDTPeriphID7
RO
0x0000.0000
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 7
344
0xFE0
WDTPeriphID0
RO
0x0000.0005
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 0
345
0xFE4
WDTPeriphID1
RO
0x0000.0018
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 1
346
0xFE8
WDTPeriphID2
RO
0x0000.0018
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 2
347
June 18, 2012
331
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Table 9-1. Watchdog Timer Register Map (continued)
Offset
Name
0xFEC
Reset
WDTPeriphID3
RO
0x0000.0001
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 3
348
0xFF0
WDTPCellID0
RO
0x0000.000D
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 0
349
0xFF4
WDTPCellID1
RO
0x0000.00F0
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 1
350
0xFF8
WDTPCellID2
RO
0x0000.0005
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 2
351
0xFFC
WDTPCellID3
RO
0x0000.00B1
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 3
352
9.5
Description
See
page
Type
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the WDT registers, in numerical order by address
offset.
332
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: Watchdog Load (WDTLOAD), offset 0x000
This register is the 32-bit interval value used by the 32-bit counter. When this register is written, the
value is immediately loaded and the counter restarts counting down from the new value. If the
WDTLOAD register is loaded with 0x0000.0000, an interrupt is immediately generated.
Watchdog Load (WDTLOAD)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
WDTLoad
Type
Reset
WDTLoad
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
WDTLoad
R/W
Reset
R/W
1
Description
0xFFFF.FFFF Watchdog Load Value
June 18, 2012
333
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 2: Watchdog Value (WDTVALUE), offset 0x004
This register contains the current count value of the timer.
Watchdog Value (WDTVALUE)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x004
Type RO, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
WDTValue
Type
Reset
WDTValue
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
31:0
WDTValue
RO
Reset
RO
1
Description
0xFFFF.FFFF Watchdog Value
Current value of the 32-bit down counter.
334
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: Watchdog Control (WDTCTL), offset 0x008
This register is the watchdog control register. The watchdog timer can be configured to generate a
reset signal (on second time-out) or an interrupt on time-out.
When the watchdog interrupt has been enabled, all subsequent writes to the control register are
ignored. The only mechanism that can re-enable writes is a hardware reset.
Watchdog Control (WDTCTL)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x008
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
1
0
RESEN
INTEN
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
RESEN
R/W
0
Watchdog Reset Enable
The RESEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
INTEN
R/W
0
0
Disabled.
1
Enable the Watchdog module reset output.
Watchdog Interrupt Enable
The INTEN values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Interrupt event disabled (once this bit is set, it can only be
cleared by a hardware reset).
1
Interrupt event enabled. Once enabled, all writes are ignored.
June 18, 2012
335
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 4: Watchdog Interrupt Clear (WDTICR), offset 0x00C
This register is the interrupt clear register. A write of any value to this register clears the Watchdog
interrupt and reloads the 32-bit counter from the WDTLOAD register. Value for a read or reset is
indeterminate.
Watchdog Interrupt Clear (WDTICR)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x00C
Type WO, reset 31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WO
-
WDTIntClr
Type
Reset
WDTIntClr
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
WDTIntClr
WO
-
WO
-
Description
Watchdog Interrupt Clear
336
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: Watchdog Raw Interrupt Status (WDTRIS), offset 0x010
This register is the raw interrupt status register. Watchdog interrupt events can be monitored via
this register if the controller interrupt is masked.
Watchdog Raw Interrupt Status (WDTRIS)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x010
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
WDTRIS
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:1
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
WDTRIS
RO
0
Watchdog Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of WDTINTR.
June 18, 2012
337
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 6: Watchdog Masked Interrupt Status (WDTMIS), offset 0x014
This register is the masked interrupt status register. The value of this register is the logical AND of
the raw interrupt bit and the Watchdog interrupt enable bit.
Watchdog Masked Interrupt Status (WDTMIS)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x014
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
WDTMIS
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:1
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
0
WDTMIS
RO
0
Watchdog Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state (after masking) of the WDTINTR
interrupt.
338
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 7: Watchdog Test (WDTTEST), offset 0x418
This register provides user-enabled stalling when the microcontroller asserts the CPU halt flag
during debug.
Watchdog Test (WDTTEST)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0x418
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
STALL
R/W
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:9
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
8
STALL
R/W
0
Watchdog Stall Enable
When set to 1, if the Stellaris microcontroller is stopped with a debugger,
the watchdog timer stops counting. Once the microcontroller is restarted,
the watchdog timer resumes counting.
7:0
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
339
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 8: Watchdog Lock (WDTLOCK), offset 0xC00
Writing 0x1ACC.E551 to the WDTLOCK register enables write access to all other registers. Writing
any other value to the WDTLOCK register re-enables the locked state for register writes to all the
other registers. Reading the WDTLOCK register returns the lock status rather than the 32-bit value
written. Therefore, when write accesses are disabled, reading the WDTLOCK register returns
0x0000.0001 (when locked; otherwise, the returned value is 0x0000.0000 (unlocked)).
Watchdog Lock (WDTLOCK)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xC00
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
WDTLock
Type
Reset
WDTLock
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:0
WDTLock
R/W
0x0000
R/W
0
Description
Watchdog Lock
A write of the value 0x1ACC.E551 unlocks the watchdog registers for
write access. A write of any other value reapplies the lock, preventing
any register updates.
A read of this register returns the following values:
Value
Description
0x0000.0001 Locked
0x0000.0000 Unlocked
340
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 4 (WDTPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 4 (WDTPeriphID4)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFD0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID4
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID4
RO
0x00
WDT Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
June 18, 2012
341
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 10: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 5 (WDTPeriphID5), offset
0xFD4
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 5 (WDTPeriphID5)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFD4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID5
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID5
RO
0x00
WDT Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
342
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 11: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 6 (WDTPeriphID6), offset
0xFD8
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 6 (WDTPeriphID6)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFD8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID6
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID6
RO
0x00
WDT Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
June 18, 2012
343
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 12: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 7 (WDTPeriphID7), offset
0xFDC
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 7 (WDTPeriphID7)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFDC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID7
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID7
RO
0x00
WDT Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
344
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 13: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 0 (WDTPeriphID0), offset
0xFE0
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 0 (WDTPeriphID0)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFE0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0005
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID0
RO
0x05
Watchdog Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
June 18, 2012
345
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 14: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 1 (WDTPeriphID1), offset
0xFE4
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 1 (WDTPeriphID1)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFE4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0018
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID1
RO
0x18
Watchdog Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
346
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 15: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 2 (WDTPeriphID2), offset
0xFE8
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 2 (WDTPeriphID2)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFE8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0018
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID2
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID2
RO
0x18
Watchdog Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
June 18, 2012
347
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 16: Watchdog Peripheral Identification 3 (WDTPeriphID3), offset
0xFEC
The WDTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog Peripheral Identification 3 (WDTPeriphID3)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFEC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
PID3
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID3
RO
0x01
Watchdog Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
348
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 17: Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 0 (WDTPCellID0), offset 0xFF0
The WDTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 0 (WDTPCellID0)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFF0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.000D
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID0
RO
0x0D
Watchdog PrimeCell ID Register[7:0]
June 18, 2012
349
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 18: Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 1 (WDTPCellID1), offset 0xFF4
The WDTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 1 (WDTPCellID1)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFF4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00F0
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID1
RO
0xF0
Watchdog PrimeCell ID Register[15:8]
350
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 19: Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 2 (WDTPCellID2), offset 0xFF8
The WDTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 2 (WDTPCellID2)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFF8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0005
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID2
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID2
RO
0x05
Watchdog PrimeCell ID Register[23:16]
June 18, 2012
351
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Watchdog Timer
Register 20: Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 3 (WDTPCellID3 ), offset 0xFFC
The WDTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
Watchdog PrimeCell Identification 3 (WDTPCellID3)
Base 0x4000.0000
Offset 0xFFC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00B1
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID3
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID3
RO
0xB1
Watchdog PrimeCell ID Register[31:24]
352
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
10
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters
(UARTs)
®
The Stellaris Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART) has the following features:
■ Fully programmable 16C550-type UART with IrDA support
■ Separate 16x8 transmit (TX) and receive (RX) FIFOs to reduce CPU interrupt service loading
■ Programmable baud-rate generator allowing speeds up to 3.125 Mbps
■ Programmable FIFO length, including 1-byte deep operation providing conventional
double-buffered interface
■ FIFO trigger levels of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, and 7/8
■ Standard asynchronous communication bits for start, stop, and parity
■ Line-break generation and detection
■ Fully programmable serial interface characteristics
– 5, 6, 7, or 8 data bits
– Even, odd, stick, or no-parity bit generation/detection
– 1 or 2 stop bit generation
■ IrDA serial-IR (SIR) encoder/decoder providing
– Programmable use of IrDA Serial Infrared (SIR) or UART input/output
– Support of IrDA SIR encoder/decoder functions for data rates up to 115.2 Kbps half-duplex
– Support of normal 3/16 and low-power (1.41-2.23 μs) bit durations
– Programmable internal clock generator enabling division of reference clock by 1 to 256 for
low-power mode bit duration
June 18, 2012
353
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
10.1
Block Diagram
Figure 10-1. UART Module Block Diagram
System Clock
Interrupt
Interrupt Control
UARTIFLS
UARTIM
UARTMIS
UARTRIS
UARTICR
Identification
Registers
UARTPCellID0
UARTPCellID1
UARTPCellID2
UARTPCellID3
UARTPeriphID0
UARTPeriphID1
UARTPeriphID2
UARTPeriphID3
UARTPeriphID4
UARTPeriphID5
UARTPeriphID6
UARTPeriphID7
10.2
TxFIFO
16 x 8
.
.
.
Baud Rate
Generator
UARTDR
Transmitter
(with SIR
Transmit
Encoder)
UnTx
UARTIBRD
UARTFBRD
Control/Status
RxFIFO
16 x 8
UARTRSR/ECR
UARTFR
UARTLCRH
UARTCTL
UARTILPR
.
.
.
Receiver
(with SIR
Receive
Decoder)
UnRx
Signal Description
Table 10-1 on page 354 and Table 10-2 on page 355 list the external signals of the UART module
and describe the function of each. The UART signals are alternate functions for some GPIO signals
and default to be GPIO signals at reset, with the exception of the U0Rx and U0Tx pins which default
to the UART function. The column in the table below titled "Pin Assignment" lists the possible GPIO
pin placements for these UART signals. The AFSEL bit in the GPIO Alternate Function Select
(GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) should be set to choose the UART function. For more information
on configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)” on page 245.
Table 10-1. UART Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
U0Rx
26
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
27
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
354
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 10-2. UART Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
U0Rx
L3
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
M3
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
10.3
Functional Description
Each Stellaris UART performs the functions of parallel-to-serial and serial-to-parallel conversions.
It is similar in functionality to a 16C550 UART, but is not register compatible.
The UART is configured for transmit and/or receive via the TXE and RXE bits of the UART Control
(UARTCTL) register (see page 373). Transmit and receive are both enabled out of reset. Before any
control registers are programmed, the UART must be disabled by clearing the UARTEN bit in
UARTCTL. If the UART is disabled during a TX or RX operation, the current transaction is completed
prior to the UART stopping.
The UART peripheral also includes a serial IR (SIR) encoder/decoder block that can be connected
to an infrared transceiver to implement an IrDA SIR physical layer. The SIR function is programmed
using the UARTCTL register.
10.3.1
Transmit/Receive Logic
The transmit logic performs parallel-to-serial conversion on the data read from the transmit FIFO.
The control logic outputs the serial bit stream beginning with a start bit, and followed by the data
bits (LSB first), parity bit, and the stop bits according to the programmed configuration in the control
registers. See Figure 10-2 on page 355 for details.
The receive logic performs serial-to-parallel conversion on the received bit stream after a valid start
pulse has been detected. Overrun, parity, frame error checking, and line-break detection are also
performed, and their status accompanies the data that is written to the receive FIFO.
Figure 10-2. UART Character Frame
UnTX
LSB
1
5-8 data bits
0
n
Parity bit
if enabled
Start
10.3.2
1-2
stop bits
MSB
Baud-Rate Generation
The baud-rate divisor is a 22-bit number consisting of a 16-bit integer and a 6-bit fractional part.
The number formed by these two values is used by the baud-rate generator to determine the bit
period. Having a fractional baud-rate divider allows the UART to generate all the standard baud
rates.
The 16-bit integer is loaded through the UART Integer Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTIBRD) register
(see page 369) and the 6-bit fractional part is loaded with the UART Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor
(UARTFBRD) register (see page 370). The baud-rate divisor (BRD) has the following relationship
to the system clock (where BRDI is the integer part of the BRD and BRDF is the fractional part,
separated by a decimal place.)
June 18, 2012
355
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
BRD = BRDI + BRDF = UARTSysClk / (16 * Baud Rate)
where UARTSysClk is the system clock connected to the UART.
The 6-bit fractional number (that is to be loaded into the DIVFRAC bit field in the UARTFBRD register)
can be calculated by taking the fractional part of the baud-rate divisor, multiplying it by 64, and
adding 0.5 to account for rounding errors:
UARTFBRD[DIVFRAC] = integer(BRDF * 64 + 0.5)
The UART generates an internal baud-rate reference clock at 16x the baud-rate (referred to as
Baud16). This reference clock is divided by 16 to generate the transmit clock, and is used for error
detection during receive operations.
Along with the UART Line Control, High Byte (UARTLCRH) register (see page 371), the UARTIBRD
and UARTFBRD registers form an internal 30-bit register. This internal register is only updated
when a write operation to UARTLCRH is performed, so any changes to the baud-rate divisor must
be followed by a write to the UARTLCRH register for the changes to take effect.
To update the baud-rate registers, there are four possible sequences:
■ UARTIBRD write, UARTFBRD write, and UARTLCRH write
■ UARTFBRD write, UARTIBRD write, and UARTLCRH write
■ UARTIBRD write and UARTLCRH write
■ UARTFBRD write and UARTLCRH write
10.3.3
Data Transmission
Data received or transmitted is stored in two 16-byte FIFOs, though the receive FIFO has an extra
four bits per character for status information. For transmission, data is written into the transmit FIFO.
If the UART is enabled, it causes a data frame to start transmitting with the parameters indicated
in the UARTLCRH register. Data continues to be transmitted until there is no data left in the transmit
FIFO. The BUSY bit in the UART Flag (UARTFR) register (see page 366) is asserted as soon as
data is written to the transmit FIFO (that is, if the FIFO is non-empty) and remains asserted while
data is being transmitted. The BUSY bit is negated only when the transmit FIFO is empty, and the
last character has been transmitted from the shift register, including the stop bits. The UART can
indicate that it is busy even though the UART may no longer be enabled.
When the receiver is idle (the UnRx is continuously 1) and the data input goes Low (a start bit has
been received), the receive counter begins running and data is sampled on the eighth cycle of
Baud16 (described in “Transmit/Receive Logic” on page 355).
The start bit is valid and recognized if UnRx is still low on the eighth cycle of Baud16, otherwise it
is ignored. After a valid start bit is detected, successive data bits are sampled on every 16th cycle
of Baud16 (that is, one bit period later) according to the programmed length of the data characters.
The parity bit is then checked if parity mode was enabled. Data length and parity are defined in the
UARTLCRH register.
Lastly, a valid stop bit is confirmed if UnRx is High, otherwise a framing error has occurred. When
a full word is received, the data is stored in the receive FIFO, with any error bits associated with
that word.
356
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
10.3.4
Serial IR (SIR)
The UART peripheral includes an IrDA serial-IR (SIR) encoder/decoder block. The IrDA SIR block
provides functionality that converts between an asynchronous UART data stream, and half-duplex
serial SIR interface. No analog processing is performed on-chip. The role of the SIR block is to
provide a digital encoded output and decoded input to the UART. The UART signal pins can be
connected to an infrared transceiver to implement an IrDA SIR physical layer link. The SIR block
has two modes of operation:
■ In normal IrDA mode, a zero logic level is transmitted as high pulse of 3/16th duration of the
selected baud rate bit period on the output pin, while logic one levels are transmitted as a static
LOW signal. These levels control the driver of an infrared transmitter, sending a pulse of light
for each zero. On the reception side, the incoming light pulses energize the photo transistor base
of the receiver, pulling its output LOW. This drives the UART input pin LOW.
■ In low-power IrDA mode, the width of the transmitted infrared pulse is set to three times the
period of the internally generated IrLPBaud16 signal (1.63 µs, assuming a nominal 1.8432 MHz
frequency) by changing the appropriate bit in the UARTCR register. See page 368 for more
information on IrDA low-power pulse-duration configuration.
Figure 10-3 on page 357 shows the UART transmit and receive signals, with and without IrDA
modulation.
Figure 10-3. IrDA Data Modulation
Data bits
Start
bit
UnTx
1
0
0
0
1
Stop
bit
0
0
1
1
1
UnTx with IrDA
3
16 Bit period
Bit period
UnRx with IrDA
UnRx
0
1
0
Start
1
0
0
1
1
Data bits
0
1
Stop
In both normal and low-power IrDA modes:
■ During transmission, the UART data bit is used as the base for encoding
■ During reception, the decoded bits are transferred to the UART receive logic
The IrDA SIR physical layer specifies a half-duplex communication link, with a minimum 10 ms delay
between transmission and reception. This delay must be generated by software because it is not
automatically supported by the UART. The delay is required because the infrared receiver electronics
might become biased, or even saturated from the optical power coupled from the adjacent transmitter
LED. This delay is known as latency, or receiver setup time.
If the application does not require the use of the UnRx signal, the GPIO pin that has the UnRx signal
as an alternate function must be configured as the UnRx signal and pulled High.
June 18, 2012
357
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
10.3.5
FIFO Operation
The UART has two 16-entry FIFOs; one for transmit and one for receive. Both FIFOs are accessed
via the UART Data (UARTDR) register (see page 362). Read operations of the UARTDR register
return a 12-bit value consisting of 8 data bits and 4 error flags while write operations place 8-bit data
in the transmit FIFO.
Out of reset, both FIFOs are disabled and act as 1-byte-deep holding registers. The FIFOs are
enabled by setting the FEN bit in UARTLCRH (page 371).
FIFO status can be monitored via the UART Flag (UARTFR) register (see page 366) and the UART
Receive Status (UARTRSR) register. Hardware monitors empty, full and overrun conditions. The
UARTFR register contains empty and full flags (TXFE, TXFF, RXFE, and RXFF bits) and the
UARTRSR register shows overrun status via the OE bit.
The trigger points at which the FIFOs generate interrupts is controlled via the UART Interrupt FIFO
Level Select (UARTIFLS) register (see page 375). Both FIFOs can be individually configured to
trigger interrupts at different levels. Available configurations include 1/8, ¼, ½, ¾, and 7/8. For
example, if the ¼ option is selected for the receive FIFO, the UART generates a receive interrupt
after 4 data bytes are received. Out of reset, both FIFOs are configured to trigger an interrupt at the
½ mark.
10.3.6
Interrupts
The UART can generate interrupts when the following conditions are observed:
■ Overrun Error
■ Break Error
■ Parity Error
■ Framing Error
■ Receive Timeout
■ Transmit (when condition defined in the TXIFLSEL bit in the UARTIFLS register is met)
■ Receive (when condition defined in the RXIFLSEL bit in the UARTIFLS register is met)
All of the interrupt events are ORed together before being sent to the interrupt controller, so the
UART can only generate a single interrupt request to the controller at any given time. Software can
service multiple interrupt events in a single interrupt service routine by reading the UART Masked
Interrupt Status (UARTMIS) register (see page 380).
The interrupt events that can trigger a controller-level interrupt are defined in the UART Interrupt
Mask (UARTIM ) register (see page 377) by setting the corresponding IM bit to 1. If interrupts are
not used, the raw interrupt status is always visible via the UART Raw Interrupt Status (UARTRIS)
register (see page 379).
Interrupts are always cleared (for both the UARTMIS and UARTRIS registers) by setting the
corresponding bit in the UART Interrupt Clear (UARTICR) register (see page 381).
The receive interrupt changes state when one of the following events occurs:
358
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ If the FIFOs are enabled and the receive FIFO reaches the programmed trigger level, the RXRIS
bit is set. The receive interrupt is cleared by reading data from the receive FIFO until it becomes
less than the trigger level, or by clearing the interrupt by writing a 1 to the RXIC bit.
■ If the FIFOs are disabled (have a depth of one location) and data is received thereby filling the
location, the RXRIS bit is set. The receive interrupt is cleared by performing a single read of the
receive FIFO, or by clearing the interrupt by writing a 1 to the RXIC bit.
The transmit interrupt changes state when one of the following events occurs:
■ If the FIFOs are enabled and the transmit FIFO reaches the programmed trigger level, the TXRIS
bit is set. The transmit interrupt is cleared by writing data to the transmit FIFO until it becomes
greater than the trigger level, or by clearing the interrupt by writing a 1 to the TXIC bit.
■ If the FIFOs are disabled (have a depth of one location) and there is no data present in the
transmitters single location, the TXRIS bit is set. It is cleared by performing a single write to the
transmit FIFO, or by clearing the interrupt by writing a 1 to the TXIC bit.
10.3.7
Loopback Operation
The UART can be placed into an internal loopback mode for diagnostic or debug work. This is
accomplished by setting the LBE bit in the UARTCTL register (see page 373). In loopback mode,
data transmitted on UnTx is received on the UnRx input.
10.3.8
IrDA SIR block
The IrDA SIR block contains an IrDA serial IR (SIR) protocol encoder/decoder. When enabled, the
SIR block uses the UnTx and UnRx pins for the SIR protocol, which should be connected to an IR
transceiver.
The SIR block can receive and transmit, but it is only half-duplex so it cannot do both at the same
time. Transmission must be stopped before data can be received. The IrDA SIR physical layer
specifies a minimum 10-ms delay between transmission and reception.
10.4
Initialization and Configuration
To use the UART, the peripheral clock must be enabled by setting the UART0 bit in the RCGC1
register.
This section discusses the steps that are required to use a UART module. For this example, the
UART clock is assumed to be 20 MHz and the desired UART configuration is:
■ 115200 baud rate
■ Data length of 8 bits
■ One stop bit
■ No parity
■ FIFOs disabled
■ No interrupts
June 18, 2012
359
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
The first thing to consider when programming the UART is the baud-rate divisor (BRD), since the
UARTIBRD and UARTFBRD registers must be written before the UARTLCRH register. Using the
equation described in “Baud-Rate Generation” on page 355, the BRD can be calculated:
BRD = 20,000,000 / (16 * 115,200) = 10.8507
which means that the DIVINT field of the UARTIBRD register (see page 369) should be set to 10.
The value to be loaded into the UARTFBRD register (see page 370) is calculated by the equation:
UARTFBRD[DIVFRAC] = integer(0.8507 * 64 + 0.5) = 54
With the BRD values in hand, the UART configuration is written to the module in the following order:
1. Disable the UART by clearing the UARTEN bit in the UARTCTL register.
2. Write the integer portion of the BRD to the UARTIBRD register.
3. Write the fractional portion of the BRD to the UARTFBRD register.
4. Write the desired serial parameters to the UARTLCRH register (in this case, a value of
0x0000.0060).
5. Enable the UART by setting the UARTEN bit in the UARTCTL register.
10.5
Register Map
Table 10-3 on page 360 lists the UART registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to the
register’s address, relative to that UART’s base address:
■ UART0: 0x4000.C000
Note that the UART module clock must be enabled before the registers can be programmed (see
page 204). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the UART module clock is enabled before
any UART module registers are accessed.
Note:
The UART must be disabled (see the UARTEN bit in the UARTCTL register on page 373)
before any of the control registers are reprogrammed. When the UART is disabled during
a TX or RX operation, the current transaction is completed prior to the UART stopping.
Table 10-3. UART Register Map
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
Description
See
page
0x000
UARTDR
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Data
362
0x004
UARTRSR/UARTECR
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Receive Status/Error Clear
364
0x018
UARTFR
RO
0x0000.0090
UART Flag
366
0x020
UARTILPR
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART IrDA Low-Power Register
368
0x024
UARTIBRD
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Integer Baud-Rate Divisor
369
0x028
UARTFBRD
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor
370
0x02C
UARTLCRH
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Line Control
371
0x030
UARTCTL
R/W
0x0000.0300
UART Control
373
360
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 10-3. UART Register Map (continued)
Name
Type
Reset
0x034
UARTIFLS
R/W
0x0000.0012
UART Interrupt FIFO Level Select
375
0x038
UARTIM
R/W
0x0000.0000
UART Interrupt Mask
377
0x03C
UARTRIS
RO
0x0000.000F
UART Raw Interrupt Status
379
0x040
UARTMIS
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Masked Interrupt Status
380
0x044
UARTICR
W1C
0x0000.0000
UART Interrupt Clear
381
0xFD0
UARTPeriphID4
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Peripheral Identification 4
383
0xFD4
UARTPeriphID5
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Peripheral Identification 5
384
0xFD8
UARTPeriphID6
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Peripheral Identification 6
385
0xFDC
UARTPeriphID7
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Peripheral Identification 7
386
0xFE0
UARTPeriphID0
RO
0x0000.0011
UART Peripheral Identification 0
387
0xFE4
UARTPeriphID1
RO
0x0000.0000
UART Peripheral Identification 1
388
0xFE8
UARTPeriphID2
RO
0x0000.0018
UART Peripheral Identification 2
389
0xFEC
UARTPeriphID3
RO
0x0000.0001
UART Peripheral Identification 3
390
0xFF0
UARTPCellID0
RO
0x0000.000D
UART PrimeCell Identification 0
391
0xFF4
UARTPCellID1
RO
0x0000.00F0
UART PrimeCell Identification 1
392
0xFF8
UARTPCellID2
RO
0x0000.0005
UART PrimeCell Identification 2
393
0xFFC
UARTPCellID3
RO
0x0000.00B1
UART PrimeCell Identification 3
394
10.6
Description
See
page
Offset
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the UART registers, in numerical order by address
offset.
June 18, 2012
361
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 1: UART Data (UARTDR), offset 0x000
Important: This register is read-sensitive. See the register description for details.
This register is the data register (the interface to the FIFOs).
When FIFOs are enabled, data written to this location is pushed onto the transmit FIFO. If FIFOs
are disabled, data is stored in the transmitter holding register (the bottom word of the transmit FIFO).
A write to this register initiates a transmission from the UART.
For received data, if the FIFO is enabled, the data byte and the 4-bit status (break, frame, parity,
and overrun) is pushed onto the 12-bit wide receive FIFO. If FIFOs are disabled, the data byte and
status are stored in the receiving holding register (the bottom word of the receive FIFO). The received
data can be retrieved by reading this register.
UART Data (UARTDR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
OE
BE
PE
FE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
DATA
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:12
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
11
OE
RO
0
UART Overrun Error
The OE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
10
BE
RO
0
0
There has been no data loss due to a FIFO overrun.
1
New data was received when the FIFO was full, resulting in
data loss.
UART Break Error
This bit is set to 1 when a break condition is detected, indicating that
the receive data input was held Low for longer than a full-word
transmission time (defined as start, data, parity, and stop bits).
In FIFO mode, this error is associated with the character at the top of
the FIFO. When a break occurs, only one 0 character is loaded into the
FIFO. The next character is only enabled after the received data input
goes to a 1 (marking state) and the next valid start bit is received.
362
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
9
PE
RO
0
Description
UART Parity Error
This bit is set to 1 when the parity of the received data character does
not match the parity defined by bits 2 and 7 of the UARTLCRH register.
In FIFO mode, this error is associated with the character at the top of
the FIFO.
8
FE
RO
0
UART Framing Error
This bit is set to 1 when the received character does not have a valid
stop bit (a valid stop bit is 1).
7:0
DATA
R/W
0
Data Transmitted or Received
When written, the data that is to be transmitted via the UART. When
read, the data that was received by the UART.
June 18, 2012
363
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 2: UART Receive Status/Error Clear (UARTRSR/UARTECR), offset
0x004
The UARTRSR/UARTECR register is the receive status register/error clear register.
In addition to the UARTDR register, receive status can also be read from the UARTRSR register.
If the status is read from this register, then the status information corresponds to the entry read from
UARTDR prior to reading UARTRSR. The status information for overrun is set immediately when
an overrun condition occurs.
The UARTRSR register cannot be written.
A write of any value to the UARTECR register clears the framing, parity, break, and overrun errors.
All the bits are cleared to 0 on reset.
Reads
UART Receive Status/Error Clear (UARTRSR/UARTECR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x004
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
OE
BE
PE
FE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
OE
RO
0
UART Overrun Error
When this bit is set to 1, data is received and the FIFO is already full.
This bit is cleared to 0 by a write to UARTECR.
The FIFO contents remain valid since no further data is written when
the FIFO is full, only the contents of the shift register are overwritten.
The CPU must now read the data in order to empty the FIFO.
2
BE
RO
0
UART Break Error
This bit is set to 1 when a break condition is detected, indicating that
the received data input was held Low for longer than a full-word
transmission time (defined as start, data, parity, and stop bits).
This bit is cleared to 0 by a write to UARTECR.
In FIFO mode, this error is associated with the character at the top of
the FIFO. When a break occurs, only one 0 character is loaded into the
FIFO. The next character is only enabled after the receive data input
goes to a 1 (marking state) and the next valid start bit is received.
364
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
PE
RO
0
Description
UART Parity Error
This bit is set to 1 when the parity of the received data character does
not match the parity defined by bits 2 and 7 of the UARTLCRH register.
This bit is cleared to 0 by a write to UARTECR.
0
FE
RO
0
UART Framing Error
This bit is set to 1 when the received character does not have a valid
stop bit (a valid stop bit is 1).
This bit is cleared to 0 by a write to UARTECR.
In FIFO mode, this error is associated with the character at the top of
the FIFO.
Writes
UART Receive Status/Error Clear (UARTRSR/UARTECR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x004
Type WO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
WO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
DATA
WO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
WO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
DATA
WO
0
Error Clear
A write to this register of any data clears the framing, parity, break, and
overrun flags.
June 18, 2012
365
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 3: UART Flag (UARTFR), offset 0x018
The UARTFR register is the flag register. After reset, the TXFF, RXFF, and BUSY bits are 0, and
TXFE and RXFE bits are 1.
UART Flag (UARTFR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x018
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0090
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TXFE
RXFF
TXFF
RXFE
BUSY
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
TXFE
RO
1
UART Transmit FIFO Empty
The meaning of this bit depends on the state of the FEN bit in the
UARTLCRH register.
If the FIFO is disabled (FEN is 0), this bit is set when the transmit holding
register is empty.
If the FIFO is enabled (FEN is 1), this bit is set when the transmit FIFO
is empty.
6
RXFF
RO
0
UART Receive FIFO Full
The meaning of this bit depends on the state of the FEN bit in the
UARTLCRH register.
If the FIFO is disabled, this bit is set when the receive holding register
is full.
If the FIFO is enabled, this bit is set when the receive FIFO is full.
5
TXFF
RO
0
UART Transmit FIFO Full
The meaning of this bit depends on the state of the FEN bit in the
UARTLCRH register.
If the FIFO is disabled, this bit is set when the transmit holding register
is full.
If the FIFO is enabled, this bit is set when the transmit FIFO is full.
4
RXFE
RO
1
UART Receive FIFO Empty
The meaning of this bit depends on the state of the FEN bit in the
UARTLCRH register.
If the FIFO is disabled, this bit is set when the receive holding register
is empty.
If the FIFO is enabled, this bit is set when the receive FIFO is empty.
366
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
3
BUSY
RO
0
UART Busy
When this bit is 1, the UART is busy transmitting data. This bit remains
set until the complete byte, including all stop bits, has been sent from
the shift register.
This bit is set as soon as the transmit FIFO becomes non-empty
(regardless of whether UART is enabled).
2:0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
367
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 4: UART IrDA Low-Power Register (UARTILPR), offset 0x020
The UARTILPR register is an 8-bit read/write register that stores the low-power counter divisor
value used to derive the low-power SIR pulse width clock by dividing down the system clock (SysClk).
All the bits are cleared to 0 when reset.
The internal IrLPBaud16 clock is generated by dividing down SysClk according to the low-power
divisor value written to UARTILPR. The duration of SIR pulses generated when low-power mode
is enabled is three times the period of the IrLPBaud16 clock. The low-power divisor value is
calculated as follows:
ILPDVSR = SysClk / FIrLPBaud16
where FIrLPBaud16 is nominally 1.8432 MHz.
You must choose the divisor so that 1.42 MHz < FIrLPBaud16 < 2.12 MHz, which results in a low-power
pulse duration of 1.41–2.11 μs (three times the period of IrLPBaud16). The minimum frequency
of IrLPBaud16 ensures that pulses less than one period of IrLPBaud16 are rejected, but that
pulses greater than 1.4 μs are accepted as valid pulses.
Note:
Zero is an illegal value. Programming a zero value results in no IrLPBaud16 pulses being
generated.
UART IrDA Low-Power Register (UARTILPR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x020
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
ILPDVSR
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0
7:0
ILPDVSR
R/W
0x00
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
IrDA Low-Power Divisor
This is an 8-bit low-power divisor value.
368
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: UART Integer Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTIBRD), offset 0x024
The UARTIBRD register is the integer part of the baud-rate divisor value. All the bits are cleared
on reset. The minimum possible divide ratio is 1 (when UARTIBRD=0), in which case the UARTFBRD
register is ignored. When changing the UARTIBRD register, the new value does not take effect until
transmission/reception of the current character is complete. Any changes to the baud-rate divisor
must be followed by a write to the UARTLCRH register. See “Baud-Rate Generation” on page 355
for configuration details.
UART Integer Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTIBRD)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x024
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
DIVINT
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0
15:0
DIVINT
R/W
0x0000
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Integer Baud-Rate Divisor
June 18, 2012
369
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 6: UART Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTFBRD), offset 0x028
The UARTFBRD register is the fractional part of the baud-rate divisor value. All the bits are cleared
on reset. When changing the UARTFBRD register, the new value does not take effect until
transmission/reception of the current character is complete. Any changes to the baud-rate divisor
must be followed by a write to the UARTLCRH register. See “Baud-Rate Generation” on page 355
for configuration details.
UART Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor (UARTFBRD)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x028
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
DIVFRAC
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:6
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:0
DIVFRAC
R/W
0x000
Fractional Baud-Rate Divisor
370
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 7: UART Line Control (UARTLCRH), offset 0x02C
The UARTLCRH register is the line control register. Serial parameters such as data length, parity,
and stop bit selection are implemented in this register.
When updating the baud-rate divisor (UARTIBRD and/or UARTIFRD), the UARTLCRH register
must also be written. The write strobe for the baud-rate divisor registers is tied to the UARTLCRH
register.
UART Line Control (UARTLCRH)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x02C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
SPS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
5
WLEN
R/W
0
R/W
0
4
3
2
1
0
FEN
STP2
EPS
PEN
BRK
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7
SPS
R/W
0
UART Stick Parity Select
When bits 1, 2, and 7 of UARTLCRH are set, the parity bit is transmitted
and checked as a 0. When bits 1 and 7 are set and 2 is cleared, the
parity bit is transmitted and checked as a 1.
When this bit is cleared, stick parity is disabled.
6:5
WLEN
R/W
0
UART Word Length
The bits indicate the number of data bits transmitted or received in a
frame as follows:
Value Description
0x3 8 bits
0x2 7 bits
0x1 6 bits
0x0 5 bits (default)
4
FEN
R/W
0
UART Enable FIFOs
If this bit is set to 1, transmit and receive FIFO buffers are enabled (FIFO
mode).
When cleared to 0, FIFOs are disabled (Character mode). The FIFOs
become 1-byte-deep holding registers.
3
STP2
R/W
0
UART Two Stop Bits Select
If this bit is set to 1, two stop bits are transmitted at the end of a frame.
The receive logic does not check for two stop bits being received.
June 18, 2012
371
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2
EPS
R/W
0
Description
UART Even Parity Select
If this bit is set to 1, even parity generation and checking is performed
during transmission and reception, which checks for an even number
of 1s in data and parity bits.
When cleared to 0, then odd parity is performed, which checks for an
odd number of 1s.
This bit has no effect when parity is disabled by the PEN bit.
1
PEN
R/W
0
UART Parity Enable
If this bit is set to 1, parity checking and generation is enabled; otherwise,
parity is disabled and no parity bit is added to the data frame.
0
BRK
R/W
0
UART Send Break
If this bit is set to 1, a Low level is continually output on the UnTX output,
after completing transmission of the current character. For the proper
execution of the break command, the software must set this bit for at
least two frames (character periods). For normal use, this bit must be
cleared to 0.
372
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 8: UART Control (UARTCTL), offset 0x030
The UARTCTL register is the control register. All the bits are cleared on reset except for the
Transmit Enable (TXE) and Receive Enable (RXE) bits, which are set to 1.
To enable the UART module, the UARTEN bit must be set to 1. If software requires a configuration
change in the module, the UARTEN bit must be cleared before the configuration changes are written.
If the UART is disabled during a transmit or receive operation, the current transaction is completed
prior to the UART stopping.
Note:
The UARTCTL register should not be changed while the UART is enabled or else the results
are unpredictable. The following sequence is recommended for making changes to the
UARTCTL register.
1. Disable the UART.
2. Wait for the end of transmission or reception of the current character.
3. Flush the transmit FIFO by disabling bit 4 (FEN) in the line control register (UARTLCRH).
4. Reprogram the control register.
5. Enable the UART.
UART Control (UARTCTL)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x030
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0300
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RXE
TXE
LBE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
0
SIRLP
SIREN
UARTEN
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:10
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
9
RXE
R/W
1
UART Receive Enable
If this bit is set to 1, the receive section of the UART is enabled. When
the UART is disabled in the middle of a receive, it completes the current
character before stopping.
Note:
8
TXE
R/W
1
To enable reception, the UARTEN bit must also be set.
UART Transmit Enable
If this bit is set to 1, the transmit section of the UART is enabled. When
the UART is disabled in the middle of a transmission, it completes the
current character before stopping.
Note:
To enable transmission, the UARTEN bit must also be set.
June 18, 2012
373
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
7
LBE
R/W
0
Description
UART Loop Back Enable
If this bit is set to 1, the UnTX path is fed through the UnRX path.
6:3
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
2
SIRLP
R/W
0
UART SIR Low Power Mode
This bit selects the IrDA encoding mode. If this bit is cleared to 0,
low-level bits are transmitted as an active High pulse with a width of
3/16th of the bit period. If this bit is set to 1, low-level bits are transmitted
with a pulse width which is 3 times the period of the IrLPBaud16 input
signal, regardless of the selected bit rate. Setting this bit uses less power,
but might reduce transmission distances. See page 368 for more
information.
1
SIREN
R/W
0
UART SIR Enable
If this bit is set to 1, the IrDA SIR block is enabled, and the UART will
transmit and receive data using SIR protocol.
0
UARTEN
R/W
0
UART Enable
If this bit is set to 1, the UART is enabled. When the UART is disabled
in the middle of transmission or reception, it completes the current
character before stopping.
374
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 9: UART Interrupt FIFO Level Select (UARTIFLS), offset 0x034
The UARTIFLS register is the interrupt FIFO level select register. You can use this register to define
the FIFO level at which the TXRIS and RXRIS bits in the UARTRIS register are triggered.
The interrupts are generated based on a transition through a level rather than being based on the
level. That is, the interrupts are generated when the fill level progresses through the trigger level.
For example, if the receive trigger level is set to the half-way mark, the interrupt is triggered as the
module is receiving the 9th character.
Out of reset, the TXIFLSEL and RXIFLSEL bits are configured so that the FIFOs trigger an interrupt
at the half-way mark.
UART Interrupt FIFO Level Select (UARTIFLS)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x034
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0012
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RXIFLSEL
R/W
1
TXIFLSEL
R/W
1
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:6
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:3
RXIFLSEL
R/W
0x2
UART Receive Interrupt FIFO Level Select
The trigger points for the receive interrupt are as follows:
Value
Description
0x0
RX FIFO ≥ ⅛ full
0x1
RX FIFO ≥ ¼ full
0x2
RX FIFO ≥ ½ full (default)
0x3
RX FIFO ≥ ¾ full
0x4
RX FIFO ≥ ⅞ full
0x5-0x7 Reserved
June 18, 2012
375
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2:0
TXIFLSEL
R/W
0x2
Description
UART Transmit Interrupt FIFO Level Select
The trigger points for the transmit interrupt are as follows:
Value
Description
0x0
TX FIFO ≤ ⅞ empty
0x1
TX FIFO ≤ ¾ empty
0x2
TX FIFO ≤ ½ empty (default)
0x3
TX FIFO ≤ ¼ empty
0x4
TX FIFO ≤ ⅛ empty
0x5-0x7 Reserved
376
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 10: UART Interrupt Mask (UARTIM), offset 0x038
The UARTIM register is the interrupt mask set/clear register.
On a read, this register gives the current value of the mask on the relevant interrupt. Writing a 1 to
a bit allows the corresponding raw interrupt signal to be routed to the interrupt controller. Writing a
0 prevents the raw interrupt signal from being sent to the interrupt controller.
UART Interrupt Mask (UARTIM)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x038
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
13
12
11
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
OEIM
BEIM
PEIM
FEIM
RTIM
TXIM
RXIM
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
OEIM
R/W
0
UART Overrun Error Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the OEIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the OEIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
9
BEIM
R/W
0
UART Break Error Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the BEIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the BEIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
8
PEIM
R/W
0
UART Parity Error Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the PEIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the PEIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
7
FEIM
R/W
0
UART Framing Error Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the FEIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the FEIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
6
RTIM
R/W
0
UART Receive Time-Out Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the RTIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the RTIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
5
TXIM
R/W
0
UART Transmit Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the TXIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the TXIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
4
RXIM
R/W
0
UART Receive Interrupt Mask
On a read, the current mask for the RXIM interrupt is returned.
Setting this bit to 1 promotes the RXIM interrupt to the interrupt controller.
June 18, 2012
377
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
3:0
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
378
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 11: UART Raw Interrupt Status (UARTRIS), offset 0x03C
The UARTRIS register is the raw interrupt status register. On a read, this register gives the current
raw status value of the corresponding interrupt. A write has no effect.
UART Raw Interrupt Status (UARTRIS)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x03C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.000F
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
OERIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BERIS
PERIS
FERIS
RTRIS
TXRIS
RXRIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
OERIS
RO
0
UART Overrun Error Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
9
BERIS
RO
0
UART Break Error Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
8
PERIS
RO
0
UART Parity Error Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
7
FERIS
RO
0
UART Framing Error Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
6
RTRIS
RO
0
UART Receive Time-Out Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
5
TXRIS
RO
0
UART Transmit Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
4
RXRIS
RO
0
UART Receive Raw Interrupt Status
Gives the raw interrupt state (prior to masking) of this interrupt.
3:0
reserved
RO
0xF
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
379
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 12: UART Masked Interrupt Status (UARTMIS), offset 0x040
The UARTMIS register is the masked interrupt status register. On a read, this register gives the
current masked status value of the corresponding interrupt. A write has no effect.
UART Masked Interrupt Status (UARTMIS)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x040
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
OEMIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BEMIS
PEMIS
FEMIS
RTMIS
TXMIS
RXMIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
OEMIS
RO
0
UART Overrun Error Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
9
BEMIS
RO
0
UART Break Error Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
8
PEMIS
RO
0
UART Parity Error Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
7
FEMIS
RO
0
UART Framing Error Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
6
RTMIS
RO
0
UART Receive Time-Out Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
5
TXMIS
RO
0
UART Transmit Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
4
RXMIS
RO
0
UART Receive Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt.
3:0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
380
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 13: UART Interrupt Clear (UARTICR), offset 0x044
The UARTICR register is the interrupt clear register. On a write of 1, the corresponding interrupt
(both raw interrupt and masked interrupt, if enabled) is cleared. A write of 0 has no effect.
UART Interrupt Clear (UARTICR)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0x044
Type W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
OEIC
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
W1C
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BEIC
PEIC
FEIC
RTIC
TXIC
RXIC
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10
OEIC
W1C
0
Overrun Error Interrupt Clear
The OEIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
9
BEIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Break Error Interrupt Clear
The BEIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
8
PEIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Parity Error Interrupt Clear
The PEIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
7
FEIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Framing Error Interrupt Clear
The FEIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
June 18, 2012
381
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
6
RTIC
W1C
0
Description
Receive Time-Out Interrupt Clear
The RTIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
5
TXIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Transmit Interrupt Clear
The TXIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
4
RXIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Receive Interrupt Clear
The RXIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
3:0
reserved
RO
0x00
0
No effect on the interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
382
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 14: UART Peripheral Identification 4 (UARTPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 4 (UARTPeriphID4)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFD0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID4
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID4
RO
0x0000
UART Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
383
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 15: UART Peripheral Identification 5 (UARTPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 5 (UARTPeriphID5)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFD4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID5
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID5
RO
0x0000
UART Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
384
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 16: UART Peripheral Identification 6 (UARTPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 6 (UARTPeriphID6)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFD8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID6
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID6
RO
0x0000
UART Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
385
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 17: UART Peripheral Identification 7 (UARTPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 7 (UARTPeriphID7)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFDC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID7
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0
7:0
PID7
RO
0x0000
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
UART Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
386
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: UART Peripheral Identification 0 (UARTPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 0 (UARTPeriphID0)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFE0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0011
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID0
RO
0x11
UART Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
387
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 19: UART Peripheral Identification 1 (UARTPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 1 (UARTPeriphID1)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFE4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID1
RO
0x00
UART Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
388
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 20: UART Peripheral Identification 2 (UARTPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 2 (UARTPeriphID2)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFE8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0018
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID2
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID2
RO
0x18
UART Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
389
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 21: UART Peripheral Identification 3 (UARTPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC
The UARTPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the
reset values.
UART Peripheral Identification 3 (UARTPeriphID3)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFEC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID3
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID3
RO
0x01
UART Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
390
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 22: UART PrimeCell Identification 0 (UARTPCellID0), offset 0xFF0
The UARTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the reset
values.
UART PrimeCell Identification 0 (UARTPCellID0)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFF0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.000D
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID0
RO
0x0D
UART PrimeCell ID Register[7:0]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
391
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 23: UART PrimeCell Identification 1 (UARTPCellID1), offset 0xFF4
The UARTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the reset
values.
UART PrimeCell Identification 1 (UARTPCellID1)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFF4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00F0
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID1
RO
0xF0
UART PrimeCell ID Register[15:8]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
392
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 24: UART PrimeCell Identification 2 (UARTPCellID2), offset 0xFF8
The UARTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the reset
values.
UART PrimeCell Identification 2 (UARTPCellID2)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFF8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0005
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID2
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID2
RO
0x05
UART PrimeCell ID Register[23:16]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
393
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
Register 25: UART PrimeCell Identification 3 (UARTPCellID3), offset 0xFFC
The UARTPCellIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the registers determine the reset
values.
UART PrimeCell Identification 3 (UARTPCellID3)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
Offset 0xFFC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00B1
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID3
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID3
RO
0xB1
UART PrimeCell ID Register[31:24]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
394
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
11
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
®
The Stellaris Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) is a master or slave interface for synchronous
serial communication with peripheral devices that have either Freescale SPI, MICROWIRE, or Texas
Instruments synchronous serial interfaces.
The Stellaris SSI module has the following features:
■ Master or slave operation
■ Programmable clock bit rate and prescale
■ Separate transmit and receive FIFOs, 16 bits wide, 8 locations deep
■ Programmable interface operation for Freescale SPI, MICROWIRE, or Texas Instruments
synchronous serial interfaces
■ Programmable data frame size from 4 to 16 bits
■ Internal loopback test mode for diagnostic/debug testing
11.1
Block Diagram
Figure 11-1. SSI Module Block Diagram
Interrupt
Interrupt Control
SSIIM
SSIMIS
Control/ Status
SSIRIS
SSIICR
SSICR0
SSICR1
TxFIFO
8 x16
.
.
.
SSITx
SSISR
SSIRx
SSIDR
RxFIFO
8 x16
System Clock
SSIPCellID0
Identification
Registers
SSIPeriphID0 SSIPeriphID 4
SSIPCellID1
SSIPeriphID 1 SSIPeriphID 5
SSIPCellID2
SSIPeriphID 2 SSIPeriphID 6
SSIPCellID3
SSIPeriphID 3 SSIPeriphID7
11.2
Clock
Prescaler
Transmit /
Receive
Logic
SSIClk
SSIFss
.
.
.
SSICPSR
Signal Description
Table 11-1 on page 396 and Table 11-2 on page 396 list the external signals of the SSI module and
describe the function of each. The SSI signals are alternate functions for some GPIO signals and
June 18, 2012
395
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
default to be GPIO signals at reset., with the exception of the SSI0Clk, SSI0Fss, SSI0Rx, and
SSI0Tx pins which default to the SSI function. The column in the table below titled "Pin Assignment"
lists the possible GPIO pin placements for the SSI signals. The AFSEL bit in the GPIO Alternate
Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) should be set to choose the SSI function. For
more information on configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)” on page 245.
Table 11-1. SSI Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
SSI0Clk
28
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
29
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
30
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
31
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 11-2. SSI Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
SSI0Clk
M4
I/O
TTL
Description
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
L4
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
L5
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
M5
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
11.3
Functional Description
The SSI performs serial-to-parallel conversion on data received from a peripheral device. The CPU
accesses data, control, and status information. The transmit and receive paths are buffered with
internal FIFO memories allowing up to eight 16-bit values to be stored independently in both transmit
and receive modes.
11.3.1
Bit Rate Generation
The SSI includes a programmable bit rate clock divider and prescaler to generate the serial output
clock. Bit rates are supported to 2 MHz and higher, although maximum bit rate is determined by
peripheral devices.
The serial bit rate is derived by dividing down the input clock (FSysClk). The clock is first divided
by an even prescale value CPSDVSR from 2 to 254, which is programmed in the SSI Clock Prescale
(SSICPSR) register (see page 415). The clock is further divided by a value from 1 to 256, which is
1 + SCR, where SCR is the value programmed in the SSI Control0 (SSICR0) register (see page 408).
The frequency of the output clock SSIClk is defined by:
SSIClk = FSysClk / (CPSDVSR * (1 + SCR))
Note:
For master mode, the system clock must be at least two times faster than the SSIClk. For
slave mode, the system clock must be at least 12 times faster than the SSIClk.
See “Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)” on page 526 to view SSI timing parameters.
396
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
11.3.2
FIFO Operation
11.3.2.1
Transmit FIFO
The common transmit FIFO is a 16-bit wide, 8-locations deep, first-in, first-out memory buffer. The
CPU writes data to the FIFO by writing the SSI Data (SSIDR) register (see page 412), and data is
stored in the FIFO until it is read out by the transmission logic.
When configured as a master or a slave, parallel data is written into the transmit FIFO prior to serial
conversion and transmission to the attached slave or master, respectively, through the SSITx pin.
In slave mode, the SSI transmits data each time the master initiates a transaction. If the transmit
FIFO is empty and the master initiates, the slave transmits the 8th most recent value in the transmit
FIFO. If less than 8 values have been written to the transmit FIFO since the SSI module clock was
enabled using the SSI bit in the RGCG1 register, then 0 is transmitted. Care should be taken to
ensure that valid data is in the FIFO as needed. The SSI can be configured to generate an interrupt
or a µDMA request when the FIFO is empty.
11.3.2.2
Receive FIFO
The common receive FIFO is a 16-bit wide, 8-locations deep, first-in, first-out memory buffer.
Received data from the serial interface is stored in the buffer until read out by the CPU, which
accesses the read FIFO by reading the SSIDR register.
When configured as a master or slave, serial data received through the SSIRx pin is registered
prior to parallel loading into the attached slave or master receive FIFO, respectively.
11.3.3
Interrupts
The SSI can generate interrupts when the following conditions are observed:
■ Transmit FIFO service
■ Receive FIFO service
■ Receive FIFO time-out
■ Receive FIFO overrun
All of the interrupt events are ORed together before being sent to the interrupt controller, so the SSI
can only generate a single interrupt request to the controller at any given time. You can mask each
of the four individual maskable interrupts by setting the appropriate bits in the SSI Interrupt Mask
(SSIIM) register (see page 416). Setting the appropriate mask bit to 1 enables the interrupt.
Provision of the individual outputs, as well as a combined interrupt output, allows use of either a
global interrupt service routine, or modular device drivers to handle interrupts. The transmit and
receive dynamic dataflow interrupts have been separated from the status interrupts so that data
can be read or written in response to the FIFO trigger levels. The status of the individual interrupt
sources can be read from the SSI Raw Interrupt Status (SSIRIS) and SSI Masked Interrupt Status
(SSIMIS) registers (see page 418 and page 419, respectively).
11.3.4
Frame Formats
Each data frame is between 4 and 16 bits long, depending on the size of data programmed, and is
transmitted starting with the MSB. There are three basic frame types that can be selected:
■ Texas Instruments synchronous serial
June 18, 2012
397
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
■ Freescale SPI
■ MICROWIRE
For all three formats, the serial clock (SSIClk) is held inactive while the SSI is idle, and SSIClk
transitions at the programmed frequency only during active transmission or reception of data. The
idle state of SSIClk is utilized to provide a receive timeout indication that occurs when the receive
FIFO still contains data after a timeout period.
For Freescale SPI and MICROWIRE frame formats, the serial frame (SSIFss ) pin is active Low,
and is asserted (pulled down) during the entire transmission of the frame.
For Texas Instruments synchronous serial frame format, the SSIFss pin is pulsed for one serial
clock period starting at its rising edge, prior to the transmission of each frame. For this frame format,
both the SSI and the off-chip slave device drive their output data on the rising edge of SSIClk, and
latch data from the other device on the falling edge.
Unlike the full-duplex transmission of the other two frame formats, the MICROWIRE format uses a
special master-slave messaging technique, which operates at half-duplex. In this mode, when a
frame begins, an 8-bit control message is transmitted to the off-chip slave. During this transmit, no
incoming data is received by the SSI. After the message has been sent, the off-chip slave decodes
it and, after waiting one serial clock after the last bit of the 8-bit control message has been sent,
responds with the requested data. The returned data can be 4 to 16 bits in length, making the total
frame length anywhere from 13 to 25 bits.
11.3.4.1
Texas Instruments Synchronous Serial Frame Format
Figure 11-2 on page 398 shows the Texas Instruments synchronous serial frame format for a single
transmitted frame.
Figure 11-2. TI Synchronous Serial Frame Format (Single Transfer)
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSITx/SSIRx
MSB
LSB
4 to 16 bits
In this mode, SSIClk and SSIFss are forced Low, and the transmit data line SSITx is tristated
whenever the SSI is idle. Once the bottom entry of the transmit FIFO contains data, SSIFss is
pulsed High for one SSIClk period. The value to be transmitted is also transferred from the transmit
FIFO to the serial shift register of the transmit logic. On the next rising edge of SSIClk, the MSB
of the 4 to 16-bit data frame is shifted out on the SSITx pin. Likewise, the MSB of the received data
is shifted onto the SSIRx pin by the off-chip serial slave device.
Both the SSI and the off-chip serial slave device then clock each data bit into their serial shifter on
the falling edge of each SSIClk. The received data is transferred from the serial shifter to the receive
FIFO on the first rising edge of SSIClk after the LSB has been latched.
Figure 11-3 on page 399 shows the Texas Instruments synchronous serial frame format when
back-to-back frames are transmitted.
398
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 11-3. TI Synchronous Serial Frame Format (Continuous Transfer)
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSITx/SSIRx
MSB
LSB
4 to 16 bits
11.3.4.2
Freescale SPI Frame Format
The Freescale SPI interface is a four-wire interface where the SSIFss signal behaves as a slave
select. The main feature of the Freescale SPI format is that the inactive state and phase of the
SSIClk signal are programmable through the SPO and SPH bits within the SSISCR0 control register.
SPO Clock Polarity Bit
When the SPO clock polarity control bit is Low, it produces a steady state Low value on the SSIClk
pin. If the SPO bit is High, a steady state High value is placed on the SSIClk pin when data is not
being transferred.
SPH Phase Control Bit
The SPH phase control bit selects the clock edge that captures data and allows it to change state.
It has the most impact on the first bit transmitted by either allowing or not allowing a clock transition
before the first data capture edge. When the SPH phase control bit is Low, data is captured on the
first clock edge transition. If the SPH bit is High, data is captured on the second clock edge transition.
11.3.4.3
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=0 and SPH=0
Single and continuous transmission signal sequences for Freescale SPI format with SPO=0 and
SPH=0 are shown in Figure 11-4 on page 399 and Figure 11-5 on page 400.
Figure 11-4. Freescale SPI Format (Single Transfer) with SPO=0 and SPH=0
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx
LSB
MSB
Q
4 to 16 bits
SSITx
MSB
Note:
LSB
Q is undefined.
June 18, 2012
399
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Figure 11-5. Freescale SPI Format (Continuous Transfer) with SPO=0 and SPH=0
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx LSB
LSB
MSB
MSB
4 to16 bits
SSITx LSB
MSB
LSB
MSB
In this configuration, during idle periods:
■ SSIClk is forced Low
■ SSIFss is forced High
■ The transmit data line SSITx is arbitrarily forced Low
■ When the SSI is configured as a master, it enables the SSIClk pad
■ When the SSI is configured as a slave, it disables the SSIClk pad
If the SSI is enabled and there is valid data within the transmit FIFO, the start of transmission is
signified by the SSIFss master signal being driven Low. This causes slave data to be enabled onto
the SSIRx input line of the master. The master SSITx output pad is enabled.
One half SSIClk period later, valid master data is transferred to the SSITx pin. Now that both the
master and slave data have been set, the SSIClk master clock pin goes High after one further half
SSIClk period.
The data is now captured on the rising and propagated on the falling edges of the SSIClk signal.
In the case of a single word transmission, after all bits of the data word have been transferred, the
SSIFss line is returned to its idle High state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
However, in the case of continuous back-to-back transmissions, the SSIFss signal must be pulsed
High between each data word transfer. This is because the slave select pin freezes the data in its
serial peripheral register and does not allow it to be altered if the SPH bit is logic zero. Therefore,
the master device must raise the SSIFss pin of the slave device between each data transfer to
enable the serial peripheral data write. On completion of the continuous transfer, the SSIFss pin
is returned to its idle state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
11.3.4.4
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=0 and SPH=1
The transfer signal sequence for Freescale SPI format with SPO=0 and SPH=1 is shown in Figure
11-6 on page 401, which covers both single and continuous transfers.
400
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 11-6. Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=0 and SPH=1
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx
Q
MSB
Q
LSB
Q
4 to 16 bits
SSITx
LSB
MSB
Note:
Q is undefined.
In this configuration, during idle periods:
■ SSIClk is forced Low
■ SSIFss is forced High
■ The transmit data line SSITx is arbitrarily forced Low
■ When the SSI is configured as a master, it enables the SSIClk pad
■ When the SSI is configured as a slave, it disables the SSIClk pad
If the SSI is enabled and there is valid data within the transmit FIFO, the start of transmission is
signified by the SSIFss master signal being driven Low. The master SSITx output is enabled. After
a further one half SSIClk period, both master and slave valid data is enabled onto their respective
transmission lines. At the same time, the SSIClk is enabled with a rising edge transition.
Data is then captured on the falling edges and propagated on the rising edges of the SSIClk signal.
In the case of a single word transfer, after all bits have been transferred, the SSIFss line is returned
to its idle High state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
For continuous back-to-back transfers, the SSIFss pin is held Low between successive data words
and termination is the same as that of the single word transfer.
11.3.4.5
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=1 and SPH=0
Single and continuous transmission signal sequences for Freescale SPI format with SPO=1 and
SPH=0 are shown in Figure 11-7 on page 401 and Figure 11-8 on page 402.
Figure 11-7. Freescale SPI Frame Format (Single Transfer) with SPO=1 and SPH=0
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx
MSB
LSB
Q
4 to 16 bits
SSITx
LSB
MSB
Note:
Q is undefined.
June 18, 2012
401
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Figure 11-8. Freescale SPI Frame Format (Continuous Transfer) with SPO=1 and SPH=0
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSITx/SSIRx
MSB
LSB
LSB
MSB
4 to 16 bits
In this configuration, during idle periods:
■ SSIClk is forced High
■ SSIFss is forced High
■ The transmit data line SSITx is arbitrarily forced Low
■ When the SSI is configured as a master, it enables the SSIClk pad
■ When the SSI is configured as a slave, it disables the SSIClk pad
If the SSI is enabled and there is valid data within the transmit FIFO, the start of transmission is
signified by the SSIFss master signal being driven Low, which causes slave data to be immediately
transferred onto the SSIRx line of the master. The master SSITx output pad is enabled.
One half period later, valid master data is transferred to the SSITx line. Now that both the master
and slave data have been set, the SSIClk master clock pin becomes Low after one further half
SSIClk period. This means that data is captured on the falling edges and propagated on the rising
edges of the SSIClk signal.
In the case of a single word transmission, after all bits of the data word are transferred, the SSIFss
line is returned to its idle High state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
However, in the case of continuous back-to-back transmissions, the SSIFss signal must be pulsed
High between each data word transfer. This is because the slave select pin freezes the data in its
serial peripheral register and does not allow it to be altered if the SPH bit is logic zero. Therefore,
the master device must raise the SSIFss pin of the slave device between each data transfer to
enable the serial peripheral data write. On completion of the continuous transfer, the SSIFss pin
is returned to its idle state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
11.3.4.6
Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=1 and SPH=1
The transfer signal sequence for Freescale SPI format with SPO=1 and SPH=1 is shown in Figure
11-9 on page 403, which covers both single and continuous transfers.
402
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 11-9. Freescale SPI Frame Format with SPO=1 and SPH=1
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx
Q
MSB
LSB
Q
4 to 16 bits
MSB
SSITx
Note:
LSB
Q is undefined.
In this configuration, during idle periods:
■ SSIClk is forced High
■ SSIFss is forced High
■ The transmit data line SSITx is arbitrarily forced Low
■ When the SSI is configured as a master, it enables the SSIClk pad
■ When the SSI is configured as a slave, it disables the SSIClk pad
If the SSI is enabled and there is valid data within the transmit FIFO, the start of transmission is
signified by the SSIFss master signal being driven Low. The master SSITx output pad is enabled.
After a further one-half SSIClk period, both master and slave data are enabled onto their respective
transmission lines. At the same time, SSIClk is enabled with a falling edge transition. Data is then
captured on the rising edges and propagated on the falling edges of the SSIClk signal.
After all bits have been transferred, in the case of a single word transmission, the SSIFss line is
returned to its idle high state one SSIClk period after the last bit has been captured.
For continuous back-to-back transmissions, the SSIFss pin remains in its active Low state, until
the final bit of the last word has been captured, and then returns to its idle state as described above.
For continuous back-to-back transfers, the SSIFss pin is held Low between successive data words
and termination is the same as that of the single word transfer.
11.3.4.7
MICROWIRE Frame Format
Figure 11-10 on page 403 shows the MICROWIRE frame format, again for a single frame. Figure
11-11 on page 404 shows the same format when back-to-back frames are transmitted.
Figure 11-10. MICROWIRE Frame Format (Single Frame)
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSITx
LSB
MSB
8-bit control
SSIRx
0
MSB
LSB
4 to 16 bits
output data
June 18, 2012
403
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
MICROWIRE format is very similar to SPI format, except that transmission is half-duplex instead of
full-duplex, using a master-slave message passing technique. Each serial transmission begins with
an 8-bit control word that is transmitted from the SSI to the off-chip slave device. During this
transmission, no incoming data is received by the SSI. After the message has been sent, the off-chip
slave decodes it and, after waiting one serial clock after the last bit of the 8-bit control message has
been sent, responds with the required data. The returned data is 4 to 16 bits in length, making the
total frame length anywhere from 13 to 25 bits.
In this configuration, during idle periods:
■ SSIClk is forced Low
■ SSIFss is forced High
■ The transmit data line SSITx is arbitrarily forced Low
A transmission is triggered by writing a control byte to the transmit FIFO. The falling edge of SSIFss
causes the value contained in the bottom entry of the transmit FIFO to be transferred to the serial
shift register of the transmit logic, and the MSB of the 8-bit control frame to be shifted out onto the
SSITx pin. SSIFss remains Low for the duration of the frame transmission. The SSIRx pin remains
tristated during this transmission.
The off-chip serial slave device latches each control bit into its serial shifter on the rising edge of
each SSIClk. After the last bit is latched by the slave device, the control byte is decoded during a
one clock wait-state, and the slave responds by transmitting data back to the SSI. Each bit is driven
onto the SSIRx line on the falling edge of SSIClk. The SSI in turn latches each bit on the rising
edge of SSIClk. At the end of the frame, for single transfers, the SSIFss signal is pulled High one
clock period after the last bit has been latched in the receive serial shifter, which causes the data
to be transferred to the receive FIFO.
Note:
The off-chip slave device can tristate the receive line either on the falling edge of SSIClk
after the LSB has been latched by the receive shifter, or when the SSIFss pin goes High.
For continuous transfers, data transmission begins and ends in the same manner as a single transfer.
However, the SSIFss line is continuously asserted (held Low) and transmission of data occurs
back-to-back. The control byte of the next frame follows directly after the LSB of the received data
from the current frame. Each of the received values is transferred from the receive shifter on the
falling edge of SSIClk, after the LSB of the frame has been latched into the SSI.
Figure 11-11. MICROWIRE Frame Format (Continuous Transfer)
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSITx
LSB
MSB
LSB
8-bit control
SSIRx
0
MSB
LSB
MSB
4 to 16 bits
output data
In the MICROWIRE mode, the SSI slave samples the first bit of receive data on the rising edge of
SSIClk after SSIFss has gone Low. Masters that drive a free-running SSIClk must ensure that
the SSIFss signal has sufficient setup and hold margins with respect to the rising edge of SSIClk.
404
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 11-12 on page 405 illustrates these setup and hold time requirements. With respect to the
SSIClk rising edge on which the first bit of receive data is to be sampled by the SSI slave, SSIFss
must have a setup of at least two times the period of SSIClk on which the SSI operates. With
respect to the SSIClk rising edge previous to this edge, SSIFss must have a hold of at least one
SSIClk period.
Figure 11-12. MICROWIRE Frame Format, SSIFss Input Setup and Hold Requirements
tSetup=(2*tSSIClk)
tHold=tSSIClk
SSIClk
SSIFss
SSIRx
First RX data to be
sampled by SSI slave
11.4
Initialization and Configuration
To use the SSI, its peripheral clock must be enabled by setting the SSI bit in the RCGC1 register.
For each of the frame formats, the SSI is configured using the following steps:
1. Ensure that the SSE bit in the SSICR1 register is disabled before making any configuration
changes.
2. Select whether the SSI is a master or slave:
a. For master operations, set the SSICR1 register to 0x0000.0000.
b. For slave mode (output enabled), set the SSICR1 register to 0x0000.0004.
c. For slave mode (output disabled), set the SSICR1 register to 0x0000.000C.
3. Configure the clock prescale divisor by writing the SSICPSR register.
4. Write the SSICR0 register with the following configuration:
■ Serial clock rate (SCR)
■ Desired clock phase/polarity, if using Freescale SPI mode (SPH and SPO)
■ The protocol mode: Freescale SPI, TI SSF, MICROWIRE (FRF)
■ The data size (DSS)
5. Enable the SSI by setting the SSE bit in the SSICR1 register.
As an example, assume the SSI must be configured to operate with the following parameters:
■ Master operation
■ Freescale SPI mode (SPO=1, SPH=1)
June 18, 2012
405
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
■ 1 Mbps bit rate
■ 8 data bits
Assuming the system clock is 20 MHz, the bit rate calculation would be:
FSSIClk = FSysClk / (CPSDVSR * (1 + SCR))
1x106 = 20x106 / (CPSDVSR * (1 + SCR))
In this case, if CPSDVSR=2, SCR must be 9.
The configuration sequence would be as follows:
1. Ensure that the SSE bit in the SSICR1 register is disabled.
2. Write the SSICR1 register with a value of 0x0000.0000.
3. Write the SSICPSR register with a value of 0x0000.0002.
4. Write the SSICR0 register with a value of 0x0000.09C7.
5. The SSI is then enabled by setting the SSE bit in the SSICR1 register to 1.
11.5
Register Map
Table 11-3 on page 406 lists the SSI registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment to the
register’s address, relative to that SSI module’s base address:
■ SSI0: 0x4000.8000
Note that the SSI module clock must be enabled before the registers can be programmed (see
page 204). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the SSI module clock is enabled before
any SSI module registers are accessed.
Note:
The SSI must be disabled (see the SSE bit in the SSICR1 register) before any of the control
registers are reprogrammed.
Table 11-3. SSI Register Map
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
Description
See
page
0x000
SSICR0
R/W
0x0000.0000
SSI Control 0
408
0x004
SSICR1
R/W
0x0000.0000
SSI Control 1
410
0x008
SSIDR
R/W
0x0000.0000
SSI Data
412
0x00C
SSISR
RO
0x0000.0003
SSI Status
413
0x010
SSICPSR
R/W
0x0000.0000
SSI Clock Prescale
415
0x014
SSIIM
R/W
0x0000.0000
SSI Interrupt Mask
416
0x018
SSIRIS
RO
0x0000.0008
SSI Raw Interrupt Status
418
0x01C
SSIMIS
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Masked Interrupt Status
419
0x020
SSIICR
W1C
0x0000.0000
SSI Interrupt Clear
420
406
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 11-3. SSI Register Map (continued)
Offset
Name
0xFD0
Reset
SSIPeriphID4
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Peripheral Identification 4
421
0xFD4
SSIPeriphID5
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Peripheral Identification 5
422
0xFD8
SSIPeriphID6
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Peripheral Identification 6
423
0xFDC
SSIPeriphID7
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Peripheral Identification 7
424
0xFE0
SSIPeriphID0
RO
0x0000.0022
SSI Peripheral Identification 0
425
0xFE4
SSIPeriphID1
RO
0x0000.0000
SSI Peripheral Identification 1
426
0xFE8
SSIPeriphID2
RO
0x0000.0018
SSI Peripheral Identification 2
427
0xFEC
SSIPeriphID3
RO
0x0000.0001
SSI Peripheral Identification 3
428
0xFF0
SSIPCellID0
RO
0x0000.000D
SSI PrimeCell Identification 0
429
0xFF4
SSIPCellID1
RO
0x0000.00F0
SSI PrimeCell Identification 1
430
0xFF8
SSIPCellID2
RO
0x0000.0005
SSI PrimeCell Identification 2
431
0xFFC
SSIPCellID3
RO
0x0000.00B1
SSI PrimeCell Identification 3
432
11.6
Description
See
page
Type
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the SSI registers, in numerical order by address
offset.
June 18, 2012
407
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 1: SSI Control 0 (SSICR0), offset 0x000
SSICR0 is control register 0 and contains bit fields that control various functions within the SSI
module. Functionality such as protocol mode, clock rate, and data size are configured in this register.
SSI Control 0 (SSICR0)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SPH
SPO
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
SCR
Type
Reset
FRF
R/W
0
DSS
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:8
SCR
R/W
0x0000
SSI Serial Clock Rate
The value SCR is used to generate the transmit and receive bit rate of
the SSI. The bit rate is:
BR=FSSIClk/(CPSDVSR * (1 + SCR))
where CPSDVSR is an even value from 2-254 programmed in the
SSICPSR register, and SCR is a value from 0-255.
7
SPH
R/W
0
SSI Serial Clock Phase
This bit is only applicable to the Freescale SPI Format.
The SPH control bit selects the clock edge that captures data and allows
it to change state. It has the most impact on the first bit transmitted by
either allowing or not allowing a clock transition before the first data
capture edge.
When the SPH bit is 0, data is captured on the first clock edge transition.
If SPH is 1, data is captured on the second clock edge transition.
6
SPO
R/W
0
SSI Serial Clock Polarity
This bit is only applicable to the Freescale SPI Format.
When the SPO bit is 0, it produces a steady state Low value on the
SSIClk pin. If SPO is 1, a steady state High value is placed on the
SSIClk pin when data is not being transferred.
5:4
FRF
R/W
0x0
SSI Frame Format Select
The FRF values are defined as follows:
Value Frame Format
0x0 Freescale SPI Frame Format
0x1 Texas Instruments Synchronous Serial Frame Format
0x2 MICROWIRE Frame Format
0x3 Reserved
408
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
3:0
DSS
R/W
0x00
SSI Data Size Select
The DSS values are defined as follows:
Value
Data Size
0x0-0x2 Reserved
0x3
4-bit data
0x4
5-bit data
0x5
6-bit data
0x6
7-bit data
0x7
8-bit data
0x8
9-bit data
0x9
10-bit data
0xA
11-bit data
0xB
12-bit data
0xC
13-bit data
0xD
14-bit data
0xE
15-bit data
0xF
16-bit data
June 18, 2012
409
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 2: SSI Control 1 (SSICR1), offset 0x004
SSICR1 is control register 1 and contains bit fields that control various functions within the SSI
module. Master and slave mode functionality is controlled by this register.
SSI Control 1 (SSICR1)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x004
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SOD
MS
SSE
LBM
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
SOD
R/W
0
SSI Slave Mode Output Disable
This bit is relevant only in the Slave mode (MS=1). In multiple-slave
systems, it is possible for the SSI master to broadcast a message to all
slaves in the system while ensuring that only one slave drives data onto
the serial output line. In such systems, the TXD lines from multiple slaves
could be tied together. To operate in such a system, the SOD bit can be
configured so that the SSI slave does not drive the SSITx pin.
The SOD values are defined as follows:
Value Description
2
MS
R/W
0
0
SSI can drive SSITx output in Slave Output mode.
1
SSI must not drive the SSITx output in Slave mode.
SSI Master/Slave Select
This bit selects Master or Slave mode and can be modified only when
SSI is disabled (SSE=0).
The MS values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Device configured as a master.
1
Device configured as a slave.
410
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
SSE
R/W
0
Description
SSI Synchronous Serial Port Enable
Setting this bit enables SSI operation.
The SSE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
SSI operation disabled.
1
SSI operation enabled.
Note:
0
LBM
R/W
0
This bit must be set to 0 before any control registers
are reprogrammed.
SSI Loopback Mode
Setting this bit enables Loopback Test mode.
The LBM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Normal serial port operation enabled.
1
Output of the transmit serial shift register is connected internally
to the input of the receive serial shift register.
June 18, 2012
411
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 3: SSI Data (SSIDR), offset 0x008
Important: This register is read-sensitive. See the register description for details.
SSIDR is the data register and is 16-bits wide. When SSIDR is read, the entry in the receive FIFO
(pointed to by the current FIFO read pointer) is accessed. As data values are removed by the SSI
receive logic from the incoming data frame, they are placed into the entry in the receive FIFO (pointed
to by the current FIFO write pointer).
When SSIDR is written to, the entry in the transmit FIFO (pointed to by the write pointer) is written
to. Data values are removed from the transmit FIFO one value at a time by the transmit logic. It is
loaded into the transmit serial shifter, then serially shifted out onto the SSITx pin at the programmed
bit rate.
When a data size of less than 16 bits is selected, the user must right-justify data written to the
transmit FIFO. The transmit logic ignores the unused bits. Received data less than 16 bits is
automatically right-justified in the receive buffer.
When the SSI is programmed for MICROWIRE frame format, the default size for transmit data is
eight bits (the most significant byte is ignored). The receive data size is controlled by the programmer.
The transmit FIFO and the receive FIFO are not cleared even when the SSE bit in the SSICR1
register is set to zero. This allows the software to fill the transmit FIFO before enabling the SSI.
SSI Data (SSIDR)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x008
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
DATA
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
DATA
R/W
0x0000
SSI Receive/Transmit Data
A read operation reads the receive FIFO. A write operation writes the
transmit FIFO.
Software must right-justify data when the SSI is programmed for a data
size that is less than 16 bits. Unused bits at the top are ignored by the
transmit logic. The receive logic automatically right-justifies the data.
412
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 4: SSI Status (SSISR), offset 0x00C
SSISR is a status register that contains bits that indicate the FIFO fill status and the SSI busy status.
SSI Status (SSISR)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x00C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0003
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BSY
RFF
RNE
TNF
TFE
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
R0
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:5
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
BSY
RO
0
SSI Busy Bit
The BSY values are defined as follows:
Value Description
3
RFF
RO
0
0
SSI is idle.
1
SSI is currently transmitting and/or receiving a frame, or the
transmit FIFO is not empty.
SSI Receive FIFO Full
The RFF values are defined as follows:
Value Description
2
RNE
RO
0
0
Receive FIFO is not full.
1
Receive FIFO is full.
SSI Receive FIFO Not Empty
The RNE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
1
TNF
RO
1
0
Receive FIFO is empty.
1
Receive FIFO is not empty.
SSI Transmit FIFO Not Full
The TNF values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Transmit FIFO is full.
1
Transmit FIFO is not full.
June 18, 2012
413
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
0
TFE
R0
1
Description
SSI Transmit FIFO Empty
The TFE values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
Transmit FIFO is not empty.
1
Transmit FIFO is empty.
414
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: SSI Clock Prescale (SSICPSR), offset 0x010
SSICPSR is the clock prescale register and specifies the division factor by which the system clock
must be internally divided before further use.
The value programmed into this register must be an even number between 2 and 254. The
least-significant bit of the programmed number is hard-coded to zero. If an odd number is written
to this register, data read back from this register has the least-significant bit as zero.
SSI Clock Prescale (SSICPSR)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x010
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
CPSDVSR
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CPSDVSR
R/W
0x00
SSI Clock Prescale Divisor
This value must be an even number from 2 to 254, depending on the
frequency of SSIClk. The LSB always returns 0 on reads.
June 18, 2012
415
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 6: SSI Interrupt Mask (SSIIM), offset 0x014
The SSIIM register is the interrupt mask set or clear register. It is a read/write register and all bits
are cleared to 0 on reset.
On a read, this register gives the current value of the mask on the relevant interrupt. A write of 1 to
the particular bit sets the mask, enabling the interrupt to be read. A write of 0 clears the corresponding
mask.
SSI Interrupt Mask (SSIIM)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x014
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
3
2
1
0
TXIM
RXIM
RTIM
RORIM
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
TXIM
R/W
0
SSI Transmit FIFO Interrupt Mask
The TXIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
2
RXIM
R/W
0
0
TX FIFO half-empty or less condition interrupt is masked.
1
TX FIFO half-empty or less condition interrupt is not masked.
SSI Receive FIFO Interrupt Mask
The RXIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
1
RTIM
R/W
0
0
RX FIFO half-full or more condition interrupt is masked.
1
RX FIFO half-full or more condition interrupt is not masked.
SSI Receive Time-Out Interrupt Mask
The RTIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
RX FIFO time-out interrupt is masked.
1
RX FIFO time-out interrupt is not masked.
416
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
0
RORIM
R/W
0
Description
SSI Receive Overrun Interrupt Mask
The RORIM values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
RX FIFO overrun interrupt is masked.
1
RX FIFO overrun interrupt is not masked.
June 18, 2012
417
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 7: SSI Raw Interrupt Status (SSIRIS), offset 0x018
The SSIRIS register is the raw interrupt status register. On a read, this register gives the current
raw status value of the corresponding interrupt prior to masking. A write has no effect.
SSI Raw Interrupt Status (SSIRIS)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x018
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0008
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TXRIS
RXRIS
RTRIS
RORRIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
TXRIS
RO
1
SSI Transmit FIFO Raw Interrupt Status
Indicates that the transmit FIFO is half empty or less, when set.
2
RXRIS
RO
0
SSI Receive FIFO Raw Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive FIFO is half full or more, when set.
1
RTRIS
RO
0
SSI Receive Time-Out Raw Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive time-out has occurred, when set.
0
RORRIS
RO
0
SSI Receive Overrun Raw Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive FIFO has overflowed, when set.
418
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 8: SSI Masked Interrupt Status (SSIMIS), offset 0x01C
The SSIMIS register is the masked interrupt status register. On a read, this register gives the current
masked status value of the corresponding interrupt. A write has no effect.
SSI Masked Interrupt Status (SSIMIS)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x01C
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TXMIS
RXMIS
RTMIS
RORMIS
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
TXMIS
RO
0
SSI Transmit FIFO Masked Interrupt Status
Indicates that the transmit FIFO is half empty or less, when set.
2
RXMIS
RO
0
SSI Receive FIFO Masked Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive FIFO is half full or more, when set.
1
RTMIS
RO
0
SSI Receive Time-Out Masked Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive time-out has occurred, when set.
0
RORMIS
RO
0
SSI Receive Overrun Masked Interrupt Status
Indicates that the receive FIFO has overflowed, when set.
June 18, 2012
419
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 9: SSI Interrupt Clear (SSIICR), offset 0x020
The SSIICR register is the interrupt clear register. On a write of 1, the corresponding interrupt is
cleared. A write of 0 has no effect.
SSI Interrupt Clear (SSIICR)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0x020
Type W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RTIC
RORIC
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
W1C
0
W1C
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
RTIC
W1C
0
SSI Receive Time-Out Interrupt Clear
The RTIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
RORIC
W1C
0
0
No effect on interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
SSI Receive Overrun Interrupt Clear
The RORIC values are defined as follows:
Value Description
0
No effect on interrupt.
1
Clears interrupt.
420
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 10: SSI Peripheral Identification 4 (SSIPeriphID4), offset 0xFD0
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 4 (SSIPeriphID4)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFD0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID4
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID4
RO
0x00
SSI Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
421
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 11: SSI Peripheral Identification 5 (SSIPeriphID5), offset 0xFD4
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 5 (SSIPeriphID5)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFD4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID5
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID5
RO
0x00
SSI Peripheral ID Register[15:8]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
422
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 12: SSI Peripheral Identification 6 (SSIPeriphID6), offset 0xFD8
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 6 (SSIPeriphID6)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFD8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID6
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID6
RO
0x00
SSI Peripheral ID Register[23:16]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
423
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 13: SSI Peripheral Identification 7 (SSIPeriphID7), offset 0xFDC
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 7 (SSIPeriphID7)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFDC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID7
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID7
RO
0x00
SSI Peripheral ID Register[31:24]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
424
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 14: SSI Peripheral Identification 0 (SSIPeriphID0), offset 0xFE0
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 0 (SSIPeriphID0)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFE0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0022
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0
7:0
PID0
RO
0x22
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
SSI Peripheral ID Register[7:0]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
425
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 15: SSI Peripheral Identification 1 (SSIPeriphID1), offset 0xFE4
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 1 (SSIPeriphID1)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFE4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID1
RO
0x00
SSI Peripheral ID Register [15:8]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
426
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 16: SSI Peripheral Identification 2 (SSIPeriphID2), offset 0xFE8
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 2 (SSIPeriphID2)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFE8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0018
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID2
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID2
RO
0x18
SSI Peripheral ID Register [23:16]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
June 18, 2012
427
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 17: SSI Peripheral Identification 3 (SSIPeriphID3), offset 0xFEC
The SSIPeriphIDn registers are hard-coded and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI Peripheral Identification 3 (SSIPeriphID3)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFEC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
PID3
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
PID3
RO
0x01
SSI Peripheral ID Register [31:24]
Can be used by software to identify the presence of this peripheral.
428
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: SSI PrimeCell Identification 0 (SSIPCellID0), offset 0xFF0
The SSIPCellIDn registers are hard-coded, and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI PrimeCell Identification 0 (SSIPCellID0)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFF0
Type RO, reset 0x0000.000D
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID0
RO
0x0D
SSI PrimeCell ID Register [7:0]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
429
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 19: SSI PrimeCell Identification 1 (SSIPCellID1), offset 0xFF4
The SSIPCellIDn registers are hard-coded, and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI PrimeCell Identification 1 (SSIPCellID1)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFF4
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00F0
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID1
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID1
RO
0xF0
SSI PrimeCell ID Register [15:8]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
430
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 20: SSI PrimeCell Identification 2 (SSIPCellID2), offset 0xFF8
The SSIPCellIDn registers are hard-coded, and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI PrimeCell Identification 2 (SSIPCellID2)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFF8
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0005
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID2
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID2
RO
0x05
SSI PrimeCell ID Register [23:16]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
June 18, 2012
431
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Register 21: SSI PrimeCell Identification 3 (SSIPCellID3), offset 0xFFC
The SSIPCellIDn registers are hard-coded, and the fields within the register determine the reset
value.
SSI PrimeCell Identification 3 (SSIPCellID3)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
Offset 0xFFC
Type RO, reset 0x0000.00B1
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
1
RO
0
RO
1
RO
1
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
CID3
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:8
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
7:0
CID3
RO
0xB1
SSI PrimeCell ID Register [31:24]
Provides software a standard cross-peripheral identification system.
432
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
12
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Controller Area Network (CAN) is a multicast, shared serial bus standard for connecting electronic
control units (ECUs). CAN was specifically designed to be robust in electromagnetically-noisy
environments and can utilize a differential balanced line like RS-485 or a more robust twisted-pair
wire. Originally created for automotive purposes, it is also used in many embedded control
applications (such as industrial and medical). Bit rates up to 1Mbps are possible at network lengths
less than 40 meters. Decreased bit rates allow longer network distances (for example, 125 Kbps at
500 meters).
®
The Stellaris CAN controller supports the following features:
■ CAN protocol version 2.0 part A/B
■ Bit rates up to 1 Mbps
■ 32 message objects with individual identifier masks
■ Maskable interrupt
■ Disable Automatic Retransmission mode for Time-Triggered CAN (TTCAN) applications
■ Programmable Loopback mode for self-test operation
■ Programmable FIFO mode enables storage of multiple message objects
■ Gluelessly attaches to an external CAN interface through the CANnTX and CANnRX signals
June 18, 2012
433
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
12.1
Block Diagram
Figure 12-1. CAN Controller Block Diagram
CAN Control
CANCTL
CANSTS
CANERR
CANBIT
CANINT
CANTST
CANBRPE
ABP
Pins
APB
Interface
CAN Interface 1
CANIF1CRQ
CANIF1CMSK
CANIF1MSK1
CANIF1MSK2
CANIF1ARB1
CANIF1ARB2
CANIF1MCTL
CANIF1DA1
CANIF1DA2
CANIF1DB1
CANIF1DB2
CAN Interface 2
CANIF2CRQ
CANIF2CMSK
CANIF2MSK1
CANIF2MSK2
CANIF2ARB1
CANIF2ARB2
CANIF2MCTL
CANIF2DA1
CANIF2DA2
CANIF2DB1
CANIF2DB2
CAN Tx
CAN Core
CAN Rx
Message Object
Registers
CANTXRQ1
CANTXRQ2
CANNWDA1
CANNWDA2
CANMSG1INT
CANMSG2INT
CANMSG1VAL
CANMSG2VAL
Message RAM
32 Message Objects
12.2
Signal Description
Table 12-1 on page 435 and Table 12-2 on page 435 list the external signals of the CAN controller
and describe the function of each. The CAN controller signals are alternate functions for some GPIO
signals and default to be GPIO signals at reset. The column in the table below titled "Pin Assignment"
lists the possible GPIO pin placements for the CAN signals. The AFSEL bit in the GPIO Alternate
Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) should be set to choose the CAN controller
function. For more information on configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs
(GPIOs)” on page 245.
434
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 12-1. Controller Area Network Signals (100LQFP)
Pin Name
Pin Number
CAN0Rx
CAN0Tx
a
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
10
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
11
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 12-2. Controller Area Network Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
CAN0Rx
G1
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
CAN0Tx
G2
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
12.3
Functional Description
The Stellaris CAN controller conforms to the CAN protocol version 2.0 (parts A and B). Message
transfers that include data, remote, error, and overload frames with an 11-bit identifier (standard)
or a 29-bit identifier (extended) are supported. Transfer rates can be programmed up to 1 Mbps.
The CAN module consists of three major parts:
■ CAN protocol controller and message handler
■ Message memory
■ CAN register interface
A data frame contains data for transmission, whereas a remote frame contains no data and is used
to request the transmission of a specific message object. The CAN data/remote frame is constructed
as shown in Figure 12-2 on page 435.
Figure 12-2. CAN Data/Remote Frame
Remote
Transmission
Request
Start
Of Frame
Bus
Idle
R
S
Control
O Message Delimiter T Field
R
F
Number 1
Of Bits
11 or 29
1
6
Delimiter
Bits
Data Field
CRC
Sequence
A
C
K
EOP
IFS
0 . . . 64
15
1 1 1
7
3
CRC Sequence
CRC
Field
Arbitration Field
Bit Stuffing
End of
Frame
Field
Bus
Idle
Interframe
Field
Acknowledgement
Field
CAN Data Frame
June 18, 2012
435
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
The protocol controller transfers and receives the serial data from the CAN bus and passes the data
on to the message handler. The message handler then loads this information into the appropriate
message object based on the current filtering and identifiers in the message object memory. The
message handler is also responsible for generating interrupts based on events on the CAN bus.
The message object memory is a set of 32 identical memory blocks that hold the current configuration,
status, and actual data for each message object. These are accessed via either of the CAN message
object register interfaces.
The message memory is not directly accessible in the Stellaris memory map, so the Stellaris CAN
controller provides an interface to communicate with the message memory via two CAN interface
register sets for communicating with the message objects. As there is no direct access to the
message object memory, these two interfaces must be used to read or write to each message object.
The two message object interfaces allow parallel access to the CAN controller message objects
when multiple objects may have new information that must be processed. In general, one interface
is used for transmit data and one for receive data.
12.3.1
Initialization
Software initialization is started by setting the INIT bit in the CAN Control (CANCTL) register (with
software or by a hardware reset) or by going bus-off, which occurs when the transmitter's error
counter exceeds a count of 255. While INIT is set, all message transfers to and from the CAN bus
are stopped and the CANnTX signal is held High. Entering the initialization state does not change
the configuration of the CAN controller, the message objects, or the error counters. However, some
configuration registers are only accessible while in the initialization state.
To initialize the CAN controller, set the CAN Bit Timing (CANBIT) register and configure each
message object. If a message object is not needed, label it as not valid by clearing the MSGVAL bit
in the CAN IFn Arbitration 2 (CANIFnARB2) register. Otherwise, the whole message object must
be initialized, as the fields of the message object may not have valid information, causing unexpected
results. Both the INIT and CCE bits in the CANCTL register must be set in order to access the
CANBIT register and the CAN Baud Rate Prescaler Extension (CANBRPE) register to configure
the bit timing. To leave the initialization state, the INIT bit must be cleared. Afterwards, the internal
Bit Stream Processor (BSP) synchronizes itself to the data transfer on the CAN bus by waiting for
the occurrence of a sequence of 11 consecutive recessive bits (indicating a bus idle condition)
before it takes part in bus activities and starts message transfers. Message object initialization does
not require the CAN to be in the initialization state and can be done on the fly. However, message
objects should all be configured to particular identifiers or set to not valid before message transfer
starts. To change the configuration of a message object during normal operation, clear the MSGVAL
bit in the CANIFnARB2 register to indicate that the message object is not valid during the change.
When the configuration is completed, set the MSGVAL bit again to indicate that the message object
is once again valid.
12.3.2
Operation
There are two sets of CAN Interface Registers (CANIF1x and CANIF2x), which are used to access
the message objects in the Message RAM. The CAN controller coordinates transfers to and from
the Message RAM to and from the registers. The two sets are independent and identical and can
be used to queue transactions. Generally, one interface is used to transmit data and one is used to
receive data.
Once the CAN module is initialized and the INIT bit in the CANCTL register is cleared, the CAN
module synchronizes itself to the CAN bus and starts the message transfer. As each message is
received, it goes through the message handler's filtering process, and if it passes through the filter,
is stored in the message object specified by the MNUM bit in the CAN IFn Command Request
436
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
(CANIFnCRQ) register. The whole message (including all arbitration bits, data-length code, and
eight data bytes) is stored in the message object. If the Identifier Mask (the MSK bits in the CAN IFn
Mask 1 and CAN IFn Mask 2 (CANIFnMSKn) registers) is used, the arbitration bits that are masked
to "don't care" may be overwritten in the message object.
The CPU may read or write each message at any time via the CAN Interface Registers. The message
handler guarantees data consistency in case of concurrent accesses.
The transmission of message objects is under the control of the software that is managing the CAN
hardware. These can be message objects used for one-time data transfers, or permanent message
objects used to respond in a more periodic manner. Permanent message objects have all arbitration
and control set up, and only the data bytes are updated. At the start of transmission, the appropriate
TXRQST bit in the CAN Transmission Request n (CANTXRQn) register and the NEWDAT bit in the
CAN New Data n (CANNWDAn) register are set. If several transmit messages are assigned to the
same message object (when the number of message objects is not sufficient), the whole message
object has to be configured before the transmission of this message is requested.
The transmission of any number of message objects may be requested at the same time; they are
transmitted according to their internal priority, which is based on the message identifier (MNUM) for
the message object, with 1 being the highest priority and 32 being the lowest priority. Messages
may be updated or set to not valid any time, even when their requested transmission is still pending.
The old data is discarded when a message is updated before its pending transmission has started.
Depending on the configuration of the message object, the transmission of a message may be
requested autonomously by the reception of a remote frame with a matching identifier.
Transmission can be automatically started by the reception of a matching remote frame. To enable
this mode, set the RMTEN bit in the CAN IFn Message Control (CANIFnMCTL) register. A matching
received remote frame causes the TXRQST bit to be set and the message object automatically
transfers its data or generates an interrupt indicating a remote frame was requested. This can be
strictly a single message identifier, or it can be a range of values specified in the message object.
The CAN mask registers, CANIFnMSKn, configure which groups of frames are identified as remote
frame requests. The UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register enables the MSK bits in the
CANIFnMSKn register to filter which frames are identified as a remote frame request. The MXTD
bit in the CANIFnMSK2 register should be set if a remote frame request is expected to be triggered
by 29-bit extended identifiers.
12.3.3
Transmitting Message Objects
If the internal transmit shift register of the CAN module is ready for loading, and if there is no data
transfer occurring between the CAN Interface Registers and message RAM, the valid message
object with the highest priority that has a pending transmission request is loaded into the transmit
shift register by the message handler and the transmission is started. The message object's NEWDAT
bit in the CANNWDAn register is cleared. After a successful transmission, and if no new data was
written to the message object since the start of the transmission, the TXRQST bit in the CANTXRQn
register is cleared. If the CAN controller is set up to interrupt upon a successful transmission of a
message object, (the TXIE bit in the CAN IFn Message Control (CANIFnMCTL) register is set),
the INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set after a successful transmission. If the CAN
module has lost the arbitration or if an error occurred during the transmission, the message is
re-transmitted as soon as the CAN bus is free again. If, meanwhile, the transmission of a message
with higher priority has been requested, the messages are transmitted in the order of their priority.
12.3.4
Configuring a Transmit Message Object
The following steps illustrate how to configure a transmit message object.
June 18, 2012
437
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
1. In the CAN IFn Command Mask (CANIFnCMASK) register:
■ Set the WRNRD bit to specify a write to the CANIFnCMASK register; specify whether to
transfer the IDMASK, DIR, and MXTD of the message object into the CAN IFn registers using
the MASK bit
■ Specify whether to transfer the ID, DIR, XTD, and MSGVAL of the message object into the
interface registers using the ARB bit
■ Specify whether to transfer the control bits into the interface registers using the CONTROL
bit
■ Specify whether to clear the INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register using the CLRINTPND
bit
■ Specify whether to clear the NEWDAT bit in the CANNWDAn register using the NEWDAT bit
■ Specify which bits to transfer using the DATAA and DATAB bits
2. In the CANIFnMSK1 register, use the MSK[15:0] bits to specify which of the bits in the 29-bit
or 11-bit message identifier are used for acceptance filtering. Note that MSK[15:0] in this
register are used for bits [15:0] of the 29-bit message identifier and are not used for an 11-bit
identifier. A value of 0x00 enables all messages to pass through the acceptance filtering. Also
note that in order for these bits to be used for acceptance filtering, they must be enabled by
setting the UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register.
3. In the CANIFnMSK2 register, use the MSK[12:0] bits to specify which of the bits in the 29-bit
or 11-bit message identifier are used for acceptance filtering. Note that MSK[12:0] are used
for bits [28:16] of the 29-bit message identifier; whereas MSK[12:2] are used for bits [10:0] of
the 11-bit message identifier. Use the MXTD and MDIR bits to specify whether to use XTD and
DIR for acceptance filtering. A value of 0x00 enables all messages to pass through the
acceptance filtering. Also note that in order for these bits to be used for acceptance filtering,
they must be enabled by setting the UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register.
4. For a 29-bit identifier, configure ID[15:0] in the CANIFnARB1 register to are used for bits
[15:0] of the message identifier and ID[12:0] in the CANIFnARB2 register to are used for
bits [28:16] of the message identifier. Set the XTD bit to indicate an extended identifier; set the
DIR bit to indicate transmit; and set the MSGVAL bit to indicate that the message object is valid.
5. For an 11-bit identifier, disregard the CANIFnARB1 register and configure ID[12:2] in the
CANIFnARB2 register to are used for bits [10:0] of the message identifier. Clear the XTD bit to
indicate a standard identifier; set the DIR bit to indicate transmit; and set the MSGVAL bit to
indicate that the message object is valid.
6. In the CANIFnMCTL register:
■ Optionally set the UMASK bit to enable the mask (MSK, MXTD, and MDIR specified in the
CANIFnMSK1 and CANIFnMSK2 registers) for acceptance filtering
■ Optionally set the TXIE bit to enable the INTPND bit to be set after a successful transmission
■ Optionally set the RMTEN bit to enable the TXRQST bit to be set upon the reception of a
matching remote frame allowing automatic transmission
438
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ Set the EOB bit for a single message object;
■ Set the DLC[3:0] field to specify the size of the data frame. Take care during this
configuration not to set the NEWDAT, MSGLST, INTPND or TXRQST bits.
7. Load the data to be transmitted into the CAN IFn Data (CANIFnDA1, CANIFnDA2, CANIFnDB1,
CANIFnDB2) or (CANIFnDATAA and CANIFnDATAB) registers. Byte 0 of the CAN data frame
is stored in DATA[7:0] in the CANIFnDA1 register.
8. Program the number of the message object to be transmitted in the MNUM field in the CAN IFn
Command Request (CANIFnCRQ) register.
9. When everything is properly configured, set the TXRQST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register. Once
this bit is set, the message object is available to be transmitted, depending on priority and bus
availability. Note that setting the RMTEN bit in the CANIFnMCTL register can also start message
transmission if a matching remote frame has been received.
12.3.5
Updating a Transmit Message Object
The CPU may update the data bytes of a Transmit Message Object any time via the CAN Interface
Registers and neither the MSGVAL bit in the CANIFnARB2 register nor the TXRQST bits in the
CANIFnMCTL register have to be cleared before the update.
Even if only some of the data bytes are to be updated, all four bytes of the corresponding
CANIFnDAn/CANIFnDBn register have to be valid before the content of that register is transferred
to the message object. Either the CPU must write all four bytes into the CANIFnDAn/CANIFnDBn
register or the message object is transferred to the CANIFnDAn/CANIFnDBn register before the
CPU writes the new data bytes.
In order to only update the data in a message object, the WRNRD, DATAA and DATAB bits in the
CANIFnMSKn register are set, followed by writing the updated data into CANIFnDA1, CANIFnDA2,
CANIFnDB1, and CANIFnDB2 registers, and then the number of the message object is written to
the MNUM field in the CAN IFn Command Request (CANIFnCRQ) register. To begin transmission
of the new data as soon as possible, set the TXRQST bit in the CANIFnMSKn register.
To prevent the clearing of the TXRQST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register at the end of a transmission
that may already be in progress while the data is updated, the NEWDAT and TXRQST bits have to be
set at the same time in the CANIFnMCTL register. When these bits are set at the same time, NEWDAT
is cleared as soon as the new transmission has started.
12.3.6
Accepting Received Message Objects
When the arbitration and control field (the ID and XTD bits in the CANIFnARB2 and the RMTEN and
DLC[3:0] bits of the CANIFnMCTL register) of an incoming message is completely shifted into
the CAN controller, the message handling capability of the controller starts scanning the message
RAM for a matching valid message object. To scan the message RAM for a matching message
object, the controller uses the acceptance filtering programmed through the mask bits in the
CANIFnMSKn register and enabled using the UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register. Each valid
message object, starting with object 1, is compared with the incoming message to locate a matching
message object in the message RAM. If a match occurs, the scanning is stopped and the message
handler proceeds depending on whether it is a data frame or remote frame that was received.
12.3.7
Receiving a Data Frame
The message handler stores the message from the CAN controller receive shift register into the
matching message object in the message RAM. The data bytes, all arbitration bits, and the DLC bits
June 18, 2012
439
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
are all stored into the corresponding message object. In this manner, the data bytes are connected
with the identifier even if arbitration masks are used. The NEWDAT bit of the CANIFnMCTL register
is set to indicate that new data has been received. The CPU should clear this bit when it reads the
message object to indicate to the controller that the message has been received, and the buffer is
free to receive more messages. If the CAN controller receives a message and the NEWDAT bit is
already set, the MSGLST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set to indicate that the previous data
was lost. If the system requires an interrupt upon successful reception of a frame, the RXIE bit of
the CANIFnMCTL register should be set. In this case, the INTPND bit of the same register is set,
causing the CANINT register to point to the message object that just received a message. The
TXRQST bit of this message object should be cleared to prevent the transmission of a remote frame.
12.3.8
Receiving a Remote Frame
A remote frame contains no data, but instead specifies which object should be transmitted. When
a remote frame is received, three different configurations of the matching message object have to
be considered:
Configuration in CANIFnMCTL
■
■
DIR = 1 (direction = transmit); programmed in the At the reception of a matching remote frame, the TXRQST bit of this
CANIFnARB2 register
message object is set. The rest of the message object remains
unchanged, and the controller automatically transfers the data in
RMTEN = 1 (set the TXRQST bit of the
the message object as soon as possible.
CANIFnMCTL register at reception of the frame
to enable transmission)
■
UMASK = 1 or 0
■
DIR = 1 (direction = transmit); programmed in the At the reception of a matching remote frame, the TXRQST bit of this
CANIFnARB2 register
message object remains unchanged, and the remote frame is
ignored. This remote frame is disabled, the data is not transferred
RMTEN = 0 (do not change the TXRQST bit of the and there is no indication that the remote frame ever happened.
CANIFnMCTL register at reception of the frame)
■
■
UMASK = 0 (ignore mask in the CANIFnMSKn
register)
■
DIR = 1 (direction = transmit); programmed in the At the reception of a matching remote frame, the TXRQST bit of this
message object is cleared. The arbitration and control field (ID +
CANIFnARB2 register
XTD + RMTEN + DLC) from the shift register is stored into the
RMTEN = 0 (do not change the TXRQST bit of the message object in the message RAM and the NEWDAT bit of this
CANIFnMCTL register at reception of the frame) message object is set. The data field of the message object remains
unchanged; the remote frame is treated similar to a received data
UMASK = 1 (use mask (MSK, MXTD, and MDIR in
frame. This is useful for a remote data request from another CAN
the CANIFnMSKn register) for acceptance filtering)
device for which the Stellaris controller does not have readily
available data. The software must fill the data and answer the frame
manually.
■
■
12.3.9
Description
Receive/Transmit Priority
The receive/transmit priority for the message objects is controlled by the message number. Message
object 1 has the highest priority, while message object 32 has the lowest priority. If more than one
transmission request is pending, the message objects are transmitted in order based on the message
object with the lowest message number. This should not be confused with the message identifier
as that priority is enforced by the CAN bus. This means that if message object 1 and message object
2 both have valid messages that need to be transmitted, message object 1 will always be transmitted
first regardless of the message identifier in the message object itself.
440
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
12.3.10
Configuring a Receive Message Object
The following steps illustrate how to configure a receive message object.
1. Program the CAN IFn Command Mask (CANIFnCMASK) register as described in the
“Configuring a Transmit Message Object” on page 437 section, except that the WRNRD bit is set
to specify a write to the message RAM.
2. Program the CANIFnMSK1and CANIFnMSK2 registers as described in the “Configuring a
Transmit Message Object” on page 437 section to configure which bits are used for acceptance
filtering. Note that in order for these bits to be used for acceptance filtering, they must be enabled
by setting the UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register.
3. In the CANIFnMSK2 register, use the MSK[12:0] bits to specify which of the bits in the 29-bit
or 11-bit message identifier are used for acceptance filtering. Note that MSK[12:0] are used
for bits [28:16] of the 29-bit message identifier; whereas MSK[12:2] are used for bits [10:0] of
the 11-bit message identifier. Use the MXTD and MDIR bits to specify whether to use XTD and
DIR for acceptance filtering. A value of 0x00 enables all messages to pass through the
acceptance filtering. Also note that in order for these bits to be used for acceptance filtering,
they must be enabled by setting the UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register.
4. Program the CANIFnARB1 and CANIFnARB2 registers as described in the “Configuring a
Transmit Message Object” on page 437 section to program XTD and ID bits for the message
identifier to be received; set the MSGVAL bit to indicate a valid message; and clear the DIR bit
to specify receive.
5. In the CANIFnMCTL register:
■ Optionally set the UMASK bit to enable the mask (MSK, MXTD, and MDIR specified in the
CANIFnMSK1 and CANIFnMSK2 registers) for acceptance filtering
■ Optionally set the RXIE bit to enable the INTPND bit to be set after a successful reception
■ Clear the RMTEN bit to leave the TXRQST bit unchanged
■ Set the EOB bit for a single message object
■ Set the DLC[3:0] field to specify the size of the data frame
Take care during this configuration not to set the NEWDAT, MSGLST, INTPND or TXRQST bits.
6. Program the number of the message object to be received in the MNUM field in the CAN IFn
Command Request (CANIFnCRQ) register. Reception of the message object begins as soon
as a matching frame is available on the CAN bus.
When the message handler stores a data frame in the message object, it stores the received Data
Length Code and eight data bytes in the CANIFnDA1, CANIFnDA2, CANIFnDB1, and CANIFnDB2
register. Byte 0 of the CAN data frame is stored in DATA[7:0] in the CANIFnDA1 register. If the
Data Length Code is less than 8, the remaining bytes of the message object are overwritten by
unspecified values.
The CAN mask registers can be used to allow groups of data frames to be received by a message
object. The CAN mask registers, CANIFnMSKn, configure which groups of frames are received by
a message object. The UMASK bit in the CANIFnMCTL register enables the MSK bits in the
June 18, 2012
441
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
CANIFnMSKn register to filter which frames are received. The MXTD bit in the CANIFnMSK2 register
should be set if only 29-bit extended identifiers are expected by this message object.
12.3.11
Handling of Received Message Objects
The CPU may read a received message any time via the CAN Interface registers because the data
consistency is guaranteed by the message handler state machine.
Typically, the CPU first writes 0x007F to the CANIFnCMSK register and then writes the number of
the message object to the CANIFnCRQ register. That combination transfers the whole received
message from the message RAM into the Message Buffer registers (CANIFnMSKn, CANIFnARBn,
and CANIFnMCTL). Additionally, the NEWDAT and INTPND bits are cleared in the message RAM,
acknowledging that the message has been read and clearing the pending interrupt generated by
this message object.
If the message object uses masks for acceptance filtering, the CANIFnARBn registers show the
full, unmasked ID for the received message.
The NEWDAT bit in the CANIFnMCTL register shows whether a new message has been received
since the last time this message object was read. The MSGLST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register
shows whether more than one message has been received since the last time this message object
was read. MSGLST is not automatically cleared, and should be cleared by software after reading its
status.
Using a remote frame, the CPU may request new data from another CAN node on the CAN bus.
Setting the TXRQST bit of a receive object causes the transmission of a remote frame with the receive
object's identifier. This remote frame triggers the other CAN node to start the transmission of the
matching data frame. If the matching data frame is received before the remote frame could be
transmitted, the TXRQST bit is automatically reset. This prevents the possible loss of data when the
other device on the CAN bus has already transmitted the data slightly earlier than expected.
12.3.11.1 Configuration of a FIFO Buffer
With the exception of the EOB bit in the CANIFnMCTL register, the configuration of receive message
objects belonging to a FIFO buffer is the same as the configuration of a single receive message
object (see “Configuring a Receive Message Object” on page 441). To concatenate two or more
message objects into a FIFO buffer, the identifiers and masks (if used) of these message objects
have to be programmed to matching values. Due to the implicit priority of the message objects, the
message object with the lowest message object number is the first message object in a FIFO buffer.
The EOB bit of all message objects of a FIFO buffer except the last one must be cleared. The EOB
bit of the last message object of a FIFO buffer is set, indicating it is the last entry in the buffer.
12.3.11.2 Reception of Messages with FIFO Buffers
Received messages with identifiers matching to a FIFO buffer are stored starting with the message
object with the lowest message number. When a message is stored into a message object of a
FIFO buffer, the NEWDAT of the CANIFnMCTL register bit of this message object is set. By setting
NEWDAT while EOB is clear, the message object is locked and cannot be written to by the message
handler until the CPU has cleared the NEWDAT bit. Messages are stored into a FIFO buffer until the
last message object of this FIFO buffer is reached. If none of the preceding message objects has
been released by clearing the NEWDAT bit, all further messages for this FIFO buffer will be written
into the last message object of the FIFO buffer and therefore overwrite previous messages.
442
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
12.3.11.3 Reading from a FIFO Buffer
When the CPU transfers the contents of a message object from a FIFO buffer by writing its number
to the CANIFnCRQ, the TXRQST and CLRINTPND bits in the CANIFnCMSK register should be set
such that the NEWDAT and INTPEND bits in the CANIFnMCTL register are cleared after the read.
The values of these bits in the CANIFnMCTL register always reflect the status of the message
object before the bits are cleared. To assure the correct function of a FIFO buffer, the CPU should
read out the message objects starting with the message object with the lowest message number.
When reading from the FIFO buffer, the user should be aware that a new received message is
placed in the message object with the lowest message number for which the NEWDAT bit of the
CANIFnMCTL register. As a result, the order of the received messages in the FIFO is not guaranteed.
Figure 12-3 on page 444 shows how a set of message objects which are concatenated to a FIFO
Buffer can be handled by the CPU.
June 18, 2012
443
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Figure 12-3. Message Objects in a FIFO Buffer
START
Message Interrupt
Read Interrupt Pointer
0x0000
Case Interrupt Pointer
else
0x8000
END
Status Change
Interrupt Handling
MNUM = Interrupt Pointer
Write MNUM to IFn Command Request
(Read Message to IFn Registers,
Reset NEWDAT = 0,
Reset INTPND = 0
Read IFn Message Control
Yes
No
NEWDAT = 1
Read Data from IFn Data A,B
EOB = 1
Yes
No
MNUM = MNUM + 1
444
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
12.3.12
Handling of Interrupts
If several interrupts are pending, the CAN Interrupt (CANINT) register points to the pending interrupt
with the highest priority, disregarding their chronological order. The status interrupt has the highest
priority. Among the message interrupts, the message object's interrupt with the lowest message
number has the highest priority. A message interrupt is cleared by clearing the message object's
INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register or by reading the CAN Status (CANSTS) register. The
status Interrupt is cleared by reading the CANSTS register.
The interrupt identifier INTID in the CANINT register indicates the cause of the interrupt. When no
interrupt is pending, the register reads as 0x0000. If the value of the INTID field is different from 0,
then there is an interrupt pending. If the IE bit is set in the CANCTL register, the interrupt line to
the CPU is active. The interrupt line remains active until the INTID field is 0, meaning that all interrupt
sources have been cleared (the cause of the interrupt is reset), or until IE is cleared, which disables
interrupts from the CAN controller.
The INTID field of the CANINT register points to the pending message interrupt with the highest
interrupt priority. The SIE bit in the CANCTL register controls whether a change of the RXOK, TXOK,
and LEC bits in the CANSTS register can cause an interrupt. The EIE bit in the CANCTLregister
controls whether a change of the BOFF and EWARN bits in the CANSTS can cause an interrupt. The
IE bit in the CANCTL controls whether any interrupt from the CAN controller actually generates an
interrupt to the microcontroller's interrupt controller. The CANINT register is updated even when
the IE bit in the CANCTL register is clear, but the interrupt will not be indicated to the CPU.
A value of 0x8000 in the CANINT register indicates that an interrupt is pending because the CAN
module has updated, but not necessarily changed, the CANSTS , indicating that either an error or
status interrupt has been generated. A write access to the CANSTS register can clear the RXOK,
TXOK, and LEC bits in that same register; however, the only way to clear the source of a status
interrupt is to read the CANSTS register.
There are two ways to determine the source of an interrupt during interrupt handling. The first is to
read the INTID bit in the CANINT register to determine the highest priority interrupt that is pending,
and the second is to read the CAN Message Interrupt Pending (CANMSGnINT) register to see
all of the message objects that have pending interrupts.
An interrupt service routine reading the message that is the source of the interrupt may read the
message and clear the message object's INTPND bit at the same time by setting the CLRINTPND
bit in the CANIFnCMSK register. Once the INTPND bit has been cleared, the CANINT register
contains the message number for the next message object with a pending interrupt.
12.3.13
Test Mode
A Test Mode is provided, which allows various diagnostics to be performed. Test Mode is entered
by setting the TEST bit CANCTL register. Once in Test Mode, the TX[1:0], LBACK, SILENT and
BASIC bits in the CAN Test (CANTST) register can be used to put the CAN controller into the
various diagnostic modes. The RX bit in the CANTST register allows monitoring of the CANnRX
signal. All CANTST register functions are disabled when the TEST bit is cleared.
12.3.13.1 Silent Mode
Silent Mode can be used to analyze the traffic on a CAN bus without affecting it by the transmission
of dominant bits (Acknowledge Bits, Error Frames). The CAN Controller is put in Silent Mode setting
the SILENT bit in the CANTST register. In Silent Mode, the CAN controller is able to receive valid
data frames and valid remote frames, but it sends only recessive bits on the CAN bus and it cannot
start a transmission. If the CAN Controller is required to send a dominant bit (ACK bit, overload flag,
June 18, 2012
445
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
or active error flag), the bit is rerouted internally so that the CAN Controller monitors this dominant
bit, although the CAN bus remains in recessive state.
12.3.13.2 Loopback Mode
Loopback mode is useful for self-test functions. In Loopback Mode, the CAN Controller internally
routes the CANnTX signal on to the CANnRX signal and treats its own transmitted messages as
received messages and stores them (if they pass acceptance filtering) into the message buffer. The
CAN Controller is put in Loopback Mode by setting the LBACK bit in the CANTST register. To be
independent from external stimulation, the CAN Controller ignores acknowledge errors (a recessive
bit sampled in the acknowledge slot of a data/remote frame) in Loopback Mode. The actual value
of the CANnRX signal is disregarded by the CAN Controller. The transmitted messages can be
monitored on the CANnTX signal.
12.3.13.3 Loopback Combined with Silent Mode
Loopback Mode and Silent Mode can be combined to allow the CAN Controller to be tested without
affecting a running CAN system connected to the CANnTX and CANnRX signals. In this mode, the
CANnRX signal is disconnected from the CAN Controller and the CANnTX signal is held recessive.
This mode is enabled by setting both the LBACK and SILENT bits in the CANTST register.
12.3.13.4 Basic Mode
Basic Mode allows the CAN Controller to be operated without the Message RAM. In Basic Mode,
The CANIF1 registers are used as the transmit buffer. The transmission of the contents of the IF1
registers is requested by setting the BUSY bit of the CANIF1CRQ register. The CANIF1 registers
are locked while the BUSY bit is set. The BUSY bit indicates that a transmission is pending. As soon
the CAN bus is idle, the CANIF1 registers are loaded into the shift register of the CAN Controller
and transmission is started. When the transmission has completed, the BUSY bit is cleared and the
locked CANIF1 registers are released. A pending transmission can be aborted at any time by clearing
the BUSY bit in the CANIF1CRQ register while the CANIF1 registers are locked. If the CPU has
cleared the BUSY bit, a possible retransmission in case of lost arbitration or an error is disabled.
The CANIF2 Registers are used as a receive buffer. After the reception of a message, the contents
of the shift register is stored into the CANIF2 registers, without any acceptance filtering. Additionally,
the actual contents of the shift register can be monitored during the message transfer. Each time a
read message object is initiated by setting the BUSY bit of the CANIF2CRQ register, the contents
of the shift register are stored into the CANIF2 registers.
In Basic Mode, all message-object-related control and status bits and of the control bits of the
CANIFnCMSK registers are not evaluated. The message number of the CANIFnCRQ registers is
also not evaluated. In the CANIF2MCTL register, the NEWDAT and MSGLST bits retain their function,
the DLC[3:0] field shows the received DLC, the other control bits are cleared.
Basic Mode is enabled by setting the BASIC bit in the CANTST register.
12.3.13.5 Transmit Control
Software can directly override control of the CANnTX signal in four different ways.
■ CANnTX is controlled by the CAN Controller
■ The sample point is driven on the CANnTX signal to monitor the bit timing
■ CANnTX drives a low value
446
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
■ CANnTX drives a high value
The last two functions, combined with the readable CAN receive pin CANnRX, can be used to check
the physical layer of the CAN bus.
The Transmit Control function is enabled by programming the TX[1:0] field in the CANTST register.
The three test functions for the CANnTX signal interfere with all CAN protocol functions. TX[1:0]
must be cleared when CAN message transfer or Loopback Mode, Silent Mode, or Basic Mode are
selected.
12.3.14
Bit Timing Configuration Error Considerations
Even if minor errors in the configuration of the CAN bit timing do not result in immediate failure, the
performance of a CAN network can be reduced significantly. In many cases, the CAN bit
synchronization amends a faulty configuration of the CAN bit timing to such a degree that only
occasionally an error frame is generated. In the case of arbitration, however, when two or more
CAN nodes simultaneously try to transmit a frame, a misplaced sample point may cause one of the
transmitters to become error passive. The analysis of such sporadic errors requires a detailed
knowledge of the CAN bit synchronization inside a CAN node and of the CAN nodes' interaction on
the CAN bus.
12.3.15
Bit Time and Bit Rate
The CAN system supports bit rates in the range of lower than 1 Kbps up to 1000 Kbps. Each member
of the CAN network has its own clock generator. The timing parameter of the bit time can be
configured individually for each CAN node, creating a common bit rate even though the CAN nodes'
oscillator periods may be different.
Because of small variations in frequency caused by changes in temperature or voltage and by
deteriorating components, these oscillators are not absolutely stable. As long as the variations
remain inside a specific oscillator's tolerance range, the CAN nodes are able to compensate for the
different bit rates by periodically resynchronizing to the bit stream.
According to the CAN specification, the bit time is divided into four segments (see Figure
12-4 on page 448): the Synchronization Segment, the Propagation Time Segment, the Phase Buffer
Segment 1, and the Phase Buffer Segment 2. Each segment consists of a specific, programmable
number of time quanta (see Table 12-3 on page 448). The length of the time quantum (tq), which is
the basic time unit of the bit time, is defined by the CAN controller's input clock (fsys) and the Baud
Rate Prescaler (BRP):
tq = BRP / fsys
The fsys input clock is 8 MHz.
The Synchronization Segment Sync is that part of the bit time where edges of the CAN bus level
are expected to occur; the distance between an edge that occurs outside of Sync and the Sync is
called the phase error of that edge.
The Propagation Time Segment Prop is intended to compensate for the physical delay times within
the CAN network.
The Phase Buffer Segments Phase1 and Phase2 surround the Sample Point.
The (Re-)Synchronization Jump Width (SJW) defines how far a resynchronization may move the
Sample Point inside the limits defined by the Phase Buffer Segments to compensate for edge phase
errors.
June 18, 2012
447
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
A given bit rate may be met by different bit-time configurations, but for the proper function of the
CAN network, the physical delay times and the oscillator's tolerance range have to be considered.
Figure 12-4. CAN Bit Time
Nominal CAN Bit Time
a
b
TSEG1
Sync
Prop
TSEG2
Phase1
c
1 Time
Quantum
q)
(tq
Phase2
Sample
Point
a. TSEG1 = Prop + Phase1
b. TSEG2 = Phase2
c. Phase1 = Phase2 or Phase1 + 1 = Phase2
a
Table 12-3. CAN Protocol Ranges
Parameter
Range
Remark
BRP
[1 .. 64]
Defines the length of the time quantum tq. The CANBRPE register can
be used to extend the range to 1024.
Sync
1 tq
Fixed length, synchronization of bus input to system clock
Prop
[1 .. 8] tq
Compensates for the physical delay times
Phase1
[1 .. 8] tq
May be lengthened temporarily by synchronization
Phase2
[1 .. 8] tq
May be shortened temporarily by synchronization
SJW
[1 .. 4] tq
May not be longer than either Phase Buffer Segment
a. This table describes the minimum programmable ranges required by the CAN protocol.
The bit timing configuration is programmed in two register bytes in the CANBIT register. In the
CANBIT register, the four components TSEG2, TSEG1, SJW, and BRP have to be programmed to a
numerical value that is one less than its functional value; so instead of values in the range of [1..n],
values in the range of [0..n-1] are programmed. That way, for example, SJW (functional range of
[1..4]) is represented by only two bits in the SJW bit field. Table 12-4 shows the relationship between
the CANBIT register values and the parameters.
Table 12-4. CANBIT Register Values
CANBIT Register Field
Setting
TSEG2
Phase2 - 1
TSEG1
Prop + Phase1 - 1
SJW
SJW - 1
BRP
BRP
Therefore, the length of the bit time is (programmed values):
[TSEG1 + TSEG2 + 3] × tq
or (functional values):
448
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
[Sync + Prop + Phase1 + Phase2] × tq
The data in the CANBIT register is the configuration input of the CAN protocol controller. The baud
rate prescaler (configured by the BRP field) defines the length of the time quantum, the basic time
unit of the bit time; the bit timing logic (configured by TSEG1, TSEG2, and SJW) defines the number
of time quanta in the bit time.
The processing of the bit time, the calculation of the position of the sample point, and occasional
synchronizations are controlled by the CAN controller and are evaluated once per time quantum.
The CAN controller translates messages to and from frames. In addition, the controller generates
and discards the enclosing fixed format bits, inserts and extracts stuff bits, calculates and checks
the CRC code, performs the error management, and decides which type of synchronization is to be
used. The bit value is received or transmitted at the sample point. The information processing time
(IPT) is the time after the sample point needed to calculate the next bit to be transmitted on the CAN
bus. The IPT includes any of the following: retrieving the next data bit, handling a CRC bit, determining
if bit stuffing is required, generating an error flag or simply going idle.
The IPT is application-specific but may not be longer than 2 tq; the CAN's IPT is 0 tq. Its length is
the lower limit of the programmed length of Phase2. In case of synchronization, Phase2 may be
shortened to a value less than IPT, which does not affect bus timing.
12.3.16
Calculating the Bit Timing Parameters
Usually, the calculation of the bit timing configuration starts with a required bit rate or bit time. The
resulting bit time (1/bit rate) must be an integer multiple of the system clock period.
The bit time may consist of 4 to 25 time quanta. Several combinations may lead to the required bit
time, allowing iterations of the following steps.
The first part of the bit time to be defined is Prop. Its length depends on the delay times measured
in the system. A maximum bus length as well as a maximum node delay has to be defined for
expandable CAN bus systems. The resulting time for Prop is converted into time quanta (rounded
up to the nearest integer multiple of tq).
Sync is 1 tq long (fixed), which leaves (bit time - Prop - 1) tq for the two Phase Buffer Segments. If
the number of remaining tq is even, the Phase Buffer Segments have the same length, that is,
Phase2 = Phase1, else Phase2 = Phase1 + 1.
The minimum nominal length of Phase2 has to be regarded as well. Phase2 may not be shorter
than the CAN controller's Information Processing Time, which is, depending on the actual
implementation, in the range of [0..2] tq.
The length of the synchronization jump width is set to the least of 4, Phase1 or Phase2.
The oscillator tolerance range necessary for the resulting configuration is calculated by the formula
given below:
(1 − df ) × fnom ≤ fosc ≤ (1 + df ) × fnom
where:
df
≤
(Phase _ seg1, Phase _ seg2) min
2 × (13 × tbit − Phase _ Seg 2)
■ df = Maximum tolerance of oscillator frequency
■ fosc
Actual=oscillator
df =max
2 × dffrequency
× fnom
June 18, 2012
449
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
■ fnom = Nominal oscillator frequency
− )df
× fnom
≤ fosc
+ account
× the
fnom
frequency
tolerance
must
following formulas:
(Maximum
)df
1 −(1df
× )fnom
≤ fosc
≤ (take
1≤ +(1into
df
× )fnom
(Phase
_ seg
1, Phase
_ seg
2) min
(Phase
_ seg
1, Phase
_ seg
2) min
df df
≤ ≤ 2 × (13 × tbit − Phase _ Seg 2)
2 × (13 × tbit − Phase _ Seg 2)
× df
× fnom
df df
maxmax
= 2=× 2df
× fnom
where:
■ Phase1 and Phase2 are from Table 12-3 on page 448
■ tbit = Bit Time
■ dfmax = Maximum difference between two oscillators
If more than one configuration is possible, that configuration allowing the highest oscillator tolerance
range should be chosen.
CAN nodes with different system clocks require different configurations to come to the same bit
rate. The calculation of the propagation time in the CAN network, based on the nodes with the
longest delay times, is done once for the whole network.
The CAN system's oscillator tolerance range is limited by the node with the lowest tolerance range.
The calculation may show that bus length or bit rate have to be decreased or that the oscillator
frequencies' stability has to be increased in order to find a protocol-compliant configuration of the
CAN bit timing.
12.3.16.1 Example for Bit Timing at High Baud Rate
In this example, the frequency of CAN clock is 8 MHz, and the bit rate is 1 Mbps.
bit time = 1 µs = n * tq = 8 *
tq = 125 ns
tq = (Baud rate Prescaler)/CAN
Baud rate Prescaler = tq * CAN
Baud rate Prescaler = 125E-9 *
tq
Clock
Clock
8E6 = 1
tSync = 1 * tq = 125 ns
\\fixed at 1 time quanta
delay
delay
delay
tProp
\\375 is next integer multiple of tq
of bus driver 50 ns
of receiver circuit 30 ns
of bus line (40m) 220 ns
375 ns = 3 * tq
bit time
bit time
tPhase 1
tPhase 1
tPhase 1
=
=
+
+
+
tSync +
tSync +
tPhase2
tPhase2
tPhase2
tTSeg1 + tTSeg2 = 8 * tq
tProp + tPhase 1 + tPhase2
= bit time - tSync - tProp
= (8 * tq) - (1 * tq) - (3 * tq)
= 4 * tq
450
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
tPhase1 = 2 * tq
tPhase2 = 2 * tq
tTSeg1
tTSeg1
tTSeg1
tTSeg2
tTSeg2
tTSeg2
=
=
=
=
=
=
\\tPhase2 = tPhase1
tProp + tPhase1
(3 * tq) + (2 * tq)
5 * tq
tPhase2
(Information Processing Time + 2) × tq
2 * tq
\\Assumes IPT=0
tSJW = 2 * tq
\\Least of 4, Phase1 and Phase2 = 1
In the above example, the bit field values for the CANBIT register are:
= TSeg2 -1
TSEG2
= 2-1
=1
= TSeg1 -1
TSEG1
= 5-1
=4
= SJW -1
SJW
= 2-1
=1
= Baud rate prescaler - 1
BRP
= 1-1
=0
The final value programmed into the CANBIT register = 0x1440.
12.3.16.2 Example for Bit Timing at Low Baud Rate
In this example, the frequency of the CAN clock is 8 MHz, and the bit rate is 100 Kbps.
bit time = 10 µs = n * tq = 10 * tq
tq = 1 µs
tq = (Baud rate Prescaler)/CAN Clock
Baud rate Prescaler = tq * CAN Clock
Baud rate Prescaler = 1E-6 * 8E6 = 8
tSync = 1 * tq = 1 µs
\\fixed at 1 time quanta
delay
delay
delay
tProp
\\1 µs is next integer multiple of tq
of bus driver 200 ns
of receiver circuit 80 ns
of bus line (40m) 220 ns
1 µs = 1 * tq
bit time = tSync +
bit time = tSync +
tPhase 1 + tPhase2
tPhase 1 + tPhase2
tPhase 1 + tPhase2
tPhase1 = 4 * tq
tTSeg1 + tTSeg2 = 10 * tq
tProp + tPhase 1 + tPhase2
= bit time - tSync - tProp
= (10 * tq) - (1 * tq) - (1 * tq)
= 8 * tq
June 18, 2012
451
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
tPhase2 = 4 * tq
tTSeg1
tTSeg1
tTSeg1
tTSeg2
tTSeg2
tTSeg2
=
=
=
=
=
=
\\tPhase2 = tPhase1
tProp + tPhase1
(1 * tq) + (4 * tq)
5 * tq
tPhase2
(Information Processing Time + 4) * tq
4 * tq
\\Assumes IPT=0
tSJW = 4 * tq
\\Least of 4, Phase1, and Phase2
= TSeg2 -1
TSEG2
= 4-1
=3
= TSeg1 -1
TSEG1
= 5-1
=4
= SJW -1
SJW
= 4-1
=3
= Baud rate prescaler - 1
BRP
= 8-1
=7
The final value programmed into the CANBIT register = 0x34C7.
12.4
Register Map
Table 12-5 on page 452 lists the registers. All addresses given are relative to the CAN base address
of:
■ CAN0: 0x4004.0000
Note that the CAN module clock must be enabled before the registers can be programmed (see
page 199). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the CAN module clock is enabled before
any CAN module registers are accessed.
Table 12-5. CAN Register Map
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
Description
See
page
0x000
CANCTL
R/W
0x0000.0001
CAN Control
455
0x004
CANSTS
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN Status
457
0x008
CANERR
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Error Counter
459
0x00C
CANBIT
R/W
0x0000.2301
CAN Bit Timing
460
0x010
CANINT
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Interrupt
461
0x014
CANTST
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN Test
462
0x018
CANBRPE
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN Baud Rate Prescaler Extension
464
452
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 12-5. CAN Register Map (continued)
Description
See
page
Offset
Name
Type
Reset
0x020
CANIF1CRQ
R/W
0x0000.0001
CAN IF1 Command Request
465
0x024
CANIF1CMSK
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Command Mask
466
0x028
CANIF1MSK1
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
CAN IF1 Mask 1
468
0x02C
CANIF1MSK2
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
CAN IF1 Mask 2
469
0x030
CANIF1ARB1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Arbitration 1
470
0x034
CANIF1ARB2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Arbitration 2
471
0x038
CANIF1MCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Message Control
473
0x03C
CANIF1DA1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Data A1
475
0x040
CANIF1DA2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Data A2
475
0x044
CANIF1DB1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Data B1
475
0x048
CANIF1DB2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF1 Data B2
475
0x080
CANIF2CRQ
R/W
0x0000.0001
CAN IF2 Command Request
465
0x084
CANIF2CMSK
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Command Mask
466
0x088
CANIF2MSK1
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
CAN IF2 Mask 1
468
0x08C
CANIF2MSK2
R/W
0x0000.FFFF
CAN IF2 Mask 2
469
0x090
CANIF2ARB1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Arbitration 1
470
0x094
CANIF2ARB2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Arbitration 2
471
0x098
CANIF2MCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Message Control
473
0x09C
CANIF2DA1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Data A1
475
0x0A0
CANIF2DA2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Data A2
475
0x0A4
CANIF2DB1
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Data B1
475
0x0A8
CANIF2DB2
R/W
0x0000.0000
CAN IF2 Data B2
475
0x100
CANTXRQ1
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Transmission Request 1
476
0x104
CANTXRQ2
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Transmission Request 2
476
0x120
CANNWDA1
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN New Data 1
477
0x124
CANNWDA2
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN New Data 2
477
0x140
CANMSG1INT
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Message 1 Interrupt Pending
478
0x144
CANMSG2INT
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Message 2 Interrupt Pending
478
0x160
CANMSG1VAL
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Message 1 Valid
479
0x164
CANMSG2VAL
RO
0x0000.0000
CAN Message 2 Valid
479
June 18, 2012
453
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
12.5
CAN Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the CAN registers, in numerical order by address
offset. There are two sets of Interface Registers that are used to access the Message Objects in
the Message RAM: CANIF1x and CANIF2x. The function of the two sets are identical and are used
to queue transactions.
454
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: CAN Control (CANCTL), offset 0x000
This control register initializes the module and enables test mode and interrupts.
The bus-off recovery sequence (see CAN Specification Rev. 2.0) cannot be shortened by setting
or clearing INIT. If the device goes bus-off, it sets INIT, stopping all bus activities. Once INIT
has been cleared by the CPU, the device then waits for 129 occurrences of Bus Idle (129 * 11
consecutive High bits) before resuming normal operations. At the end of the bus-off recovery
sequence, the Error Management Counters are reset.
During the waiting time after INIT is cleared, each time a sequence of 11 High bits has been
monitored, a BITERROR0 code is written to the CANSTS register (the LEC field = 0x5), enabling
the CPU to readily check whether the CAN bus is stuck Low or continuously disturbed, and to monitor
the proceeding of the bus-off recovery sequence.
CAN Control (CANCTL)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TEST
CCE
DAR
reserved
EIE
SIE
IE
INIT
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
7
TEST
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Test Mode Enable
0: Normal operation
1: Test mode
6
CCE
R/W
0
Configuration Change Enable
0: Do not allow write access to the CANBIT register.
1: Allow write access to the CANBIT register if the INIT bit is 1.
5
DAR
R/W
0
Disable Automatic-Retransmission
0: Auto-retransmission of disturbed messages is enabled.
1: Auto-retransmission is disabled.
4
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3
EIE
R/W
0
Error Interrupt Enable
0: Disabled. No error status interrupt is generated.
1: Enabled. A change in the BOFF or EWARN bits in the CANSTS register
generates an interrupt.
June 18, 2012
455
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
2
SIE
R/W
0
Description
Status Interrupt Enable
0: Disabled. No status interrupt is generated.
1: Enabled. An interrupt is generated when a message has successfully
been transmitted or received, or a CAN bus error has been detected. A
change in the TXOK, RXOK or LEC bits in the CANSTS register generates
an interrupt.
1
IE
R/W
0
CAN Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupts disabled.
1: Interrupts enabled.
0
INIT
R/W
1
Initialization
0: Normal operation.
1: Initialization started.
456
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 2: CAN Status (CANSTS), offset 0x004
Important: This register is read-sensitive. See the register description for details.
The status register contains information for interrupt servicing such as Bus-Off, error count threshold,
and error types.
The LEC field holds the code that indicates the type of the last error to occur on the CAN bus. This
field is cleared when a message has been transferred (reception or transmission) without error. The
unused error code 7 may be written by the CPU to manually set this field to an invalid error so that
it can be checked for a change later.
An error interrupt is generated by the BOFF and EWARN bits and a status interrupt is generated by
the RXOK, TXOK, and LEC bits, if the corresponding enable bits in the CAN Control (CANCTL)
register are set. A change of the EPASS bit or a write to the RXOK, TXOK, or LEC bits does not
generate an interrupt.
Reading the CAN Status (CANSTS) register clears the CAN Interrupt (CANINT) register, if it is
pending.
CAN Status (CANSTS)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x004
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BOFF
EWARN
EPASS
RXOK
TXOK
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
7
BOFF
RO
0
LEC
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Bus-Off Status
0: CAN controller is not in bus-off state.
1: CAN controller is in bus-off state.
6
EWARN
RO
0
Warning Status
0: Both error counters are below the error warning limit of 96.
1: At least one of the error counters has reached the error warning limit
of 96.
5
EPASS
RO
0
Error Passive
0: The CAN module is in the Error Active state, that is, the receive or
transmit error count is less than or equal to 127.
1: The CAN module is in the Error Passive state, that is, the receive or
transmit error count is greater than 127.
June 18, 2012
457
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
4
RXOK
R/W
0
Description
Received a Message Successfully
0: Since this bit was last cleared, no message has been successfully
received.
1: Since this bit was last cleared, a message has been successfully
received, independent of the result of the acceptance filtering.
This bit is never cleared by the CAN module.
3
TXOK
R/W
0
Transmitted a Message Successfully
0: Since this bit was last cleared, no message has been successfully
transmitted.
1: Since this bit was last cleared, a message has been successfully
transmitted error-free and acknowledged by at least one other node.
This bit is never cleared by the CAN module.
2:0
LEC
R/W
0x0
Last Error Code
This is the type of the last error to occur on the CAN bus.
Value
Definition
0x0
No Error
0x1
Stuff Error
More than 5 equal bits in a sequence have occurred in a part
of a received message where this is not allowed.
0x2
Format Error
A fixed format part of the received frame has the wrong
format.
0x3
ACK Error
The message transmitted was not acknowledged by another
node.
0x4
Bit 1 Error
When a message is transmitted, the CAN controller monitors
the data lines to detect any conflicts. When the arbitration
field is transmitted, data conflicts are a part of the arbitration
protocol. When other frame fields are transmitted, data
conflicts are considered errors.
A Bit 1 Error indicates that the device wanted to send a High
level (logical 1) but the monitored bus value was Low (logical
0).
0x5
Bit 0 Error
A Bit 0 Error indicates that the device wanted to send a Low
level (logical 0), but the monitored bus value was High (logical
1).
During bus-off recovery, this status is set each time a
sequence of 11 High bits has been monitored. This enables
the CPU to monitor the proceeding of the bus-off recovery
sequence without any disturbances to the bus.
0x6
CRC Error
The CRC checksum was incorrect in the received message,
indicating that the calculated value received did not match
the calculated CRC of the data.
0x7
No Event
When the LEC bit shows this value, no CAN bus event was
detected since the CPU wrote this value to LEC.
458
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: CAN Error Counter (CANERR), offset 0x008
This register contains the error counter values, which can be used to analyze the cause of an error.
CAN Error Counter (CANERR)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x008
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RP
Type
Reset
RO
0
REC
TEC
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
15
RP
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Received Error Passive
0: The Receive Error counter is below the Error Passive level (127 or
less).
1: The Receive Error counter has reached the Error Passive level (128
or greater).
14:8
REC
RO
0x00
Receive Error Counter
State of the receiver error counter (0 to 127).
7:0
TEC
RO
0x00
Transmit Error Counter
State of the transmit error counter (0 to 255).
June 18, 2012
459
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 4: CAN Bit Timing (CANBIT), offset 0x00C
This register is used to program the bit width and bit quantum. Values are programmed to the system
clock frequency. This register is write-enabled by setting the CCE and INIT bits in the CANCTL
register. See “Bit Time and Bit Rate” on page 447 for more information.
CAN Bit Timing (CANBIT)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x00C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.2301
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
TSEG2
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
TSEG1
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:15
reserved
RO
0x0000
14:12
TSEG2
R/W
0x2
SJW
BRP
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Time Segment after Sample Point
0x00-0x07: The actual interpretation by the hardware of this value is
such that one more than the value programmed here is used.
So, for example, a reset value of 0x2 defines that there is 3 (2+1) bit
time quanta defined for Phase_Seg2 (see Figure 12-4 on page 448).
The bit time quanta is defined by the BRP field.
11:8
TSEG1
R/W
0x3
Time Segment Before Sample Point
0x00-0x0F: The actual interpretation by the hardware of this value is
such that one more than the value programmed here is used.
So, for example, the reset value of 0x3 defines that there is 4 (3+1) bit
time quanta defined for Phase_Seg1 (see Figure 12-4 on page 448).
The bit time quanta is define by the BRP field.
7:6
SJW
R/W
0x0
(Re)Synchronization Jump Width
0x00-0x03: The actual interpretation by the hardware of this value is
such that one more than the value programmed here is used.
During the start of frame (SOF), if the CAN controller detects a phase
error (misalignment), it can adjust the length of TSEG2 or TSEG1 by the
value in SJW. So the reset value of 0 adjusts the length by 1 bit time
quanta.
5:0
BRP
R/W
0x1
Baud Rate Prescaler
The value by which the oscillator frequency is divided for generating the
bit time quanta. The bit time is built up from a multiple of this quantum.
0x00-0x03F: The actual interpretation by the hardware of this value is
such that one more than the value programmed here is used.
BRP defines the number of CAN clock periods that make up 1 bit time
quanta, so the reset value is 2 bit time quanta (1+1).
The CANBRPE register can be used to further divide the bit time.
460
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: CAN Interrupt (CANINT), offset 0x010
This register indicates the source of the interrupt.
If several interrupts are pending, the CAN Interrupt (CANINT) register points to the pending interrupt
with the highest priority, disregarding the order in which the interrupts occurred. An interrupt remains
pending until the CPU has cleared it. If the INTID field is not 0x0000 (the default) and the IE bit in
the CANCTL register is set, the interrupt is active. The interrupt line remains active until the INTID
field is cleared by reading the CANSTS register, or until the IE bit in the CANCTL register is cleared.
Note:
Reading the CAN Status (CANSTS) register clears the CAN Interrupt (CANINT) register,
if it is pending.
CAN Interrupt (CANINT)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x010
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
INTID
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
INTID
RO
0x0000
Interrupt Identifier
The number in this field indicates the source of the interrupt.
Value
Definition
0x0000
No interrupt pending
0x0001-0x0020
Number of the message object that
caused the interrupt
0x0021-0x7FFF
Reserved
0x8000
Status Interrupt
0x8001-0xFFFF
Reserved
June 18, 2012
461
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 6: CAN Test (CANTST), offset 0x014
This is the test mode register for self-test and external pin access. It is write-enabled by setting the
TEST bit in the CANCTL register. Different test functions may be combined, however, CAN transfers
will be affected if the TX bits in this register are not zero.
CAN Test (CANTST)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x014
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
LBACK
SILENT
BASIC
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RX
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
7
RX
RO
0
TX
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Receive Observation
Displays the value on the CANnRx pin.
6:5
TX
R/W
0x0
Transmit Control
Overrides control of the CANnTx pin.
Value
Description
0x0
CAN Module Control
CANnTx is controlled by the CAN module; default
operation
0x1
Sample Point
The sample point is driven on the CANnTx signal. This
mode is useful to monitor bit timing.
0x2
Driven Low
CANnTx drives a low value. This mode is useful for
checking the physical layer of the CAN bus.
0x3
Driven High
CANnTx drives a high value. This mode is useful for
checking the physical layer of the CAN bus.
4
LBACK
R/W
0
Loopback Mode
0: Disabled.
1: Enabled. In loopback mode, the data from the transmitter is routed
into the receiver. Any data on the receive input is ignored.
462
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
3
SILENT
R/W
0
Silent Mode
Do not transmit data; monitor the bus. Also known as Bus Monitor mode.
0: Disabled.
1: Enabled.
2
BASIC
R/W
0
Basic Mode
0: Disabled.
1: Use CANIF1 registers as transmit buffer, and use CANIF2 registers
as receive buffer.
1:0
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
463
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 7: CAN Baud Rate Prescaler Extension (CANBRPE), offset 0x018
This register is used to further divide the bit time set with the BRP bit in the CANBIT register. It is
write-enabled by setting the CCE bit in the CANCTL register.
CAN Baud Rate Prescaler Extension (CANBRPE)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x018
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:4
reserved
RO
0x0000.000
3:0
BRPE
R/W
0x0
BRPE
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Baud Rate Prescaler Extension
0x00-0x0F: Extend the BRP bit in the CANBIT register to values up to
1023. The actual interpretation by the hardware is one more than the
value programmed by BRPE (MSBs) and BRP (LSBs).
464
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 8: CAN IF1 Command Request (CANIF1CRQ), offset 0x020
Register 9: CAN IF2 Command Request (CANIF2CRQ), offset 0x080
A message transfer is started as soon as there is a write of the message object number to the MNUM
field when the TXRQST bit in the CANIF1MCTL register is set. With this write operation, the BUSY
bit is automatically set to indicate that a transfer between the CAN Interface Registers and the
internal message RAM is in progress. After a wait time of 3 to 6 CAN_CLK periods, the transfer
between the interface register and the message RAM completes, which then clears the BUSY bit.
CAN IF1 Command Request (CANIF1CRQ)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x020
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0001
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
BUSY
Type
Reset
RO
0
reserved
RO
0
MNUM
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
15
BUSY
RO
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Busy Flag
0: Cleared when read/write action has finished.
1: Set when a write occurs to the message number in this register.
14:6
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
5:0
MNUM
R/W
0x01
Message Number
Selects one of the 32 message objects in the message RAM for data
transfer. The message objects are numbered from 1 to 32.
Value
Description
0x00
Reserved
0 is not a valid message number; it is interpreted
as 0x20, or object 32.
0x01-0x20
Message Number
Indicates specified message object 1 to 32.
0x21-0x3F
Reserved
Not a valid message number; values are shifted and
it is interpreted as 0x01-0x1F.
June 18, 2012
465
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 10: CAN IF1 Command Mask (CANIF1CMSK), offset 0x024
Register 11: CAN IF2 Command Mask (CANIF2CMSK), offset 0x084
Reading the Command Mask registers provides status for various functions. Writing to the Command
Mask registers specifies the transfer direction and selects which buffer registers are the source or
target of the data transfer.
Note that when a read from the message object buffer occurs when the WRNRD bit is clear and the
CLRINTPND and/or NEWDAT bits are set, the interrupt pending and/or new data flags in the message
object buffer are cleared.
CAN IF1 Command Mask (CANIF1CMSK)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x024
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
2
1
0
DATAA
DATAB
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:8
reserved
RO
0x0000.00
7
WRNRD
R/W
0
WRNRD
MASK
ARB
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
CONTROL CLRINTPND
R/W
0
R/W
0
NEWDAT /
TXRQST
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Write, Not Read
Transfer the message object address specified by the CAN Command
Request (CANIFnCRQ) register to the CAN message buffer registers.
Note:
6
MASK
R/W
0
Interrupt pending and new data conditions in the message
buffer can be cleared by reading from the buffer (WRNRD = 0)
when the CLRINTPND and/or NEWDAT bits are set.
Access Mask Bits
0: Mask bits unchanged.
1: Transfer IDMASK + DIR + MXTD of the message object into the
Interface registers.
5
ARB
R/W
0
Access Arbitration Bits
0: Arbitration bits unchanged.
1: Transfer ID + DIR + XTD + MSGVAL of the message object into the
Interface registers.
4
CONTROL
R/W
0
Access Control Bits
0: Control bits unchanged.
1: Transfer control bits from the CANIFnMCTL register into the Interface
registers.
466
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
3
CLRINTPND
R/W
0
Description
Clear Interrupt Pending Bit
If WRNRD is set, this bit controls whether the INTPND bit in the
CANIFnMCTL register is changed.
0: The INTPND bit in the message object remains unchanged.
1: The INTPND bit is cleared in the message object.
If WRNRD is clear and this bit is clear, the interrupt pending status is
transferred from the message buffer into the CANIFnMCTL register.
If WRNRD is clear and this bit is set, the interrupt pending status is cleared
in the message buffer. Note that the value of this bit that is transferred
to the CANIFnMCTL register always reflects the status of the bits before
clearing.
2
NEWDAT / TXRQST
R/W
0
NEWDAT / TXRQST Bit
If WRNRD is set, this bit can act as a TXRQST bit and request a
transmission. Note that when this bit is set, the TXRQST bit in the
CANIFnMCTL register is ignored.
0: Transmission is not requested
1: Begin a transmission
If WRNRD is clear and this bit is clear, the value of the new data status
is transferred from the message buffer into the CANIFnMCTL register.
If WRNRD is clear and this bit is set, the new data status is cleared in the
message buffer. Note that the value of this bit that is transferred to the
CANIFnMCTL register always reflects the status of the bits before
clearing.
1
DATAA
R/W
0
Access Data Byte 0 to 3
When WRNRD = 1:
0: Data bytes 0-3 are unchanged.
1: Transfer data bytes 0-3 in message object to CANIFnDA1 and
CANIFnDA2.
When WRNRD = 0:
0: Data bytes 0-3 are unchanged.
1: Transfer data bytes 0-3 in CANIFnDA1 and CANIFnDA2 to the
message object.
0
DATAB
R/W
0
Access Data Byte 4 to 7
When WRNRD = 1:
0: Data bytes 4-7 are unchanged.
1: Transfer data bytes 4-7 in message object to CANIFnDB1 and
CANIFnDB2.
When WRNRD = 0:
0: Data bytes 4-7 are unchanged.
1: Transfer data bytes 4-7 in CANIFnDB1 and CANIFnDB2 to the
message object.
June 18, 2012
467
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 12: CAN IF1 Mask 1 (CANIF1MSK1), offset 0x028
Register 13: CAN IF2 Mask 1 (CANIF2MSK1), offset 0x088
The mask information provided in this register accompanies the data (CANIFnDAn), arbitration
information (CANIFnARBn), and control information (CANIFnMCTL) to the message object in the
message RAM. The mask is used with the ID bit in the CANIFnARBn register for acceptance
filtering. Additional mask information is contained in the CANIFnMSK2 register.
CAN IF1 Mask 1 (CANIF1MSK1)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x028
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
MSK
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
MSK
R/W
0xFFFF
Identifier Mask
When using a 29-bit identifier, these bits are used for bits [15:0] of the
ID. The MSK field in the CANIFnMSK2 register are used for bits [28:16]
of the ID. When using an 11-bit identifier, these bits are ignored.
0: The corresponding identifier field (ID) in the message object cannot
inhibit the match in acceptance filtering.
1: The corresponding identifier field (ID) is used for acceptance filtering.
468
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 14: CAN IF1 Mask 2 (CANIF1MSK2), offset 0x02C
Register 15: CAN IF2 Mask 2 (CANIF2MSK2), offset 0x08C
This register holds extended mask information that accompanies the CANIFnMSK1 register.
CAN IF1 Mask 2 (CANIF1MSK2)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x02C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.FFFF
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
MXTD
MDIR
reserved
R/W
1
R/W
1
RO
1
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
R/W
1
reserved
Type
Reset
Type
Reset
MSK
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
15
MXTD
R/W
0x1
R/W
1
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Mask Extended Identifier
0: The extended identifier bit (XTD in the CANIFnARB2 register) has
no effect on the acceptance filtering.
1: The extended identifier bit XTD is used for acceptance filtering.
14
MDIR
R/W
0x1
Mask Message Direction
0: The message direction bit (DIR in the CANIFnARB2 register) has
no effect for acceptance filtering.
1: The message direction bit DIR is used for acceptance filtering.
13
reserved
RO
0x1
12:0
MSK
R/W
0xFF
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Identifier Mask
When using a 29-bit identifier, these bits are used for bits [28:16] of the
ID. The MSK field in the CANIFnMSK1 register are used for bits [15:0]
of the ID. When using an 11-bit identifier, MSK[12:2] are used for bits
[10:0] of the ID.
0: The corresponding identifier field (ID) in the message object cannot
inhibit the match in acceptance filtering.
1: The corresponding identifier field (ID) is used for acceptance filtering.
June 18, 2012
469
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 16: CAN IF1 Arbitration 1 (CANIF1ARB1), offset 0x030
Register 17: CAN IF2 Arbitration 1 (CANIF2ARB1), offset 0x090
These registers hold the identifiers for acceptance filtering.
CAN IF1 Arbitration 1 (CANIF1ARB1)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x030
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
ID
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
ID
R/W
0x0000
Message Identifier
This bit field is used with the ID field in the CANIFnARB2 register to
create the message identifier.
When using a 29-bit identifier, bits 15:0 of the CANIFnARB1 register
are [15:0] of the ID, while bits 12:0 of the CANIFnARB2 register are
[28:16] of the ID.
When using an 11-bit identifier, these bits are not used.
470
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 18: CAN IF1 Arbitration 2 (CANIF1ARB2), offset 0x034
Register 19: CAN IF2 Arbitration 2 (CANIF2ARB2), offset 0x094
These registers hold information for acceptance filtering.
CAN IF1 Arbitration 2 (CANIF1ARB2)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x034
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
MSGVAL
XTD
DIR
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
Type
Reset
ID
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
15
MSGVAL
R/W
0
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
Message Valid
0: The message object is ignored by the message handler.
1: The message object is configured and ready to be considered by the
message handler within the CAN controller.
All unused message objects should have this bit cleared during
initialization and before clearing the INIT bit in the CANCTL register.
The MSGVAL bit must also be cleared before any of the following bits
are modified or if the message object is no longer required: the ID fields
in the CANIFnARBn registers, the XTD and DIR bits in the CANIFnARB2
register, or the DLC field in the CANIFnMCTL register.
14
XTD
R/W
0
Extended Identifier
0: An 11-bit Standard Identifier is used for this message object.
1: A 29-bit Extended Identifier is used for this message object.
13
DIR
R/W
0
Message Direction
0: Receive. When the TXRQST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set,
a remote frame with the identifier of this message object is received.
On reception of a data frame with matching identifier, that message is
stored in this message object.
1: Transmit. When the TXRQST bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set,
the respective message object is transmitted as a data frame. On
reception of a remote frame with matching identifier, the TXRQST bit of
this message object is set (if RMTEN=1).
June 18, 2012
471
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
12:0
ID
R/W
0x000
Message Identifier
This bit field is used with the ID field in the CANIFnARB2 register to
create the message identifier.
When using a 29-bit identifier, ID[15:0] of the CANIFnARB1 register
are [15:0] of the ID, while these bits, ID[12:0], are [28:16] of the ID.
When using an 11-bit identifier, ID[12:2] are used for bits [10:0] of
the ID. The ID field in the CANIFnARB1 register is ignored.
472
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 20: CAN IF1 Message Control (CANIF1MCTL), offset 0x038
Register 21: CAN IF2 Message Control (CANIF2MCTL), offset 0x098
This register holds the control information associated with the message object to be sent to the
Message RAM.
CAN IF1 Message Control (CANIF1MCTL)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x038
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
UMASK
TXIE
RXIE
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RMTEN
TXRQST
EOB
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
NEWDAT MSGLST INTPND
Type
Reset
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
15
NEWDAT
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
DLC
Description
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
New Data
0: No new data has been written into the data portion of this message
object by the message handler since the last time this flag was cleared
by the CPU.
1: The message handler or the CPU has written new data into the data
portion of this message object.
14
MSGLST
R/W
0
Message Lost
0 : No message was lost since the last time this bit was cleared by the
CPU.
1: The message handler stored a new message into this object when
NEWDAT was set; the CPU has lost a message.
This bit is only valid for message objects when the DIR bit in the
CANIFnARB2 register clear (receive).
13
INTPND
R/W
0
Interrupt Pending
0: This message object is not the source of an interrupt.
1: This message object is the source of an interrupt. The interrupt
identifier in the CANINT register points to this message object if there
is not another interrupt source with a higher priority.
12
UMASK
R/W
0
Use Acceptance Mask
0: Mask ignored.
1: Use mask (MSK, MXTD, and MDIR bits in the CANIFnMSKn registers)
for acceptance filtering.
June 18, 2012
473
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
11
TXIE
R/W
0
Description
Transmit Interrupt Enable
0: The INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is unchanged after a
successful transmission of a frame.
1: The INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set after a successful
transmission of a frame.
10
RXIE
R/W
0
Receive Interrupt Enable
0: The INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is unchanged after a
successful reception of a frame.
1: The INTPND bit in the CANIFnMCTL register is set after a successful
reception of a frame.
9
RMTEN
R/W
0
Remote Enable
0: At the reception of a remote frame, the TXRQST bit in the
CANIFnMCTL register is left unchanged.
1: At the reception of a remote frame, the TXRQST bit in the
CANIFnMCTL register is set.
8
TXRQST
R/W
0
Transmit Request
0: This message object is not waiting for transmission.
1: The transmission of this message object is requested and is not yet
done.
7
EOB
R/W
0
End of Buffer
0: Message object belongs to a FIFO Buffer and is not the last message
object of that FIFO Buffer.
1: Single message object or last message object of a FIFO Buffer.
This bit is used to concatenate two or more message objects (up to 32)
to build a FIFO buffer. For a single message object (thus not belonging
to a FIFO buffer), this bit must be set.
6:4
reserved
RO
0x0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3:0
DLC
R/W
0x0
Data Length Code
Value
Description
0x0-0x8
Specifies the number of bytes in the data frame.
0x9-0xF
Defaults to a data frame with 8 bytes.
The DLC field in the CANIFnMCTL register of a message object must
be defined the same as in all the corresponding objects with the same
identifier at other nodes. When the message handler stores a data frame,
it writes DLC to the value given by the received message.
474
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 22: CAN IF1 Data A1 (CANIF1DA1), offset 0x03C
Register 23: CAN IF1 Data A2 (CANIF1DA2), offset 0x040
Register 24: CAN IF1 Data B1 (CANIF1DB1), offset 0x044
Register 25: CAN IF1 Data B2 (CANIF1DB2), offset 0x048
Register 26: CAN IF2 Data A1 (CANIF2DA1), offset 0x09C
Register 27: CAN IF2 Data A2 (CANIF2DA2), offset 0x0A0
Register 28: CAN IF2 Data B1 (CANIF2DB1), offset 0x0A4
Register 29: CAN IF2 Data B2 (CANIF2DB2), offset 0x0A8
These registers contain the data to be sent or that has been received. In a CAN data frame, data
byte 0 is the first byte to be transmitted or received and data byte 7 is the last byte to be transmitted
or received. In CAN's serial bit stream, the MSB of each byte is transmitted first.
CAN IF1 Data A1 (CANIF1DA1)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x03C
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
DATA
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
DATA
R/W
0x0000
Data
The CANIFnDA1 registers contain data bytes 1 and 0; CANIFnDA2
data bytes 3 and 2; CANIFnDB1 data bytes 5 and 4; and CANIFnDB2
data bytes 7 and 6.
June 18, 2012
475
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 30: CAN Transmission Request 1 (CANTXRQ1), offset 0x100
Register 31: CAN Transmission Request 2 (CANTXRQ2), offset 0x104
The CANTXRQ1 and CANTXRQ2 registers hold the TXRQST bits of the 32 message objects. By
reading out these bits, the CPU can check which message object has a transmission request pending.
The TXRQST bit of a specific message object can be changed by three sources: (1) the CPU via the
CANIFnMCTL register, (2) the message handler state machine after the reception of a remote
frame, or (3) the message handler state machine after a successful transmission.
The CANTXRQ1 register contains the TXRQST bits of the first 16 message objects in the message
RAM; the CANTXRQ2 register contains the TXRQST bits of the second 16 message objects.
CAN Transmission Request 1 (CANTXRQ1)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x100
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
TXRQST
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
TXRQST
RO
0x0000
Transmission Request Bits
0: The corresponding message object is not waiting for transmission.
1: The transmission of the corresponding message object is requested
and is not yet done.
476
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 32: CAN New Data 1 (CANNWDA1), offset 0x120
Register 33: CAN New Data 2 (CANNWDA2), offset 0x124
The CANNWDA1 and CANNWDA2 registers hold the NEWDAT bits of the 32 message objects. By
reading these bits, the CPU can check which message object has its data portion updated. The
NEWDAT bit of a specific message object can be changed by three sources: (1) the CPU via the
CANIFnMCTL register, (2) the message handler state machine after the reception of a data frame,
or (3) the message handler state machine after a successful transmission.
The CANNWDA1 register contains the NEWDAT bits of the first 16 message objects in the message
RAM; the CANNWDA2 register contains the NEWDAT bits of the second 16 message objects.
CAN New Data 1 (CANNWDA1)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x120
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
NEWDAT
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
NEWDAT
RO
0x0000
New Data Bits
0: No new data has been written into the data portion of the
corresponding message object by the message handler since the last
time this flag was cleared by the CPU.
1: The message handler or the CPU has written new data into the data
portion of the corresponding message object.
June 18, 2012
477
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
Register 34: CAN Message 1 Interrupt Pending (CANMSG1INT), offset 0x140
Register 35: CAN Message 2 Interrupt Pending (CANMSG2INT), offset 0x144
The CANMSG1INT and CANMSG2INT registers hold the INTPND bits of the 32 message objects.
By reading these bits, the CPU can check which message object has an interrupt pending. The
INTPND bit of a specific message object can be changed through two sources: (1) the CPU via the
CANIFnMCTL register, or (2) the message handler state machine after the reception or transmission
of a frame.
This field is also encoded in the CANINT register.
The CANMSG1INT register contains the INTPND bits of the first 16 message objects in the message
RAM; the CANMSG2INT register contains the INTPND bits of the second 16 message objects.
CAN Message 1 Interrupt Pending (CANMSG1INT)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x140
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
INTPND
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
INTPND
RO
0x0000
Interrupt Pending Bits
0: The corresponding message object is not the source of an interrupt.
1: The corresponding message object is the source of an interrupt.
478
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 36: CAN Message 1 Valid (CANMSG1VAL), offset 0x160
Register 37: CAN Message 2 Valid (CANMSG2VAL), offset 0x164
The CANMSG1VAL and CANMSG2VAL registers hold the MSGVAL bits of the 32 message objects.
By reading these bits, the CPU can check which message object is valid. The message value of a
specific message object can be changed with the CANIFnMCTL register.
The CANMSG1VAL register contains the MSGVAL bits of the first 16 message objects in the message
RAM; the CANMSG2VAL register contains the MSGVAL bits of the second 16 message objects in
the message RAM.
CAN Message 1 Valid (CANMSG1VAL)
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
Offset 0x160
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
MSGVAL
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:16
reserved
RO
0x0000
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
15:0
MSGVAL
RO
0x0000
Message Valid Bits
0: The corresponding message object is not configured and is ignored
by the message handler.
1: The corresponding message object is configured and should be
considered by the message handler.
June 18, 2012
479
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
13
Analog Comparators
An analog comparator is a peripheral that compares two analog voltages, and provides a logical
output that signals the comparison result.
Note:
Not all comparators have the option to drive an output pin.
The comparator can provide its output to a device pin, acting as a replacement for an analog
comparator on the board, or it can be used to signal the application via interrupts to cause it to start
capturing a sample sequence.
®
The Stellaris Analog Comparators module has the following features:
■ Two independent integrated analog comparators
■ Configurable for output to drive an output pin or generate an interrupt
■ Compare external pin input to external pin input or to internal programmable voltage reference
■ Compare a test voltage against any one of these voltages
– An individual external reference voltage
– A shared single external reference voltage
– A shared internal reference voltage
13.1
Block Diagram
Figure 13-1. Analog Comparator Module Block Diagram
C1-
-ve input
C1+
+ve input
Comparator 1
output
C1o
+ve input (alternate)
ACCTL1
ACSTAT1
interrupt
reference input
C0-
-ve input
C0+
+ve input
Comparator 0
output
C0o
+ve input (alternate)
ACCTL0
ACSTAT0
interrupt
reference input
Voltage
Ref
Interrupt Control
ACRIS
internal
bus
ACREFCTL
ACMIS
ACINTEN
interrupt
480
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
13.2
Signal Description
Table 13-1 on page 481 and Table 13-2 on page 481 list the external signals of the Analog Comparators
and describe the function of each. The Analog Comparator output signals are alternate functions
for some GPIO signals and default to be GPIO signals at reset. The column in the table below titled
"Pin Assignment" lists the possible GPIO pin placements for the Analog Comparator signals. The
AFSEL bit in the GPIO Alternate Function Select (GPIOAFSEL) register (page 268) should be set
to choose the Analog Comparator function. The positive and negative input signals are configured
by clearing the DEN bit in the GPIO Digital Enable (GPIODEN) register. For more information on
configuring GPIOs, see “General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)” on page 245.
Table 13-1. Analog Comparators Signals (100LQFP)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
C0+
90
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
C0-
92
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
C0o
100
O
TTL
C1+
24
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
C1-
91
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
C1o
2
O
TTL
Analog comparator 0 output.
Analog comparator 1 output.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
Table 13-2. Analog Comparators Signals (108BGA)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
C0+
A7
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
C0-
A6
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
C0o
F1
O
TTL
C1+
M1
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
C1-
B7
I
Analog
C1o
C2
O
TTL
Description
Analog comparator 0 output.
Analog comparator 1 output.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
13.3
Functional Description
Important: It is recommended that the Digital-Input enable (the GPIODEN bit in the GPIO module)
for the analog input pin be disabled to prevent excessive current draw from the I/O
pads.
The comparator compares the VIN- and VIN+ inputs to produce an output, VOUT.
VIN- < VIN+, VOUT = 1
VIN- > VIN+, VOUT = 0
As shown in Figure 13-2 on page 482, the input source for VIN- is an external input. In addition to
an external input, input sources for VIN+ can be the +ve input of comparator 0 or an internal reference.
June 18, 2012
481
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
Figure 13-2. Structure of Comparator Unit
-ve input
+ve input
0
output
CINV
1
IntGen
+ve input (alternate)
reference input
2
ACSTAT
interrupt
internal
bus
ACCTL
A comparator is configured through two status/control registers (ACCTL and ACSTAT ). The internal
reference is configured through one control register (ACREFCTL). Interrupt status and control is
configured through three registers (ACMIS, ACRIS, and ACINTEN).
Typically, the comparator output is used internally to generate controller interrupts. It may also be
used to drive an external pin.
Important: The ASRCP bits in the ACCTLn register must be set before using the analog
comparators.
13.3.1
Internal Reference Programming
The structure of the internal reference is shown in Figure 13-3 on page 482. This is controlled by a
single configuration register (ACREFCTL). Table 13-3 on page 482 shows the programming options
to develop specific internal reference values, to compare an external voltage against a particular
voltage generated internally.
Figure 13-3. Comparator Internal Reference Structure
8R
AVDD
8R
R
R
R
•••
EN
15
14
•••
1
0
Decoder
VREF
internal
reference
RNG
Table 13-3. Internal Reference Voltage and ACREFCTL Field Values
ACREFCTL Register
EN Bit Value
EN=0
RNG Bit Value
RNG=X
Output Reference Voltage Based on VREF Field Value
0 V (GND) for any value of VREF; however, it is recommended that RNG=1 and
VREF=0 for the least noisy ground reference.
482
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 13-3. Internal Reference Voltage and ACREFCTL Field Values (continued)
ACREFCTL Register
EN Bit Value
RNG Bit Value
RNG=0
EN=1
Output Reference Voltage Based on VREF Field Value
Total resistance in ladder is 31 R.
The range of internal reference in this mode is 0.85-2.448 V.
RNG=1
Total resistance in ladder is 23 R.
The range of internal reference for this mode is 0-2.152 V.
13.4
Initialization and Configuration
The following example shows how to configure an analog comparator to read back its output value
from an internal register.
1. Enable the analog comparator 0 clock by writing a value of 0x0010.0000 to the RCGC1 register
in the System Control module.
2. In the GPIO module, enable the GPIO port/pin associated with C0- as a GPIO input.
3. Configure the internal voltage reference to 1.65 V by writing the ACREFCTL register with the
value 0x0000.030C.
4. Configure comparator 0 to use the internal voltage reference and to not invert the output by
writing the ACCTL0 register with the value of 0x0000.040C.
5. Delay for some time.
6. Read the comparator output value by reading the ACSTAT0 register’s OVAL value.
Change the level of the signal input on C0- to see the OVAL value change.
13.5
Register Map
Table 13-4 on page 484 lists the comparator registers. The offset listed is a hexadecimal increment
to the register’s address, relative to the Analog Comparator base address of 0x4003.C000.
Note that the analog comparator module clock must be enabled before the registers can be
programmed (see page 204). There must be a delay of 3 system clocks after the ADC module clock
is enabled before any ADC module registers are accessed.
June 18, 2012
483
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
Table 13-4. Analog Comparators Register Map
Name
Type
Reset
0x000
ACMIS
R/W1C
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Masked Interrupt Status
485
0x004
ACRIS
RO
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Raw Interrupt Status
486
0x008
ACINTEN
R/W
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Interrupt Enable
487
0x010
ACREFCTL
R/W
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Reference Voltage Control
488
0x020
ACSTAT0
RO
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Status 0
489
0x024
ACCTL0
R/W
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Control 0
490
0x040
ACSTAT1
RO
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Status 1
489
0x044
ACCTL1
R/W
0x0000.0000
Analog Comparator Control 1
490
13.6
Description
See
page
Offset
Register Descriptions
The remainder of this section lists and describes the Analog Comparator registers, in numerical
order by address offset.
484
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 1: Analog Comparator Masked Interrupt Status (ACMIS), offset 0x000
This register provides a summary of the interrupt status (masked) of the comparators.
Analog Comparator Masked Interrupt Status (ACMIS)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x000
Type R/W1C, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IN1
IN0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W1C
0
R/W1C
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
IN1
R/W1C
0
Comparator 1 Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt. Write 1 to this bit to
clear the pending interrupt.
0
IN0
R/W1C
0
Comparator 0 Masked Interrupt Status
Gives the masked interrupt state of this interrupt. Write 1 to this bit to
clear the pending interrupt.
June 18, 2012
485
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
Register 2: Analog Comparator Raw Interrupt Status (ACRIS), offset 0x004
This register provides a summary of the interrupt status (raw) of the comparators.
Analog Comparator Raw Interrupt Status (ACRIS)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x004
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IN1
IN0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
IN1
RO
0
Comparator 1 Interrupt Status
When set, indicates that an interrupt has been generated by comparator
1.
0
IN0
RO
0
Comparator 0 Interrupt Status
When set, indicates that an interrupt has been generated by comparator
0.
486
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 3: Analog Comparator Interrupt Enable (ACINTEN), offset 0x008
This register provides the interrupt enable for the comparators.
Analog Comparator Interrupt Enable (ACINTEN)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x008
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IN1
IN0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
IN1
R/W
0
Comparator 1 Interrupt Enable
When set, enables the controller interrupt from the comparator 1 output.
0
IN0
R/W
0
Comparator 0 Interrupt Enable
When set, enables the controller interrupt from the comparator 0 output.
June 18, 2012
487
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
Register 4: Analog Comparator Reference Voltage Control (ACREFCTL), offset
0x010
This register specifies whether the resistor ladder is powered on as well as the range and tap.
Analog Comparator Reference Voltage Control (ACREFCTL)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x010
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
1
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
9
8
EN
RNG
R/W
0
R/W
0
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
VREF
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:10
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
9
EN
R/W
0
Resistor Ladder Enable
The EN bit specifies whether the resistor ladder is powered on. If 0, the
resistor ladder is unpowered. If 1, the resistor ladder is connected to
the analog VDD.
This bit is reset to 0 so that the internal reference consumes the least
amount of power if not used and programmed.
8
RNG
R/W
0
Resistor Ladder Range
The RNG bit specifies the range of the resistor ladder. If 0, the resistor
ladder has a total resistance of 31 R. If 1, the resistor ladder has a total
resistance of 23 R.
7:4
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
3:0
VREF
R/W
0x00
Resistor Ladder Voltage Ref
The VREF bit field specifies the resistor ladder tap that is passed through
an analog multiplexer. The voltage corresponding to the tap position is
the internal reference voltage available for comparison. See Table
13-3 on page 482 for some output reference voltage examples.
488
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Register 5: Analog Comparator Status 0 (ACSTAT0), offset 0x020
Register 6: Analog Comparator Status 1 (ACSTAT1), offset 0x040
These registers specify the current output value of the comparator.
Analog Comparator Status 0 (ACSTAT0)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x020
Type RO, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
OVAL
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:2
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
1
OVAL
RO
0
Comparator Output Value
The OVAL bit specifies the current output value of the comparator.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
489
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Analog Comparators
Register 7: Analog Comparator Control 0 (ACCTL0), offset 0x024
Register 8: Analog Comparator Control 1 (ACCTL1), offset 0x044
These registers configure the comparator’s input and output.
Analog Comparator Control 0 (ACCTL0)
Base 0x4003.C000
Offset 0x024
Type R/W, reset 0x0000.0000
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
R/W
0
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CINV
reserved
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
RO
0
R/W
0
RO
0
reserved
Type
Reset
reserved
Type
Reset
RO
0
ASRCP
reserved
ISLVAL
R/W
0
ISEN
R/W
0
R/W
0
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
Description
31:11
reserved
RO
0x00
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
10:9
ASRCP
R/W
0x00
Analog Source Positive
The ASRCP field specifies the source of input voltage to the VIN+ terminal
of the comparator. The encodings for this field are as follows:
Value Function
0x0
Pin value
0x1
Pin value of C0+
0x2
Internal voltage reference
0x3
Reserved
8:5
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
4
ISLVAL
R/W
0
Interrupt Sense Level Value
The ISLVAL bit specifies the sense value of the input that generates
an interrupt if in Level Sense mode. If 0, an interrupt is generated if the
comparator output is Low. Otherwise, an interrupt is generated if the
comparator output is High.
3:2
ISEN
R/W
0x0
Interrupt Sense
The ISEN field specifies the sense of the comparator output that
generates an interrupt. The sense conditioning is as follows:
Value Function
0x0
Level sense, see ISLVAL
0x1
Falling edge
0x2
Rising edge
0x3
Either edge
490
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Bit/Field
Name
Type
Reset
1
CINV
R/W
0
Description
Comparator Output Invert
The CINV bit conditionally inverts the output of the comparator. If 0, the
output of the comparator is unchanged. If 1, the output of the comparator
is inverted prior to being processed by hardware.
0
reserved
RO
0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit should be
preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
June 18, 2012
491
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Pin Diagram
14
Pin Diagram
The LM3S2730 microcontroller pin diagrams are shown below.
Figure 14-1. 100-Pin LQFP Package Pin Diagram
492
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 14-2. 108-Ball BGA Package Pin Diagram (Top View)
June 18, 2012
493
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
15
Signal Tables
Important: All multiplexed pins are GPIOs by default, with the exception of the five JTAG pins (PB7
and PC[3:0]) which default to the JTAG functionality.
The following tables list the signals available for each pin. Functionality is enabled by software with
the GPIOAFSEL register. All digital inputs are Schmitt triggered.
■
■
■
■
■
Signals by Pin Number
Signals by Signal Name
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions
Connections for Unused Signals
15.1
100-Pin LQFP Package Pin Tables
15.1.1
Signals by Pin Number
Table 15-1. Signals by Pin Number
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
1
PE7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PE6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
C1o
O
TTL
Analog comparator 1 output.
VDDA
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to minimize
the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog
functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets
the specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system implementation.
GNDA
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog Comparators,
etc.). These are separated from GND to minimize the electrical
noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
5
PE5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
6
PE4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
LDO
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin requires an external
capacitor between the pin and GND of 1 µF or greater. The LDO
pin must also be connected to the VDD25 pins at the board level
in addition to the decoupling capacitor(s).
8
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
9
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
PD0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
CAN0Rx
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
PD1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
2
3
4
7
10
11
Description
CAN0Tx
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
12
PD2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
13
PD3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
14
15
494
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-1. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
16
PG3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
17
PG2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
18
PG1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
19
PG0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
20
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
21
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
22
PC7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
PC6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
CCP3
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
PC5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 5.
C1+
I
Analog
PC4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
23
24
25
Description
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
PA0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 0.
26
U0Rx
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has IrDA
modulation.
PA1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
27
U0Tx
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has IrDA
modulation.
PA2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
SSI0Clk
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
28
PA3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
SSI0Fss
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
29
PA4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
SSI0Rx
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
PA5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
SSI module 0 transmit
30
31
SSI0Tx
O
TTL
32
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
33
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
PA6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
CCP1
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
35
PA7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
36
PG7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
37
PG6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
34
38
39
GND
-
Power
40
PG5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
41
PG4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
42
PF7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
43
PF6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
44
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
45
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
June 18, 2012
495
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-1. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
46
PF5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
47
PF0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
48
OSC0
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference input.
OSC1
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using a
single-ended clock source.
50
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
51
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
52
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
53
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
54
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
55
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
56
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
57
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
58
PF4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
59
PF3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
60
PF2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
61
PF1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
63
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
64
RST
I
TTL
System reset input.
CMOD0
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
PB0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
CCP0
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
PB1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
CCP2
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
68
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
69
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
70
PB2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
71
PB3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
72
PE0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
73
PE1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
74
PE2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
49
62
65
66
67
75
76
77
Description
PE3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
CMOD1
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
PC3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
SWO
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TDO
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
PC2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
TDI
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
78
496
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-1. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
PC1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
79
SWDIO
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TMS
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
PC0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
SWCLK
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
JTAG/SWD CLK.
80
Description
TCK
I
TTL
81
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
82
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
83
PH3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
84
PH2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
85
PH1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
86
PH0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
87
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
88
PB7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
TRST
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
PB6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 6.
C0+
I
Analog
PB5
I/O
TTL
C1-
I
Analog
PB4
I/O
TTL
C0-
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
93
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
94
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
95
PD4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
96
PD5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
GNDA
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog Comparators,
etc.). These are separated from GND to minimize the electrical
noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
VDDA
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to minimize
the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog
functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets
the specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system implementation.
PD6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 6.
PD7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
C0o
O
TTL
Analog comparator 0 output.
89
90
91
92
97
98
99
100
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
GPIO port B bit 5.
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
GPIO port B bit 4.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
June 18, 2012
497
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
15.1.2
Signals by Signal Name
Table 15-2. Signals by Signal Name
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
C0+
90
I
Analog
Description
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
C0-
92
I
Analog
C0o
100
O
TTL
C1+
24
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
C1-
91
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
C1o
2
O
TTL
Analog comparator 1 output.
CAN0Rx
10
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
Analog comparator 0 output.
CAN0Tx
11
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
CCP0
66
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
34
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
CCP2
67
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
23
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
CMOD0
65
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
CMOD1
76
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
GND
9
15
21
33
39
45
54
57
63
69
82
87
94
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
GNDA
4
97
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from GND to
minimize the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting
the analog functions.
LDO
7
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin requires an
external capacitor between the pin and GND of 1 µF or
greater. The LDO pin must also be connected to the VDD25
pins at the board level in addition to the decoupling
capacitor(s).
NC
50
51
52
53
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
OSC0
48
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference
input.
OSC1
49
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using
a single-ended clock source.
PA0
26
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 0.
498
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-2. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PA1
27
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
PA2
28
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
PA3
29
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
PA4
30
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
PA5
31
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
PA6
34
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
PA7
35
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
PB0
66
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
PB1
67
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
PB2
70
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
PB3
71
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
PB4
92
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 4.
PB5
91
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 5.
PB6
90
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 6.
PB7
89
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
PC0
80
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
PC1
79
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
PC2
78
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
PC3
77
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
PC4
25
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
PC5
24
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 5.
PC6
23
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
PC7
22
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
PD0
10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
PD1
11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
PD2
12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
PD3
13
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
PD4
95
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
PD5
96
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
PD6
99
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 6.
PD7
100
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
PE0
72
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
PE1
73
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
PE2
74
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
PE3
75
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
PE4
6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
PE5
5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
PE6
2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
PE7
1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PF0
47
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
PF1
61
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
June 18, 2012
499
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-2. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PF2
60
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
PF3
59
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
PF4
58
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
PF5
46
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
PF6
43
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
PF7
42
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
PG0
19
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
PG1
18
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
PG2
17
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
PG3
16
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
PG4
41
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
PG5
40
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
PG6
37
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
PG7
36
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
PH0
86
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
PH1
85
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
PH2
84
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
PH3
83
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
RST
64
I
TTL
System reset input.
SSI0Clk
28
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
29
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
30
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
31
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
SWCLK
80
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
SWDIO
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
80
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
78
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
TDO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
89
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
U0Rx
26
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
27
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
VDD
8
20
32
44
55
56
68
81
93
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
500
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-2. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
VDD25
14
38
62
88
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
VDDA
3
98
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to
minimize the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting
the analog functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a
voltage that meets the specification in “Recommended DC
Operating Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system
implementation.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
15.1.3
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO
Table 15-3. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO
Function
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
C0+
90
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
C0-
92
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
General-Purpose
Timers
Description
C0o
100
O
TTL
C1+
24
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
C1-
91
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
C1o
2
O
TTL
Analog comparator 1 output.
CAN0Rx
10
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
Analog Comparators
Controller Area
Network
a
Pin Number
Analog comparator 0 output.
CAN0Tx
11
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
CCP0
66
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
34
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
CCP2
67
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
23
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
SWCLK
80
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
SWDIO
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
80
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
78
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
TDO
77
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
79
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
89
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
JTAG/SWD/SWO
June 18, 2012
501
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-3. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO (continued)
Function
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
GND
9
15
21
33
39
45
54
57
63
69
82
87
94
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
GNDA
4
97
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits (
Analog Comparators, etc.). These are separated
from GND to minimize the electrical noise contained
on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
LDO
7
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin
requires an external capacitor between the pin and
GND of 1 µF or greater. The LDO pin must also be
connected to the VDD25 pins at the board level in
addition to the decoupling capacitor(s).
VDD
8
20
32
44
55
56
68
81
93
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
VDD25
14
38
62
88
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function,
including the processor core and most peripherals.
VDDA
3
98
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC,
Analog Comparators, etc.). These are separated
from VDD to minimize the electrical noise contained
on VDD from affecting the analog functions. VDDA
pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets the
specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system
implementation.
SSI0Clk
28
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
29
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
30
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
31
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
Power
SSI
Description
502
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-3. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO (continued)
Function
System Control &
Clocks
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
CMOD0
65
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0
(grounded); other encodings reserved.
CMOD1
76
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0
(grounded); other encodings reserved.
OSC0
48
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock
reference input.
OSC1
49
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected
when using a single-ended clock source.
RST
64
I
TTL
System reset input.
U0Rx
26
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this
signal has IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
27
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this
signal has IrDA modulation.
UART
Description
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
15.1.4
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions
Table 15-4. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
Multiplexed Function
PA0
26
U0Rx
PA1
27
U0Tx
PA2
28
SSI0Clk
PA3
29
SSI0Fss
PA4
30
SSI0Rx
PA5
31
SSI0Tx
PA6
34
CCP1
PA7
35
PB0
66
CCP0
PB1
67
CCP2
PB2
70
PB3
71
PB4
92
C0-
PB5
91
C1-
PB6
90
C0+
PB7
89
TRST
PC0
80
TCK
SWCLK
PC1
79
TMS
SWDIO
PC2
78
TDI
PC3
77
TDO
PC4
25
PC5
24
C1+
PC6
23
CCP3
PC7
22
PD0
10
SWO
CAN0Rx
June 18, 2012
503
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-4. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (continued)
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PD1
11
CAN0Tx
PD2
12
PD3
13
PD4
95
PD5
96
PD6
99
PD7
100
PE0
72
PE1
73
PE2
74
PE3
75
PE4
6
PE5
5
PE6
2
PE7
1
PF0
47
PF1
61
PF2
60
PF3
59
PF4
58
PF5
46
PF6
43
PF7
42
PG0
19
PG1
18
PG2
17
PG3
16
PG4
41
PG5
40
PG6
37
PG7
36
PH0
86
PH1
85
PH2
84
PH3
83
Multiplexed Function
C0o
C1o
504
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
15.2
108-Ball BGA Package Pin Tables
15.2.1
Signals by Pin Number
Table 15-5. Signals by Pin Number
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
A1
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
A2
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
A3
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
A4
NC
-
-
GNDA
-
Power
PB4
I/O
TTL
C0-
I
Analog
PB6
I/O
TTL
C0+
I
Analog
PB7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
TRST
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
PC0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
SWCLK
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TCK
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
PC3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
SWO
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
A5
A6
A7
A8
A9
A10
Description
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog Comparators,
etc.). These are separated from GND to minimize the electrical
noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
GPIO port B bit 4.
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
GPIO port B bit 6.
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
TDO
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
A11
PE0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
A12
PE3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
B1
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
B2
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
B3
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
B4
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
GNDA
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog Comparators,
etc.). These are separated from GND to minimize the electrical
noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
PB5
I/O
TTL
C1-
I
Analog
PC2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
TDI
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
PC1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
SWDIO
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
B5
B6
B7
B8
B9
B10
B11
GPIO port B bit 5.
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
TMS
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
CMOD1
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
PE2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
June 18, 2012
505
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-5. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
B12
PE1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
C1
PE7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PE6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
Analog comparator 1 output.
C2
C3
C4
Description
C1o
O
TTL
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
VDDA
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to minimize
the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog
functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets
the specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system implementation.
VDDA
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to minimize
the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting the analog
functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets
the specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system implementation.
C8
PH1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
C9
PH0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
C10
PG7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
C5
C6
C7
C11
PB2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
C12
PB3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
D1
PE4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
D2
PE5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
VDD25
-
Power
D10
PH3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
D11
PH2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
PB1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
D3
D12
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
CCP2
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
E1
PD4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
E2
PD5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
LDO
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin requires an external
capacitor between the pin and GND of 1 µF or greater. The LDO
pin must also be connected to the VDD25 pins at the board level
in addition to the decoupling capacitor(s).
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
CMOD0
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
PB0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
CCP0
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
PD7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
C0o
O
TTL
Analog comparator 0 output.
E3
E10
E11
E12
F1
506
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-5. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
a
Buffer Type
Description
PD6
I/O
TTL
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
F10
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
F11
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
F12
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
PD0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
CAN0Rx
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
PD1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
CAN0Tx
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
VDD25
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
G10
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
G11
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
G12
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
H1
PD3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
H2
PD2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
F2
F3
G1
G2
G3
GPIO port D bit 6.
H3
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
H10
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
H11
RST
I
TTL
System reset input.
H12
PF1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
J1
PG2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
J2
PG3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
J3
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
J10
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
J11
PF2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
J12
PF3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
K1
PG0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
K2
PG1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
K3
PG4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
K4
PF7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
K5
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
K6
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
K7
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
K8
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
K9
VDD33
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
K10
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
K11
NC
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
K12
NC
-
-
L1
PC4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
L2
PC7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
June 18, 2012
507
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-5. Signals by Pin Number (continued)
a
Pin Number
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
PA0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 0.
L3
U0Rx
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has IrDA
modulation.
PA3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
SSI0Fss
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
L4
Description
PA4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
SSI0Rx
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
L5
PA6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
CCP1
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
L7
PG6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
L8
PF5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
L9
PF4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
L10
GND
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
L11
OSC0
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference input.
L12
VDD
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
PC5
I/O
TTL
C1+
I
Analog
PC6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
CCP3
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
PA1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
U0Tx
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has IrDA
modulation.
L6
M1
M2
M3
GPIO port C bit 5.
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
PA2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
SSI0Clk
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
PA5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
M4
M5
SSI0Tx
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
M6
PA7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
M7
PG5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
M8
PF6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
M9
PF0
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
M10
M11
M12
NC
-
-
OSC1
O
Analog
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
NC
-
-
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using a
single-ended clock source.
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
15.2.2
Signals by Signal Name
Table 15-6. Signals by Signal Name
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
C0+
A7
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
C0-
A6
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
C0o
F1
O
TTL
Analog comparator 0 output.
508
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-6. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
C1+
M1
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
C1-
B7
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
C1o
C2
O
TTL
Analog comparator 1 output.
CAN0Rx
G1
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
CAN0Tx
G2
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
CCP0
E12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
L6
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
CCP2
D12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
M2
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
CMOD0
E11
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
CMOD1
B10
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0 (grounded); other
encodings reserved.
GND
B6
C4
C5
F10
F11
F12
H3
J3
J10
K5
K6
K10
L10
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
GNDA
A5
B5
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits ( Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from GND to
minimize the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting
the analog functions.
LDO
E3
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin requires an
external capacitor between the pin and GND of 1 µF or
greater. The LDO pin must also be connected to the VDD25
pins at the board level in addition to the decoupling
capacitor(s).
NC
A1
A2
A3
A4
B1
B2
B3
B4
K11
K12
M10
M12
-
-
No connect. Leave the pin electrically unconnected/isolated.
OSC0
L11
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock reference
input.
OSC1
M11
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected when using
a single-ended clock source.
PA0
L3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 0.
June 18, 2012
509
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-6. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PA1
M3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 1.
PA2
M4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 2.
PA3
L4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 3.
PA4
L5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 4.
PA5
M5
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 5.
PA6
L6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 6.
PA7
M6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port A bit 7.
PB0
E12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 0.
PB1
D12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 1.
PB2
C11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 2.
PB3
C12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 3.
PB4
A6
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 4.
PB5
B7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 5.
PB6
A7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 6.
PB7
A8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port B bit 7.
PC0
A9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 0.
PC1
B9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 1.
PC2
B8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 2.
PC3
A10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 3.
PC4
L1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 4.
PC5
M1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 5.
PC6
M2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 6.
PC7
L2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port C bit 7.
PD0
G1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 0.
PD1
G2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 1.
PD2
H2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 2.
PD3
H1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 3.
PD4
E1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 4.
PD5
E2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 5.
PD6
F2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 6.
PD7
F1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port D bit 7.
PE0
A11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 0.
PE1
B12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 1.
PE2
B11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 2.
PE3
A12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 3.
PE4
D1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 4.
PE5
D2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 5.
PE6
C2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 6.
PE7
C1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port E bit 7.
PF0
M9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 0.
PF1
H12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 1.
510
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-6. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
PF2
J11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 2.
PF3
J12
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 3.
PF4
L9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 4.
PF5
L8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 5.
PF6
M8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 6.
PF7
K4
I/O
TTL
GPIO port F bit 7.
PG0
K1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 0.
PG1
K2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 1.
PG2
J1
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 2.
PG3
J2
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 3.
PG4
K3
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 4.
PG5
M7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 5.
PG6
L7
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 6.
PG7
C10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port G bit 7.
PH0
C9
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 0.
PH1
C8
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 1.
PH2
D11
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 2.
PH3
D10
I/O
TTL
GPIO port H bit 3.
RST
H11
I
TTL
System reset input.
SSI0Clk
M4
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
L4
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
L5
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
M5
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
SWCLK
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
SWDIO
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
B8
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
TDO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
A8
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
U0Rx
L3
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
M3
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this signal has
IrDA modulation.
VDD
L12
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
VDD25
C3
D3
F3
G3
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function, including the
processor core and most peripherals.
June 18, 2012
511
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-6. Signals by Signal Name (continued)
a
Pin Name
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
Description
VDD33
E10
G10
G11
G12
H10
K7
K8
K9
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
VDDA
C6
C7
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC, Analog
Comparators, etc.). These are separated from VDD to
minimize the electrical noise contained on VDD from affecting
the analog functions. VDDA pins must be supplied with a
voltage that meets the specification in “Recommended DC
Operating Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system
implementation.
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
15.2.3
Signals by Function, Except for GPIO
Table 15-7. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO
Function
Pin Name
Pin Type
Buffer Type
C0+
A7
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 positive input.
C0-
A6
I
Analog
Analog comparator 0 negative input.
C0o
F1
O
TTL
C1+
M1
I
Analog
Analog comparator 1 positive input.
Analog comparator 1 negative input.
Analog Comparators
Controller Area
Network
General-Purpose
Timers
a
Pin Number
Description
Analog comparator 0 output.
C1-
B7
I
Analog
C1o
C2
O
TTL
Analog comparator 1 output.
CAN0Rx
G1
I
TTL
CAN module 0 receive.
CAN0Tx
G2
O
TTL
CAN module 0 transmit.
CCP0
E12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 0.
CCP1
L6
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 1.
CCP2
D12
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 2.
CCP3
M2
I/O
TTL
Capture/Compare/PWM 3.
SWCLK
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
SWDIO
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
SWO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TCK
A9
I
TTL
JTAG/SWD CLK.
TDI
B8
I
TTL
JTAG TDI.
JTAG/SWD/SWO
TDO
A10
O
TTL
JTAG TDO and SWO.
TMS
B9
I/O
TTL
JTAG TMS and SWDIO.
TRST
A8
I
TTL
JTAG TRST.
512
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-7. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO (continued)
Function
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
GND
B6
C4
C5
F10
F11
F12
H3
J3
J10
K5
K6
K10
L10
-
Power
Ground reference for logic and I/O pins.
GNDA
A5
B5
-
Power
The ground reference for the analog circuits (
Analog Comparators, etc.). These are separated
from GND to minimize the electrical noise contained
on VDD from affecting the analog functions.
LDO
E3
-
Power
Low drop-out regulator output voltage. This pin
requires an external capacitor between the pin and
GND of 1 µF or greater. The LDO pin must also be
connected to the VDD25 pins at the board level in
addition to the decoupling capacitor(s).
VDD
L12
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
VDD25
C3
D3
F3
G3
-
Power
Positive supply for most of the logic function,
including the processor core and most peripherals.
VDD33
E10
G10
G11
G12
H10
K7
K8
K9
-
Power
Positive supply for I/O and some logic.
VDDA
C6
C7
-
Power
The positive supply for the analog circuits (ADC,
Analog Comparators, etc.). These are separated
from VDD to minimize the electrical noise contained
on VDD from affecting the analog functions. VDDA
pins must be supplied with a voltage that meets the
specification in “Recommended DC Operating
Conditions” on page 518, regardless of system
implementation.
SSI0Clk
M4
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 clock
SSI0Fss
L4
I/O
TTL
SSI module 0 frame signal
SSI0Rx
L5
I
TTL
SSI module 0 receive
SSI0Tx
M5
O
TTL
SSI module 0 transmit
Power
SSI
Description
June 18, 2012
513
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-7. Signals by Function, Except for GPIO (continued)
Function
System Control &
Clocks
Pin Name
a
Pin Number
Pin Type
Buffer Type
CMOD0
E11
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 0. Input must be set to logic 0
(grounded); other encodings reserved.
CMOD1
B10
I
TTL
CPU Mode bit 1. Input must be set to logic 0
(grounded); other encodings reserved.
OSC0
L11
I
Analog
Main oscillator crystal input or an external clock
reference input.
OSC1
M11
O
Analog
Main oscillator crystal output. Leave unconnected
when using a single-ended clock source.
RST
H11
I
TTL
System reset input.
U0Rx
L3
I
TTL
UART module 0 receive. When in IrDA mode, this
signal has IrDA modulation.
U0Tx
M3
O
TTL
UART module 0 transmit. When in IrDA mode, this
signal has IrDA modulation.
UART
Description
a. The TTL designation indicates the pin has TTL-compatible voltage levels.
15.2.4
GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions
Table 15-8. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PA0
L3
U0Rx
PA1
M3
U0Tx
PA2
M4
SSI0Clk
PA3
L4
SSI0Fss
PA4
L5
SSI0Rx
PA5
M5
SSI0Tx
PA6
L6
CCP1
PA7
M6
PB0
E12
CCP0
PB1
D12
CCP2
Multiplexed Function
PB2
C11
PB3
C12
PB4
A6
C0-
PB5
B7
C1-
PB6
A7
C0+
PB7
A8
TRST
PC0
A9
TCK
SWCLK
PC1
B9
TMS
SWDIO
PC2
B8
TDI
PC3
A10
TDO
PC4
L1
PC5
M1
C1+
PC6
M2
CCP3
PC7
L2
PD0
G1
SWO
CAN0Rx
514
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 15-8. GPIO Pins and Alternate Functions (continued)
15.3
IO
Pin Number
Multiplexed Function
PD1
G2
CAN0Tx
PD2
H2
PD3
H1
PD4
E1
PD5
E2
PD6
F2
PD7
F1
PE0
A11
PE1
B12
PE2
B11
PE3
A12
PE4
D1
PE5
D2
PE6
C2
PE7
C1
PF0
M9
PF1
H12
PF2
J11
PF3
J12
PF4
L9
PF5
L8
PF6
M8
PF7
K4
PG0
K1
PG1
K2
PG2
J1
PG3
J2
PG4
K3
PG5
M7
PG6
L7
PG7
C10
PH0
C9
PH1
C8
PH2
D11
PH3
D10
Multiplexed Function
C0o
C1o
Connections for Unused Signals
Table 15-9 on page 516 show how to handle signals for functions that are not used in a particular
system implementation for devices that are in a 100-pin LQFP package. Two options are shown in
the table: an acceptable practice and a preferred practice for reduced power consumption and
improved EMC characteristics.
June 18, 2012
515
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Signal Tables
Table 15-9. Connections for Unused Signals (100-pin LQFP)
Function
GPIO
No Connects
System Control
Signal Name
Pin Number
Acceptable Practice
Preferred Practice
All unused GPIOs
NC
-
NC
GND
-
NC
NC
OSC0
48
NC
GND
OSC1
49
NC
NC
RST
64
Pull up as shown in Figure
5-1 on page 163
Connect through a capacitor to
GND as close to pin as possible
Table 15-10 on page 516 show how to handle signals for functions that are not used in a particular
system implementation for devices that are in a 108-pin BGA package. Two options are shown in
the table: an acceptable practice and a preferred practice for reduced power consumption and
improved EMC characteristics.
Table 15-10. Connections for Unused Signals, 108-pin BGA
Function
GPIO
No Connects
System Control
Signal Name
Pin Number
Acceptable Practice
Preferred Practice
All unused GPIOs
-
NC
GND
NC
-
NC
NC
OSC0
L11
NC
GND
OSC1
M11
NC
NC
RST
H11
Pull up as shown in Figure Connect through a capacitor to
5-1 on page 163
GND as close to pin as possible
516
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
16
Operating Characteristics
Table 16-1. Temperature Characteristics
Characteristic
Symbol
Value
Industrial operating temperature range
TA
-40 to +85
Unit
°C
Unpowered storage temperature range
TS
-65 to +150
°C
Table 16-2. Thermal Characteristics
Characteristic
a
Thermal resistance (junction to ambient)
b
Junction temperature
Symbol
Value
ΘJA
32
Unit
TJ
TA + (P • ΘJA)
°C/W
°C
a. Junction to ambient thermal resistance θJA numbers are determined by a package simulator.
b. Power dissipation is a function of temperature.
a
Table 16-3. ESD Absolute Maximum Ratings
Parameter Name
VESDHBM
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
-
-
2.0
kV
VESDCDM
-
-
1.0
kV
VESDMM
-
-
100
V
a. All Stellaris parts are ESD tested following the JEDEC standard.
June 18, 2012
517
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
17
Electrical Characteristics
17.1
DC Characteristics
17.1.1
Maximum Ratings
The maximum ratings are the limits to which the device can be subjected without permanently
damaging the device.
Note:
The device is not guaranteed to operate properly at the maximum ratings.
Table 17-1. Maximum Ratings
a
Characteristic
Symbol
Value
Unit
Min
Max
VDD
0
4
V
Core supply voltage (VDD25)
VDD25
0
3
V
Analog supply voltage (VDDA)
VDDA
0
4
V
-0.3
5.5
V
I/O supply voltage (VDD)
Input voltage
Input voltage for a GPIO configured as an analog input
VIN
-0.3
VDD + 0.3
V
I
-
25
mA
VNON
-
300
mV
Maximum current per output pins
Maximum input voltage on a non-power pin when the
microcontroller is unpowered
a. Voltages are measured with respect to GND.
Important: This device contains circuitry to protect the inputs against damage due to high-static
voltages or electric fields; however, it is advised that normal precautions be taken to
avoid application of any voltage higher than maximum-rated voltages to this
high-impedance circuit. Reliability of operation is enhanced if unused inputs are
connected to an appropriate logic voltage level (for example, either GND or VDD).
17.1.2
Recommended DC Operating Conditions
For special high-current applications, the GPIO output buffers may be used with the following
restrictions. With the GPIO pins configured as 8-mA output drivers, a total of four GPIO outputs may
be used to sink current loads up to 18 mA each. At 18-mA sink current loading, the VOL value is
specified as 1.2 V. The high-current GPIO package pins must be selected such that there are only
a maximum of two per side of the physical package or BGA pin group with the total number of
high-current GPIO outputs not exceeding four for the entire package.
Table 17-2. Recommended DC Operating Conditions
Parameter
VDD
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
I/O supply voltage
3.0
3.3
3.6
V
VDD25
Core supply voltage
2.25
2.5
2.75
V
VDDA
Analog supply voltage
3.0
3.3
3.6
V
High-level input voltage
2.0
-
5.0
V
VIH
Low-level input voltage
-0.3
-
1.3
V
VOH
VIL
a
High-level output voltage
2.4
-
-
V
VOLa
Low-level output voltage
-
-
0.4
V
518
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 17-2. Recommended DC Operating Conditions (continued)
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
2-mA Drive
2.0
-
-
mA
4-mA Drive
4.0
-
-
mA
8-mA Drive
8.0
-
-
mA
High-level source current, VOH=2.4 V
IOH
Low-level sink current, VOL=0.4 V
IOL
2-mA Drive
2.0
-
-
mA
4-mA Drive
4.0
-
-
mA
8-mA Drive
8.0
-
-
mA
a. VOL and VOH shift to 1.2 V when using high-current GPIOs.
17.1.3
On-Chip Low Drop-Out (LDO) Regulator Characteristics
Table 17-3. LDO Regulator Characteristics
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
Programmable internal (logic) power supply
output value
2.25
2.5
2.75
V
Output voltage accuracy
-
2%
-
%
tPON
Power-on time
-
-
100
µs
tON
Time on
-
-
200
µs
tOFF
Time off
-
-
100
µs
VSTEP
Step programming incremental voltage
-
50
-
mV
CLDO
External filter capacitor size for internal power
supply
1.0
-
3.0
µF
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
VLDOOUT
17.1.4
GPIO Module Characteristics
Table 17-4. GPIO Module DC Characteristics
Parameter
Parameter Name
RGPIOPU
GPIO internal pull-up resistor
50
-
110
kΩ
RGPIOPD
GPIO internal pull-down resistor
55
-
180
kΩ
-
-
2
µA
ILKG
a
GPIO input leakage current
a. The leakage current is measured with GND or VDD applied to the corresponding pin(s). The leakage of digital port pins is
measured individually. The port pin is configured as an input and the pullup/pulldown resistor is disabled.
17.1.5
Power Specifications
The power measurements specified in the tables that follow are run on the core processor using
SRAM with the following specifications (except as noted):
■ VDD = 3.3 V
■ VDD25 = 2.50 V
■ VDDA = 3.3 V
■ Temperature = 25°C
June 18, 2012
519
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
■ Clock Source (MOSC) =3.579545 MHz Crystal Oscillator
■ Main oscillator (MOSC) = enabled
■ Internal oscillator (IOSC) = disabled
Table 17-5. Detailed Power Specifications
Parameter
3.3 V VDD, VDDA
Parameter Name Conditions
Run mode 1
(Flash loop)
Nom
Max
3
2.5 V VDD25
Unit
Nom
Max
pending
108
pendinga
mA
0
pendinga
53
pendinga
mA
3
pendinga
102
pendinga
mA
0
pendinga
47
pendinga
mA
0
pendinga
17
pendinga
mA
0.143
pendinga
0.18
pendinga
mA
VDD25 = 2.50 V
a
Code= while(1){} executed out of
Flash
Peripherals = All ON
System Clock = 50 MHz (with PLL)
Run mode 2
(Flash loop)
VDD25 = 2.50 V
Code= while(1){} executed out of
Flash
Peripherals = All OFF
IDD_RUN
System Clock = 50 MHz (with PLL)
Run mode 1
(SRAM loop)
VDD25 = 2.50 V
Code= while(1){} executed in SRAM
Peripherals = All ON
System Clock = 50 MHz (with PLL)
Run mode 2
(SRAM loop)
VDD25 = 2.50 V
Code= while(1){} executed in SRAM
Peripherals = All OFF
System Clock = 50 MHz (with PLL)
IDD_SLEEP
Sleep mode
VDD25 = 2.50 V
Peripherals = All OFF
System Clock = 50 MHz (with PLL)
IDD_DEEPSLEEP Deep-Sleep mode LDO = 2.25 V
Peripherals = All OFF
System Clock = IOSC30KHZ/64
a. Pending characterization completion.
17.1.6
Flash Memory Characteristics
Table 17-6. Flash Memory Characteristics
Parameter
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
10,000
100,000
-
cycles
Data retention at average operating
temperature of 85˚C
10
-
-
years
TPROG
Word program time
20
-
-
µs
TERASE
Page erase time
20
-
-
ms
TME
Mass erase time
-
-
250
ms
PECYC
TRET
Parameter Name
Number of guaranteed program/erase cycles
a
before failure
a. A program/erase cycle is defined as switching the bits from 1-> 0 -> 1.
520
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
17.2
AC Characteristics
17.2.1
Load Conditions
Unless otherwise specified, the following conditions are true for all timing measurements. Timing
measurements are for 4-mA drive strength.
Figure 17-1. Load Conditions
CL = 50 pF
pin
GND
17.2.2
Clocks
Table 17-7. Phase Locked Loop (PLL) Characteristics
Parameter
Parameter Name
a
fref_crystal
Crystal reference
referencea
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
3.579545
-
8.192
MHz
fref_ext
External clock
3.579545
-
8.192
MHz
fpll
PLL frequency
-
400
-
MHz
TREADY
PLL lock time
-
-
0.5
ms
b
a. The exact value is determined by the crystal value programmed into the XTAL field of the Run-Mode Clock Configuration
(RCC) register.
b. PLL frequency is automatically calculated by the hardware based on the XTAL field of the RCC register.
Table 17-8 on page 521 shows the actual frequency of the PLL based on the crystal frequency used
(defined by the XTAL field in the RCC register).
Table 17-8. Actual PLL Frequency
XTAL
Crystal Frequency (MHz)
PLL Frequency (MHz)
Error
0x4
0x5
3.5795
400.904
0.0023%
3.6864
398.1312
0.0047%
0x6
4.0
400
-
0x7
4.096
401.408
0.0035%
0x8
4.9152
398.1312
0.0047%
0x9
5.0
400
-
0xA
5.12
399.36
0.0016%
0xB
6.0
400
-
0xC
6.144
399.36
0.0016%
0xD
7.3728
398.1312
0.0047%
0xE
8.0
400
0.0047%
0xF
8.192
398.6773333
0.0033%
June 18, 2012
521
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
Table 17-9. Clock Characteristics
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
fIOSC
Internal 12 MHz oscillator frequency
8.4
12
15.6
MHz
fIOSC30KHZ
Internal 30 KHz oscillator frequency
15
30
45
KHz
fMOSC
Main oscillator frequency
1
-
8.192
MHz
tMOSC_per
Main oscillator period
125
-
1000
ns
fref_crystal_bypass
Crystal reference using the main oscillator
(PLL in BYPASS mode)
1
-
8.192
MHz
fref_ext_bypass
External clock reference (PLL in BYPASS
mode)
0
-
50
MHz
fsystem_clock
System clock
0
-
50
MHz
Table 17-10. Crystal Characteristics
Parameter Name
Value
Frequency
6
4
3.5
Frequency tolerance
±50
±50
±50
±50
ppm
Aging
±5
±5
±5
±5
ppm/yr
Oscillation mode
17.2.3
Units
8
MHz
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
Parallel
-
Temperature stability (-40°C to 85°C)
±25
±25
±25
±25
ppm
Motional capacitance (typ)
27.8
37.0
55.6
63.5
pF
Motional inductance (typ)
14.3
19.1
28.6
32.7
mH
Equivalent series resistance (max)
120
160
200
220
Ω
Shunt capacitance (max)
10
10
10
10
pF
Load capacitance (typ)
16
16
16
16
pF
Drive level (typ)
100
100
100
100
µW
JTAG and Boundary Scan
Table 17-11. JTAG Characteristics
Parameter
No.
Parameter
Parameter Name
J1
fTCK
TCK operational clock frequency
J2
tTCK
TCK operational clock period
J3
tTCK_LOW
TCK clock Low time
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
0
-
10
MHz
100
-
-
ns
-
tTCK/2
-
ns
J4
tTCK_HIGH
TCK clock High time
-
tTCK/2
-
ns
J5
tTCK_R
TCK rise time
0
-
10
ns
J6
tTCK_F
TCK fall time
0
-
10
ns
J7
tTMS_SU
TMS setup time to TCK rise
20
-
-
ns
J8
tTMS_HLD
TMS hold time from TCK rise
20
-
-
ns
J9
tTDI_SU
TDI setup time to TCK rise
25
-
-
ns
J10
tTDI_HLD
TDI hold time from TCK rise
25
-
-
ns
522
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Table 17-11. JTAG Characteristics (continued)
Parameter
No.
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
23
35
ns
2-mA drive
J11
t TDO_ZDV
J12
t TDO_DV
J13
t TDO_DVZ
4-mA drive
TCK fall to Data
Valid from High-Z
-
8-mA drive
18
29
ns
21
35
ns
14
25
ns
4-mA drive
-
13
24
ns
8-mA drive with slew rate control
8-mA drive
18
28
ns
2-mA drive
9
11
ns
4-mA drive
7
9
ns
6
8
ns
7
9
ns
-
8-mA drive
8-mA drive with slew rate control
J15
tTRST_SU
ns
ns
2-mA drive
TCK fall to High-Z
from Data Valid
tTRST
26
25
8-mA drive with slew rate control
TCK fall to Data
Valid from Data
Valid
J14
15
14
TRST assertion time
100
-
-
ns
TRST setup time to TCK rise
10
-
-
ns
Figure 17-2. JTAG Test Clock Input Timing
J2
J3
J4
TCK
J6
J5
Figure 17-3. JTAG Test Access Port (TAP) Timing
TCK
J7
TMS
TDI
J8
J8
TMS Input Valid
TMS Input Valid
J9
J9
J10
TDI Input Valid
J11
TDO
J7
J10
TDI Input Valid
J12
TDO Output Valid
June 18, 2012
J13
TDO Output Valid
523
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
Figure 17-4. JTAG TRST Timing
TCK
J14
J15
TRST
17.2.4
Reset
Table 17-12. Reset Characteristics
Parameter
No.
Parameter
Parameter Name
R1
VTH
Reset threshold
R2
VBTH
Brown-Out threshold
R3
TPOR
R4
TBOR
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
-
2.0
-
V
2.85
2.9
2.95
V
Power-On Reset timeout
-
10
-
ms
Brown-Out timeout
-
500
-
µs
R5
TIRPOR
Internal reset timeout after POR
6
-
11
ms
R6
TIRBOR
Internal reset timeout after BOR
0
-
1
µs
R7
TIRHWR
Internal reset timeout after hardware reset
(RST pin)
0
-
1
ms
R8
TIRSWR
Internal reset timeout after software-initiated
system reset a
2.5
-
20
µs
R9
TIRWDR
Internal reset timeout after watchdog reseta
2.5
-
20
µs
R10
TVDDRISE
Supply voltage (VDD) rise time (0V-3.3V)
-
-
100
ms
R11
TMIN
Minimum RST pulse width
2
-
-
µs
a
a. 20 * t MOSC_per
Figure 17-5. External Reset Timing (RST)
RST
R11
R7
/Reset
(Internal)
524
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 17-6. Power-On Reset Timing
R1
VDD
R3
/POR
(Internal)
R5
/Reset
(Internal)
Figure 17-7. Brown-Out Reset Timing
R2
VDD
R4
/BOR
(Internal)
R6
/Reset
(Internal)
Figure 17-8. Software Reset Timing
SW Reset
R8
/Reset
(Internal)
Figure 17-9. Watchdog Reset Timing
WDOG
Reset
(Internal)
R9
/Reset
(Internal)
June 18, 2012
525
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
17.2.5
Sleep Modes
a
Table 17-13. Sleep Modes AC Characteristics
Parameter No
Parameter
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
D1
tWAKE_S
Time to wake from interrupt in sleep or
deep-sleep mode, not using the PLL
Parameter Name
-
-
7
system clocks
D2
tWAKE_PLL_S
Time to wake from interrupt in sleep or
deep-sleep mode when using the PLL
-
-
TREADY
ms
Nom
Max
Unit
2-mA drive
17
26
ns
4-mA drive
9
13
ns
a. Values in this table assume the IOSC is the clock source during sleep or deep-sleep mode.
17.2.6
General-Purpose I/O (GPIO)
Note:
All GPIOs are 5 V-tolerant.
Table 17-14. GPIO Characteristics
Parameter Parameter Name Condition
tGPIOR
tGPIOF
GPIO Rise Time
(from 20% to 80%
of VDD)
Min
-
6
9
ns
8-mA drive with slew rate control
8-mA drive
10
12
ns
2-mA drive
17
25
ns
8
12
ns
6
10
ns
11
13
ns
GPIO Fall Time
(from 80% to 20%
of VDD)
4-mA drive
-
8-mA drive
8-mA drive with slew rate control
17.2.7
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
Table 17-15. SSI Characteristics
Parameter
No.
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
S1
tclk_per
SSIClk cycle time
S2
tclk_high
SSIClk high time
S3
tclk_low
SSIClk low time
a
Nom
Max
Unit
2
-
65024
system clocks
-
0.5
-
t clk_per
-
0.5
-
t clk_per
S4
tclkrf
SSIClk rise/fall time
-
6
10
ns
S5
tDMd
Data from master valid delay time
0
-
1
system clocks
S6
tDMs
Data from master setup time
1
-
-
system clocks
S7
tDMh
Data from master hold time
2
-
-
system clocks
S8
tDSs
Data from slave setup time
1
-
-
system clocks
S9
tDSh
Data from slave hold time
2
-
-
system clocks
a. Note that the delays shown are using 8-mA drive strength.
526
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Figure 17-10. SSI Timing for TI Frame Format (FRF=01), Single Transfer Timing Measurement
S1
S4
S2
SSIClk
S3
SSIFss
SSITx
SSIRx
MSB
LSB
4 to 16 bits
Figure 17-11. SSI Timing for MICROWIRE Frame Format (FRF=10), Single Transfer
S2
S1
SSIClk
S3
SSIFss
SSITx
MSB
LSB
8-bit control
SSIRx
0
MSB
LSB
4 to 16 bits output data
June 18, 2012
527
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Electrical Characteristics
Figure 17-12. SSI Timing for SPI Frame Format (FRF=00), with SPH=1
S1
S2
S4
SSIClk
(SPO=0)
S3
SSIClk
(SPO=1)
S6
SSITx
(master)
S7
MSB
S5
S8
SSIRx
(slave)
LSB
S9
MSB
LSB
SSIFss
17.2.8
Analog Comparator
Table 17-16. Analog Comparator Characteristics
Parameter
Parameter Name
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
VOS
Input offset voltage
-
±10
±25
mV
VCM
Input common mode voltage range
0
-
VDD-1.5
V
CMRR
Common mode rejection ratio
50
-
-
dB
TRT
Response time
-
-
1
µs
TMC
Comparator mode change to Output Valid
-
-
10
µs
Table 17-17. Analog Comparator Voltage Reference Characteristics
Parameter
Min
Nom
Max
Unit
RHR
Resolution high range
Parameter Name
-
VDD/31
-
LSB
RLR
Resolution low range
-
VDD/23
-
LSB
AHR
Absolute accuracy high range
-
-
±1/2
LSB
ALR
Absolute accuracy low range
-
-
±1/4
LSB
528
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
A
Serial Flash Loader
A.1
Serial Flash Loader
®
The Stellaris serial flash loader is a preprogrammed flash-resident utility used to download code
to the flash memory of a device without the use of a debug interface. The serial flash loader uses
a simple packet interface to provide synchronous communication with the device. The flash loader
runs off the crystal and does not enable the PLL, so its speed is determined by the crystal used.
The two serial interfaces that can be used are the UART0 and SSI0 interfaces. For simplicity, both
the data format and communication protocol are identical for both serial interfaces.
A.2
Interfaces
Once communication with the flash loader is established via one of the serial interfaces, that interface
is used until the flash loader is reset or new code takes over. For example, once you start
communicating using the SSI port, communications with the flash loader via the UART are disabled
until the device is reset.
A.2.1
UART
The Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UART) communication uses a fixed serial
format of 8 bits of data, no parity, and 1 stop bit. The baud rate used for communication is
automatically detected by the flash loader and can be any valid baud rate supported by the host
and the device. The auto detection sequence requires that the baud rate should be no more than
1/32 the crystal frequency of the board that is running the serial flash loader. This is actually the
same as the hardware limitation for the maximum baud rate for any UART on a Stellaris device
which is calculated as follows:
Max Baud Rate = System Clock Frequency / 16
In order to determine the baud rate, the serial flash loader needs to determine the relationship
between its own crystal frequency and the baud rate. This is enough information for the flash loader
to configure its UART to the same baud rate as the host. This automatic baud-rate detection allows
the host to use any valid baud rate that it wants to communicate with the device.
The method used to perform this automatic synchronization relies on the host sending the flash
loader two bytes that are both 0x55. This generates a series of pulses to the flash loader that it can
use to calculate the ratios needed to program the UART to match the host’s baud rate. After the
host sends the pattern, it attempts to read back one byte of data from the UART. The flash loader
returns the value of 0xCC to indicate successful detection of the baud rate. If this byte is not received
after at least twice the time required to transfer the two bytes, the host can resend another pattern
of 0x55, 0x55, and wait for the 0xCC byte again until the flash loader acknowledges that it has
received a synchronization pattern correctly. For example, the time to wait for data back from the
flash loader should be calculated as at least 2*(20(bits/sync)/baud rate (bits/sec)). For a baud rate
of 115200, this time is 2*(20/115200) or 0.35 ms.
A.2.2
SSI
The Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) port also uses a fixed serial format for communications,
with the framing defined as Motorola format with SPH set to 1 and SPO set to 1. See “Frame
Formats” on page 397 in the SSI chapter for more information on formats for this transfer protocol.
Like the UART, this interface has hardware requirements that limit the maximum speed that the SSI
clock can run. This allows the SSI clock to be at most 1/12 the crystal frequency of the board running
June 18, 2012
529
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Serial Flash Loader
the flash loader. Since the host device is the master, the SSI on the flash loader device does not
need to determine the clock as it is provided directly by the host.
A.3
Packet Handling
All communications, with the exception of the UART auto-baud, are done via defined packets that
are acknowledged (ACK) or not acknowledged (NAK) by the devices. The packets use the same
format for receiving and sending packets, including the method used to acknowledge successful or
unsuccessful reception of a packet.
A.3.1
Packet Format
All packets sent and received from the device use the following byte-packed format.
struct
{
unsigned char ucSize;
unsigned char ucCheckSum;
unsigned char Data[];
};
A.3.2
ucSize
The first byte received holds the total size of the transfer including
the size and checksum bytes.
ucChecksum
This holds a simple checksum of the bytes in the data buffer only.
The algorithm is Data[0]+Data[1]+…+ Data[ucSize-3].
Data
This is the raw data intended for the device, which is formatted in
some form of command interface. There should be ucSize–2
bytes of data provided in this buffer to or from the device.
Sending Packets
The actual bytes of the packet can be sent individually or all at once; the only limitation is that
commands that cause flash memory access should limit the download sizes to prevent losing bytes
during flash programming. This limitation is discussed further in the section that describes the serial
flash loader command, COMMAND_SEND_DATA (see “COMMAND_SEND_DATA
(0x24)” on page 532).
Once the packet has been formatted correctly by the host, it should be sent out over the UART or
SSI interface. Then the host should poll the UART or SSI interface for the first non-zero data returned
from the device. The first non-zero byte will either be an ACK (0xCC) or a NAK (0x33) byte from
the device indicating the packet was received successfully (ACK) or unsuccessfully (NAK). This
does not indicate that the actual contents of the command issued in the data portion of the packet
were valid, just that the packet was received correctly.
A.3.3
Receiving Packets
The flash loader sends a packet of data in the same format that it receives a packet. The flash loader
may transfer leading zero data before the first actual byte of data is sent out. The first non-zero byte
is the size of the packet followed by a checksum byte, and finally followed by the data itself. There
is no break in the data after the first non-zero byte is sent from the flash loader. Once the device
communicating with the flash loader receives all the bytes, it must either ACK or NAK the packet to
indicate that the transmission was successful. The appropriate response after sending a NAK to
the flash loader is to resend the command that failed and request the data again. If needed, the
host may send leading zeros before sending down the ACK/NAK signal to the flash loader, as the
530
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
flash loader only accepts the first non-zero data as a valid response. This zero padding is needed
by the SSI interface in order to receive data to or from the flash loader.
A.4
Commands
The next section defines the list of commands that can be sent to the flash loader. The first byte of
the data should always be one of the defined commands, followed by data or parameters as
determined by the command that is sent.
A.4.1
COMMAND_PING (0X20)
This command simply accepts the command and sets the global status to success. The format of
the packet is as follows:
Byte[0] = 0x03;
Byte[1] = checksum(Byte[2]);
Byte[2] = COMMAND_PING;
The ping command has 3 bytes and the value for COMMAND_PING is 0x20 and the checksum of one
byte is that same byte, making Byte[1] also 0x20. Since the ping command has no real return status,
the receipt of an ACK can be interpreted as a successful ping to the flash loader.
A.4.2
COMMAND_GET_STATUS (0x23)
This command returns the status of the last command that was issued. Typically, this command
should be sent after every command to ensure that the previous command was successful or to
properly respond to a failure. The command requires one byte in the data of the packet and should
be followed by reading a packet with one byte of data that contains a status code. The last step is
to ACK or NAK the received data so the flash loader knows that the data has been read.
Byte[0] = 0x03
Byte[1] = checksum(Byte[2])
Byte[2] = COMMAND_GET_STATUS
A.4.3
COMMAND_DOWNLOAD (0x21)
This command is sent to the flash loader to indicate where to store data and how many bytes will
be sent by the COMMAND_SEND_DATA commands that follow. The command consists of two 32-bit
values that are both transferred MSB first. The first 32-bit value is the address to start programming
data into, while the second is the 32-bit size of the data that will be sent. This command also triggers
an erase of the full area to be programmed so this command takes longer than other commands.
This results in a longer time to receive the ACK/NAK back from the board. This command should
be followed by a COMMAND_GET_STATUS to ensure that the Program Address and Program size
are valid for the device running the flash loader.
The format of the packet to send this command is a follows:
Byte[0]
Byte[1]
Byte[2]
Byte[3]
Byte[4]
Byte[5]
Byte[6]
Byte[7]
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
11
checksum(Bytes[2:10])
COMMAND_DOWNLOAD
Program Address [31:24]
Program Address [23:16]
Program Address [15:8]
Program Address [7:0]
Program Size [31:24]
June 18, 2012
531
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Serial Flash Loader
Byte[8] = Program Size [23:16]
Byte[9] = Program Size [15:8]
Byte[10] = Program Size [7:0]
A.4.4
COMMAND_SEND_DATA (0x24)
This command should only follow a COMMAND_DOWNLOAD command or another
COMMAND_SEND_DATA command if more data is needed. Consecutive send data commands
automatically increment address and continue programming from the previous location. The caller
should limit transfers of data to a maximum 8 bytes of packet data to allow the flash to program
successfully and not overflow input buffers of the serial interfaces. The command terminates
programming once the number of bytes indicated by the COMMAND_DOWNLOAD command has been
received. Each time this function is called it should be followed by a COMMAND_GET_STATUS to
ensure that the data was successfully programmed into the flash. If the flash loader sends a NAK
to this command, the flash loader does not increment the current address to allow retransmission
of the previous data.
Byte[0] = 11
Byte[1] = checksum(Bytes[2:10])
Byte[2] = COMMAND_SEND_DATA
Byte[3] = Data[0]
Byte[4] = Data[1]
Byte[5] = Data[2]
Byte[6] = Data[3]
Byte[7] = Data[4]
Byte[8] = Data[5]
Byte[9] = Data[6]
Byte[10] = Data[7]
A.4.5
COMMAND_RUN (0x22)
This command is used to tell the flash loader to execute from the address passed as the parameter
in this command. This command consists of a single 32-bit value that is interpreted as the address
to execute. The 32-bit value is transmitted MSB first and the flash loader responds with an ACK
signal back to the host device before actually executing the code at the given address. This allows
the host to know that the command was received successfully and the code is now running.
Byte[0]
Byte[1]
Byte[2]
Byte[3]
Byte[4]
Byte[5]
Byte[6]
A.4.6
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
7
checksum(Bytes[2:6])
COMMAND_RUN
Execute Address[31:24]
Execute Address[23:16]
Execute Address[15:8]
Execute Address[7:0]
COMMAND_RESET (0x25)
This command is used to tell the flash loader device to reset. This is useful when downloading a
new image that overwrote the flash loader and wants to start from a full reset. Unlike the
COMMAND_RUN command, this allows the initial stack pointer to be read by the hardware and set
up for the new code. It can also be used to reset the flash loader if a critical error occurs and the
host device wants to restart communication with the flash loader.
532
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
Byte[0] = 3
Byte[1] = checksum(Byte[2])
Byte[2] = COMMAND_RESET
The flash loader responds with an ACK signal back to the host device before actually executing the
software reset to the device running the flash loader. This allows the host to know that the command
was received successfully and the part will be reset.
June 18, 2012
533
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
B
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
The Cortex-M3 Processor
R0, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R1, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R2, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R3, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R4, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R5, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R6, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R7, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R8, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R9, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R10, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R11, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
R12, type R/W, , reset - (see page 49)
DATA
DATA
SP, type R/W, , reset - (see page 50)
SP
SP
LR, type R/W, , reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 51)
LINK
LINK
PC, type R/W, , reset - (see page 52)
PC
PC
534
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
PSR, type R/W, , reset 0x0100.0000 (see page 53)
N
Z
C
V
Q
ICI / IT
THUMB
ICI / IT
ISRNUM
PRIMASK, type R/W, , reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 57)
PRIMASK
FAULTMASK, type R/W, , reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 58)
FAULTMASK
BASEPRI, type R/W, , reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 59)
BASEPRI
CONTROL, type R/W, , reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 60)
ASP
TMPL
INTEN
ENABLE
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
System Timer (SysTick) Registers
Base 0xE000.E000
STCTRL, type R/W, offset 0x010, reset 0x0000.0000
COUNT
CLK_SRC
STRELOAD, type R/W, offset 0x014, reset 0x0000.0000
RELOAD
RELOAD
STCURRENT, type R/WC, offset 0x018, reset 0x0000.0000
CURRENT
CURRENT
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC) Registers
Base 0xE000.E000
EN0, type R/W, offset 0x100, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
INT
EN1, type R/W, offset 0x104, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
DIS0, type R/W, offset 0x180, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
INT
DIS1, type R/W, offset 0x184, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
PEND0, type R/W, offset 0x200, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
INT
PEND1, type R/W, offset 0x204, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
UNPEND0, type R/W, offset 0x280, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
INT
June 18, 2012
535
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
UNPEND1, type R/W, offset 0x284, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
ACTIVE0, type RO, offset 0x300, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
INT
ACTIVE1, type RO, offset 0x304, reset 0x0000.0000
INT
PRI0, type R/W, offset 0x400, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI1, type R/W, offset 0x404, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI2, type R/W, offset 0x408, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI3, type R/W, offset 0x40C, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI4, type R/W, offset 0x410, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI5, type R/W, offset 0x414, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI6, type R/W, offset 0x418, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI7, type R/W, offset 0x41C, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI8, type R/W, offset 0x420, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI9, type R/W, offset 0x424, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
PRI10, type R/W, offset 0x428, reset 0x0000.0000
INTD
INTC
INTB
INTA
SWTRIG, type WO, offset 0xF00, reset 0x0000.0000
INTID
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
System Control Block (SCB) Registers
Base 0xE000.E000
CPUID, type RO, offset 0xD00, reset 0x411F.C231
IMP
VAR
PARTNO
536
CON
REV
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ISRPRE
ISRPEND
INTCTRL, type R/W, offset 0xD04, reset 0x0000.0000
NMISET
PENDSV UNPENDSV PENDSTSET PENDSTCLR
VECPEND
VECPEND
RETBASE
VECACT
VTABLE, type R/W, offset 0xD08, reset 0x0000.0000
BASE
OFFSET
OFFSET
APINT, type R/W, offset 0xD0C, reset 0xFA05.0000
VECTKEY
PRIGROUP
ENDIANESS
SYSRESREQ VECTCLRACT VECTRESET
SYSCTRL, type R/W, offset 0xD10, reset 0x0000.0000
SEVONPEND
SLEEPDEEP SLEEPEXIT
CFGCTRL, type R/W, offset 0xD14, reset 0x0000.0000
DIV0
STKALIGN BFHFNMIGN
UNALIGNED
MAINPEND
BASETHR
SYSPRI1, type R/W, offset 0xD18, reset 0x0000.0000
USAGE
BUS
MEM
SYSPRI2, type R/W, offset 0xD1C, reset 0x0000.0000
SVC
SYSPRI3, type R/W, offset 0xD20, reset 0x0000.0000
TICK
PENDSV
DEBUG
SYSHNDCTRL, type R/W, offset 0xD24, reset 0x0000.0000
USAGE
SVC
BUSP
MEMP
USAGEP
TICK
PNDSV
MON
SVCA
USGA
BUS
MEM
BUSA
MEMA
INVSTAT
UNDEF
DERR
IERR
FAULTSTAT, type R/W1C, offset 0xD28, reset 0x0000.0000
BFARV
BSTKE
BUSTKE
IMPRE
DIV0
UNALIGN
PRECISE
IBUS
NOCP
MMARV
MSTKE
MUSTKE
INVPC
HFAULTSTAT, type R/W1C, offset 0xD2C, reset 0x0000.0000
DBG
FORCED
VECT
MMADDR, type R/W, offset 0xD34, reset ADDR
ADDR
FAULTADDR, type R/W, offset 0xD38, reset ADDR
ADDR
Cortex-M3 Peripherals
Memory Protection Unit (MPU) Registers
Base 0xE000.E000
MPUTYPE, type RO, offset 0xD90, reset 0x0000.0800
IREGION
DREGION
SEPARATE
MPUCTRL, type R/W, offset 0xD94, reset 0x0000.0000
PRIVDEFEN HFNMIENA
ENABLE
MPUNUMBER, type R/W, offset 0xD98, reset 0x0000.0000
NUMBER
June 18, 2012
537
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MPUBASE, type R/W, offset 0xD9C, reset 0x0000.0000
ADDR
ADDR
VALID
REGION
VALID
REGION
VALID
REGION
VALID
REGION
MPUBASE1, type R/W, offset 0xDA4, reset 0x0000.0000
ADDR
ADDR
MPUBASE2, type R/W, offset 0xDAC, reset 0x0000.0000
ADDR
ADDR
MPUBASE3, type R/W, offset 0xDB4, reset 0x0000.0000
ADDR
ADDR
MPUATTR, type R/W, offset 0xDA0, reset 0x0000.0000
XN
AP
TEX
SRD
S
C
SIZE
B
ENABLE
MPUATTR1, type R/W, offset 0xDA8, reset 0x0000.0000
XN
AP
TEX
SRD
S
C
SIZE
B
ENABLE
MPUATTR2, type R/W, offset 0xDB0, reset 0x0000.0000
XN
AP
TEX
SRD
S
C
SIZE
B
ENABLE
MPUATTR3, type R/W, offset 0xDB8, reset 0x0000.0000
XN
AP
TEX
SRD
S
C
SIZE
B
ENABLE
System Control
Base 0x400F.E000
DID0, type RO, offset 0x000, reset - (see page 174)
VER
CLASS
MAJOR
MINOR
PBORCTL, type R/W, offset 0x030, reset 0x0000.7FFD (see page 176)
BORIOR
LDOPCTL, type R/W, offset 0x034, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 177)
VADJ
RIS, type RO, offset 0x050, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 178)
PLLLRIS
BORRIS
PLLLIM
BORIM
PLLLMIS
BORMIS
IMC, type R/W, offset 0x054, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 179)
MISC, type R/W1C, offset 0x058, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 180)
RESC, type R/W, offset 0x05C, reset - (see page 181)
SW
WDT
BOR
POR
EXT
RCC, type R/W, offset 0x060, reset 0x0780.3AD1 (see page 182)
ACG
PWRDN
SYSDIV
BYPASS
USESYSDIV
XTAL
OSCSRC
IOSCDIS MOSCDIS
PLLCFG, type RO, offset 0x064, reset - (see page 185)
F
538
R
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RCC2, type R/W, offset 0x070, reset 0x0780.2810 (see page 186)
USERCC2
SYSDIV2
PWRDN2
BYPASS2
OSCSRC2
DSLPCLKCFG, type R/W, offset 0x144, reset 0x0780.0000 (see page 188)
DSDIVORIDE
DSOSCSRC
DID1, type RO, offset 0x004, reset - (see page 189)
VER
FAM
PARTNO
PINCOUNT
TEMP
PKG
ROHS
QUAL
DC0, type RO, offset 0x008, reset 0x00FF.003F (see page 191)
SRAMSZ
FLASHSZ
DC1, type RO, offset 0x010, reset 0x0100.309F (see page 192)
CAN0
MINSYSDIV
MPU
PLL
WDT
SWO
SWD
JTAG
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
DC2, type RO, offset 0x014, reset 0x0307.0011 (see page 194)
COMP1
COMP0
SSI0
UART0
DC3, type RO, offset 0x018, reset 0x8F00.0FC0 (see page 196)
32KHZ
CCP3
C1O
CCP2
CCP1
C1PLUS C1MINUS
CCP0
C0O
C0PLUS C0MINUS
DC4, type RO, offset 0x01C, reset 0x0000.00FF (see page 198)
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
RCGC0, type R/W, offset 0x100, reset 0x00000040 (see page 199)
CAN0
WDT
SCGC0, type R/W, offset 0x110, reset 0x00000040 (see page 200)
CAN0
WDT
DCGC0, type R/W, offset 0x120, reset 0x00000040 (see page 202)
CAN0
WDT
RCGC1, type R/W, offset 0x104, reset 0x00000000 (see page 204)
COMP1
COMP0
SSI0
UART0
SCGC1, type R/W, offset 0x114, reset 0x00000000 (see page 206)
COMP1
COMP0
TIMER2
TIMER1
SSI0
TIMER0
UART0
DCGC1, type R/W, offset 0x124, reset 0x00000000 (see page 208)
COMP1
COMP0
TIMER2
TIMER1
SSI0
TIMER0
UART0
RCGC2, type R/W, offset 0x108, reset 0x00000000 (see page 210)
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
SCGC2, type R/W, offset 0x118, reset 0x00000000 (see page 212)
DCGC2, type R/W, offset 0x128, reset 0x00000000 (see page 214)
June 18, 2012
539
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TIMER2
TIMER1
TIMER0
SRCR0, type R/W, offset 0x040, reset 0x00000000 (see page 216)
CAN0
WDT
SRCR1, type R/W, offset 0x044, reset 0x00000000 (see page 217)
COMP1
COMP0
SSI0
UART0
SRCR2, type R/W, offset 0x048, reset 0x00000000 (see page 218)
GPIOH
GPIOG
GPIOF
GPIOE
GPIOD
GPIOC
GPIOB
GPIOA
Internal Memory
Flash Memory Control Registers (Flash Control Offset)
Base 0x400F.D000
FMA, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0000
OFFSET
OFFSET
FMD, type R/W, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000
DATA
DATA
FMC, type R/W, offset 0x008, reset 0x0000.0000
WRKEY
COMT
MERASE
ERASE
WRITE
PRIS
ARIS
PMASK
AMASK
PMISC
AMISC
DBG1
DBG0
FCRIS, type RO, offset 0x00C, reset 0x0000.0000
FCIM, type R/W, offset 0x010, reset 0x0000.0000
FCMISC, type R/W1C, offset 0x014, reset 0x0000.0000
Internal Memory
Flash Memory Protection Registers (System Control Offset)
Base 0x400F.E000
USECRL, type R/W, offset 0x140, reset 0x31
USEC
FMPRE0, type R/W, offset 0x130 and 0x200, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
READ_ENABLE
READ_ENABLE
FMPPE0, type R/W, offset 0x134 and 0x400, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
PROG_ENABLE
PROG_ENABLE
USER_DBG, type R/W, offset 0x1D0, reset 0xFFFF.FFFE
NW
DATA
DATA
USER_REG0, type R/W, offset 0x1E0, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
NW
DATA
DATA
USER_REG1, type R/W, offset 0x1E4, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
NW
DATA
DATA
540
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
FMPRE1, type R/W, offset 0x204, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
READ_ENABLE
READ_ENABLE
FMPRE2, type R/W, offset 0x208, reset 0x0000.0000
READ_ENABLE
READ_ENABLE
FMPRE3, type R/W, offset 0x20C, reset 0x0000.0000
READ_ENABLE
READ_ENABLE
FMPPE1, type R/W, offset 0x404, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF
PROG_ENABLE
PROG_ENABLE
FMPPE2, type R/W, offset 0x408, reset 0x0000.0000
PROG_ENABLE
PROG_ENABLE
FMPPE3, type R/W, offset 0x40C, reset 0x0000.0000
PROG_ENABLE
PROG_ENABLE
General-Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs)
GPIO Port A base: 0x4000.4000
GPIO Port B base: 0x4000.5000
GPIO Port C base: 0x4000.6000
GPIO Port D base: 0x4000.7000
GPIO Port E base: 0x4002.4000
GPIO Port F base: 0x4002.5000
GPIO Port G base: 0x4002.6000
GPIO Port H base: 0x4002.7000
GPIODATA, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 259)
DATA
GPIODIR, type R/W, offset 0x400, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 260)
DIR
GPIOIS, type R/W, offset 0x404, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 261)
IS
GPIOIBE, type R/W, offset 0x408, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 262)
IBE
GPIOIEV, type R/W, offset 0x40C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 263)
IEV
GPIOIM, type R/W, offset 0x410, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 264)
IME
GPIORIS, type RO, offset 0x414, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 265)
RIS
GPIOMIS, type RO, offset 0x418, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 266)
MIS
GPIOICR, type W1C, offset 0x41C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 267)
IC
June 18, 2012
541
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOAFSEL, type R/W, offset 0x420, reset - (see page 268)
AFSEL
GPIODR2R, type R/W, offset 0x500, reset 0x0000.00FF (see page 270)
DRV2
GPIODR4R, type R/W, offset 0x504, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 271)
DRV4
GPIODR8R, type R/W, offset 0x508, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 272)
DRV8
GPIOODR, type R/W, offset 0x50C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 273)
ODE
GPIOPUR, type R/W, offset 0x510, reset - (see page 274)
PUE
GPIOPDR, type R/W, offset 0x514, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 275)
PDE
GPIOSLR, type R/W, offset 0x518, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 276)
SRL
GPIODEN, type R/W, offset 0x51C, reset - (see page 277)
DEN
GPIOLOCK, type R/W, offset 0x520, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 278)
LOCK
LOCK
GPIOCR, type -, offset 0x524, reset - (see page 279)
CR
GPIOPeriphID4, type RO, offset 0xFD0, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 281)
PID4
GPIOPeriphID5, type RO, offset 0xFD4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 282)
PID5
GPIOPeriphID6, type RO, offset 0xFD8, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 283)
PID6
GPIOPeriphID7, type RO, offset 0xFDC, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 284)
PID7
GPIOPeriphID0, type RO, offset 0xFE0, reset 0x0000.0061 (see page 285)
PID0
GPIOPeriphID1, type RO, offset 0xFE4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 286)
PID1
542
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GPIOPeriphID2, type RO, offset 0xFE8, reset 0x0000.0018 (see page 287)
PID2
GPIOPeriphID3, type RO, offset 0xFEC, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 288)
PID3
GPIOPCellID0, type RO, offset 0xFF0, reset 0x0000.000D (see page 289)
CID0
GPIOPCellID1, type RO, offset 0xFF4, reset 0x0000.00F0 (see page 290)
CID1
GPIOPCellID2, type RO, offset 0xFF8, reset 0x0000.0005 (see page 291)
CID2
GPIOPCellID3, type RO, offset 0xFFC, reset 0x0000.00B1 (see page 292)
CID3
General-Purpose Timers
Timer0 base: 0x4003.0000
Timer1 base: 0x4003.1000
Timer2 base: 0x4003.2000
GPTMCFG, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 305)
GPTMCFG
GPTMTAMR, type R/W, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 306)
TAAMS
TACMR
TAMR
TBAMS
TBCMR
TBMR
GPTMTBMR, type R/W, offset 0x008, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 308)
GPTMCTL, type R/W, offset 0x00C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 310)
TBPWML
TBEVENT
TBSTALL
TBEN
TAPWML
RTCEN
TAEVENT
TASTALL
TAEN
GPTMIMR, type R/W, offset 0x018, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 313)
CBEIM
CBMIM
TBTOIM
RTCIM
CAEIM
CAMIM
TATOIM
CBMRIS TBTORIS
RTCRIS
CAERIS
CAMRIS
TATORIS
RTCMIS
CAEMIS
CAMMIS TATOMIS
GPTMRIS, type RO, offset 0x01C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 315)
CBERIS
GPTMMIS, type RO, offset 0x020, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 316)
CBEMIS
CBMMIS TBTOMIS
GPTMICR, type W1C, offset 0x024, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 317)
CBECINT CBMCINT TBTOCINT
RTCCINT CAECINT CAMCINT TATOCINT
GPTMTAILR, type R/W, offset 0x028, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 319)
TAILRH
TAILRL
GPTMTBILR, type R/W, offset 0x02C, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 320)
TBILRL
June 18, 2012
543
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RESEN
INTEN
GPTMTAMATCHR, type R/W, offset 0x030, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 321)
TAMRH
TAMRL
GPTMTBMATCHR, type R/W, offset 0x034, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 322)
TBMRL
GPTMTAPR, type R/W, offset 0x038, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 323)
TAPSR
GPTMTBPR, type R/W, offset 0x03C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 324)
TBPSR
GPTMTAPMR, type R/W, offset 0x040, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 325)
TAPSMR
GPTMTBPMR, type R/W, offset 0x044, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 326)
TBPSMR
GPTMTAR, type RO, offset 0x048, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 327)
TARH
TARL
GPTMTBR, type RO, offset 0x04C, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 328)
TBRL
Watchdog Timer
Base 0x4000.0000
WDTLOAD, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 333)
WDTLoad
WDTLoad
WDTVALUE, type RO, offset 0x004, reset 0xFFFF.FFFF (see page 334)
WDTValue
WDTValue
WDTCTL, type R/W, offset 0x008, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 335)
WDTICR, type WO, offset 0x00C, reset - (see page 336)
WDTIntClr
WDTIntClr
WDTRIS, type RO, offset 0x010, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 337)
WDTRIS
WDTMIS, type RO, offset 0x014, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 338)
WDTMIS
WDTTEST, type R/W, offset 0x418, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 339)
STALL
WDTLOCK, type R/W, offset 0xC00, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 340)
WDTLock
WDTLock
WDTPeriphID4, type RO, offset 0xFD0, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 341)
PID4
544
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
OE
BE
PE
FE
WDTPeriphID5, type RO, offset 0xFD4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 342)
PID5
WDTPeriphID6, type RO, offset 0xFD8, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 343)
PID6
WDTPeriphID7, type RO, offset 0xFDC, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 344)
PID7
WDTPeriphID0, type RO, offset 0xFE0, reset 0x0000.0005 (see page 345)
PID0
WDTPeriphID1, type RO, offset 0xFE4, reset 0x0000.0018 (see page 346)
PID1
WDTPeriphID2, type RO, offset 0xFE8, reset 0x0000.0018 (see page 347)
PID2
WDTPeriphID3, type RO, offset 0xFEC, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 348)
PID3
WDTPCellID0, type RO, offset 0xFF0, reset 0x0000.000D (see page 349)
CID0
WDTPCellID1, type RO, offset 0xFF4, reset 0x0000.00F0 (see page 350)
CID1
WDTPCellID2, type RO, offset 0xFF8, reset 0x0000.0005 (see page 351)
CID2
WDTPCellID3, type RO, offset 0xFFC, reset 0x0000.00B1 (see page 352)
CID3
Universal Asynchronous Receivers/Transmitters (UARTs)
UART0 base: 0x4000.C000
UARTDR, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 362)
OE
BE
PE
FE
DATA
UARTRSR/UARTECR, type RO, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000 (Reads) (see page 364)
UARTRSR/UARTECR, type WO, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000 (Writes) (see page 364)
DATA
UARTFR, type RO, offset 0x018, reset 0x0000.0090 (see page 366)
TXFE
RXFF
TXFF
RXFE
BUSY
UARTILPR, type R/W, offset 0x020, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 368)
ILPDVSR
UARTIBRD, type R/W, offset 0x024, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 369)
DIVINT
June 18, 2012
545
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
EPS
PEN
BRK
SIRLP
SIREN
UARTEN
UARTFBRD, type R/W, offset 0x028, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 370)
DIVFRAC
UARTLCRH, type R/W, offset 0x02C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 371)
SPS
WLEN
FEN
STP2
UARTCTL, type R/W, offset 0x030, reset 0x0000.0300 (see page 373)
RXE
TXE
LBE
UARTIFLS, type R/W, offset 0x034, reset 0x0000.0012 (see page 375)
RXIFLSEL
TXIFLSEL
UARTIM, type R/W, offset 0x038, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 377)
OEIM
BEIM
PEIM
FEIM
RTIM
TXIM
RXIM
PERIS
FERIS
RTRIS
TXRIS
RXRIS
PEMIS
FEMIS
RTMIS
TXMIS
RXMIS
PEIC
FEIC
RTIC
TXIC
RXIC
UARTRIS, type RO, offset 0x03C, reset 0x0000.000F (see page 379)
OERIS
BERIS
UARTMIS, type RO, offset 0x040, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 380)
OEMIS
BEMIS
UARTICR, type W1C, offset 0x044, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 381)
OEIC
BEIC
UARTPeriphID4, type RO, offset 0xFD0, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 383)
PID4
UARTPeriphID5, type RO, offset 0xFD4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 384)
PID5
UARTPeriphID6, type RO, offset 0xFD8, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 385)
PID6
UARTPeriphID7, type RO, offset 0xFDC, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 386)
PID7
UARTPeriphID0, type RO, offset 0xFE0, reset 0x0000.0011 (see page 387)
PID0
UARTPeriphID1, type RO, offset 0xFE4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 388)
PID1
UARTPeriphID2, type RO, offset 0xFE8, reset 0x0000.0018 (see page 389)
PID2
UARTPeriphID3, type RO, offset 0xFEC, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 390)
PID3
UARTPCellID0, type RO, offset 0xFF0, reset 0x0000.000D (see page 391)
CID0
546
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
UARTPCellID1, type RO, offset 0xFF4, reset 0x0000.00F0 (see page 392)
CID1
UARTPCellID2, type RO, offset 0xFF8, reset 0x0000.0005 (see page 393)
CID2
UARTPCellID3, type RO, offset 0xFFC, reset 0x0000.00B1 (see page 394)
CID3
Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI)
SSI0 base: 0x4000.8000
SSICR0, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 408)
SCR
SPH
SPO
FRF
DSS
SSICR1, type R/W, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 410)
SOD
MS
SSE
LBM
RFF
RNE
TNF
TFE
TXIM
RXIM
RTIM
RORIM
TXRIS
RXRIS
RTRIS
RORRIS
TXMIS
RXMIS
RTMIS
RORMIS
RTIC
RORIC
SSIDR, type R/W, offset 0x008, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 412)
DATA
SSISR, type RO, offset 0x00C, reset 0x0000.0003 (see page 413)
BSY
SSICPSR, type R/W, offset 0x010, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 415)
CPSDVSR
SSIIM, type R/W, offset 0x014, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 416)
SSIRIS, type RO, offset 0x018, reset 0x0000.0008 (see page 418)
SSIMIS, type RO, offset 0x01C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 419)
SSIICR, type W1C, offset 0x020, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 420)
SSIPeriphID4, type RO, offset 0xFD0, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 421)
PID4
SSIPeriphID5, type RO, offset 0xFD4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 422)
PID5
SSIPeriphID6, type RO, offset 0xFD8, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 423)
PID6
SSIPeriphID7, type RO, offset 0xFDC, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 424)
PID7
SSIPeriphID0, type RO, offset 0xFE0, reset 0x0000.0022 (see page 425)
PID0
June 18, 2012
547
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
EIE
SIE
IE
INIT
SSIPeriphID1, type RO, offset 0xFE4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 426)
PID1
SSIPeriphID2, type RO, offset 0xFE8, reset 0x0000.0018 (see page 427)
PID2
SSIPeriphID3, type RO, offset 0xFEC, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 428)
PID3
SSIPCellID0, type RO, offset 0xFF0, reset 0x0000.000D (see page 429)
CID0
SSIPCellID1, type RO, offset 0xFF4, reset 0x0000.00F0 (see page 430)
CID1
SSIPCellID2, type RO, offset 0xFF8, reset 0x0000.0005 (see page 431)
CID2
SSIPCellID3, type RO, offset 0xFFC, reset 0x0000.00B1 (see page 432)
CID3
Controller Area Network (CAN) Module
CAN0 base: 0x4004.0000
CANCTL, type R/W, offset 0x000, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 455)
TEST
CCE
DAR
BOFF
EWARN
EPASS
CANSTS, type R/W, offset 0x004, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 457)
RXOK
TXOK
LEC
CANERR, type RO, offset 0x008, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 459)
RP
REC
TEC
CANBIT, type R/W, offset 0x00C, reset 0x0000.2301 (see page 460)
TSEG2
TSEG1
SJW
BRP
CANINT, type RO, offset 0x010, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 461)
INTID
CANTST, type R/W, offset 0x014, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 462)
RX
TX
LBACK
SILENT
BASIC
CANBRPE, type R/W, offset 0x018, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 464)
BRPE
CANIF1CRQ, type R/W, offset 0x020, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 465)
BUSY
MNUM
CANIF2CRQ, type R/W, offset 0x080, reset 0x0000.0001 (see page 465)
BUSY
MNUM
548
June 18, 2012
Texas Instruments-Production Data
®
Stellaris LM3S2730 Microcontroller
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
WRNRD
MASK
ARB
CONTROL CLRINTPND
DATAA
DATAB
WRNRD
MASK
ARB
CONTROL CLRINTPND
DATAA
DATAB
CANIF1CMSK, type R/W, offset 0x024, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 466)
NEWDAT /
TXRQST
CANIF2CMSK, type R/W, offset 0x084, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 466)
NEWDAT /
TXRQST
CANIF1MSK1, type R/W, offset 0x028, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 468)
MSK
CANIF2MSK1, type R/W, offset 0x088, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 468)
MSK
CANIF1MSK2, type R/W, offset 0x02C, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 469)
MXTD
MDIR
MSK
CANIF2MSK2, type R/W, offset 0x08C, reset 0x0000.FFFF (see page 469)
MXTD
MDIR
MSK
CANIF1ARB1, type R/W, offset 0x030, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 470)
ID
CANIF2ARB1, type R/W, offset 0x090, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 470)
ID
CANIF1ARB2, type R/W, offset 0x034, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 471)
MSGVAL
XTD
DIR
ID
CANIF2ARB2, type R/W, offset 0x094, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 471)
MSGVAL
XTD
DIR
ID
CANIF1MCTL, type R/W, offset 0x038, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 473)
NEWDAT MSGLST
INTPND
UMASK
TXIE
RXIE
RMTEN
TXRQST
EOB
DLC
TXRQST
EOB
DLC
CANIF2MCTL, type R/W, offset 0x098, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 473)
NEWDAT MSGLST
INTPND
UMASK
TXIE
RXIE
RMTEN
CANIF1DA1, type R/W, offset 0x03C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF1DA2, type R/W, offset 0x040, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF1DB1, type R/W, offset 0x044, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF1DB2, type R/W, offset 0x048, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF2DA1, type R/W, offset 0x09C, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
June 18, 2012
549
Texas Instruments-Production Data
Register Quick Reference
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IN1
IN0
IN1
IN0
IN1
IN0
CANIF2DA2, type R/W, offset 0x0A0, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF2DB1, type R/W, offset 0x0A4, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANIF2DB2, type R/W, offset 0x0A8, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 475)
DATA
CANTXRQ1, type RO, offset 0x100, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 476)
TXRQST
CANTXRQ2, type RO, offset 0x104, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 476)
TXRQST
CANNWDA1, type RO, offset 0x120, reset 0x0000.0000 (see page 477)
NEWDAT
CANNWDA2, type RO, offset 0x124, reset 0x0000
Similar pages