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Week 16

Week 16. Administration. Week 17 (1/7): Term Project workshop No class, I will be here to help you work on your term project Deadline for the lab exercises Demo and turn on your codes before 2008/1/7 23:59 Otherwise I don’t think you can finish your term project. MSP430 Clock System.

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Week 16

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  1. Week 16

  2. Administration • Week 17 (1/7): Term Project workshop • No class, I will be here to help you work on your term project • Deadline for the lab exercises • Demo and turn on your codes before 2008/1/7 23:59 • Otherwise I don’t think you can finish your term project

  3. MSP430 Clock System high-frequency oscillator (optional) MSP430 digitally controlled oscillator Clock Signals Clock Modules CPU DCOCLK MCLK: Master Clock XT2CLK SMCLK: Sub-main clock Peripherals: Timer, UART, … LFXT1CLK ACLK: Auxiliary clock 32.768KHz fixed rate Low-frequency/high-frequency oscillator

  4. MSP430 Power Consumption Characteristics • Current increase with clock frequency • Current increase with supply voltage • Supply voltage vs frequency • More active peripherals means more current consumption

  5. Operating Modes • MSP430 has six operating modes • The operating modes take into account three different needs • Ultralow-power • Speed and data throughput • Minimization of individual peripheral current consumption • Turn off different clocks in different operating mode

  6. Operating Modes

  7. Typical Current Consumption

  8. Low Power Modes • Different low power mode disable different clocks • Peripherals operating with any disabled clock are disabled until the clock becomes active • Wake up is possible through all enabled interrupts • Returns to the previous operating mode if the status register value is not altered during the ISR

  9. Code Flow

  10. Enter/Leave LPM Intrinsic function

  11. Which LPM To Enter? • Depends on your configuration • MSP430 has a flexible clock system • Clock signal can select different clock source • Peripheral can be configure to use different clock signal • Which clock signal still require when system goes to sleep • Remember the peripherals that use the clock signal will also be disabled

  12. Cautions • Wakeup latency • Clock module require some time to get stable • DCO: less than 6 μS • Low frequency oscillator (32.768KHz): hundreds of milliseconds • Temperature drift • DCO change with temperature • If temperature is possible to changes significantly, re-calibrate DCO when leaving low power mode • If DCO varying too large, some peripherals might not function correctly, ex. UART

  13. Typical Configuration MSP430 digitally controlled oscillator Clock Signals Clock Modules CPU DCOCLK MCLK: Master Clock XT2CLK SMCLK: Sub-main clock Peripherals: Timer, UART, … LFXT1CLK ACLK: Auxiliary clock 32.768KHz fixed rate

  14. Useful Mode • LPM0 • CPU, MCLK off • DCO, SMCLK, ACLK on • Power consumption: 60 μA (Taroko) • SMCLK still required • Ex. UART use SMCLK • LPM3 • CPU, MCLK, DCO, SMCLK off • ACLK on • Power consumption: 7 μA (Taroko) • Only ACLK required • Timer use ACLK (time keeping)

  15. TinyOS Power Management • Enter low power state when the task queue is empty • TinyOS 1.x takes two approach • Mica platform • Calculates the low power state when told to • Problem: when to calculates? • MSP430 platform • Calculates the low power state when every time the scheduler tells the system to go to sleep • Problem: overhead

  16. TinyOS Power Management • TinyOS 2.x: three basic mechanisms • Dirty bit • When hardware configuration that might change the possible low power state of the microcontroller • Must re-compute the low power state • Low power state calculation function • Calculating the lowest power state that it can safely put the microcontroller into without disrupting the operation of TinyOS subsystems • Power state override function • higher-level components can overrides the low power state

  17. Calculating The Lowest Power State Check registers to know which clock sources the system used in order to determine which LPM mode to enter

  18. Potential Problems • Requirements that cannot be captured in hardware status and configuration registers • Ex. Maximum tolerable wakeup latency • Power override can only set to higher LPM mode • Lack of optimization

  19. Principles for Low-Power Applications • Maximize the time in LPM3 • Use interrupts to wake the processor and control program flow • Peripherals should be switched on only when needed • Use low-power integrated peripheral modules in place of software driven functions • For example: Timer PWM, DMA

  20. Measurement • How to measure power consumption • Measure current with a high-end digital multimeter • Measure voltage with oscilloscope • Characteristics of power consumption • Large dynamic range • Minimum (LPM3): 10 μA • Maximum (Radio+LED+ADC+…): 100 mA • Require high resolution • Fast switching • Current consumption change very fast • Require fast sample rate

  21. Measurement • Measure current with a high-end digital multimeter • Agilent 34411A digital multimeter • 6 ½ digit • 50000 SPS (max)

  22. Measurement • Measure voltage with oscilloscope I Oscilloscope measure voltage Rsense I = V/Rsense

  23. Demo

  24. Watchdog Timer • A “dog” watch for system hang • Watchdog timer on MSP430 • 16-bit timer, four software-selectable time intervals • (clock source)/32768, (clock source)/8192, (clock source)/512, (clock source)/64 • Resets the processor when it rolls over to zero • Can be configured into watchdog mode or interval mode • Watchdog mode: generate a reset when timer expired • Interval mode: generate a interrupt when timer expired • When power up, it is automatically configured in the watchdog mode • Initial ~32-ms reset interval using the DCOCLK. • Must halt or setup the timer at the beginning

  25. Usage • Stop watchdog timer • WDTCTL = WDTPW + WDTHOLD; • Change watchdog timer interval • WDTCTL = WDTPW+WDTCNTCL+(interval) • Periodically clear an active watchdog • WDTCTL |= WDTPW+WDTCNTCL ClockSource/32768: ClockSource/8192: WDTIS0 ClockSource/512: WDTIS1 ClockSource/64: WDTIS0 + WDTIS1 Password-protected: must include the write password

  26. Supply Voltage Supervisor • Monitor the AVCC supply voltage or an external voltage • Can be configured to set a flag or generate a reset when the supply voltage or external voltage drops below a user-selected threshold • Comparison • 14 threshold levels for AVCC • SVSIN is compared to an internal level of approximately 1.2 V

  27. SVS Register • SVSCTL • VLDx

  28. Direct Memory Access • Transfers data from one address to another, without CPU intervention • Increase throughput and decrease power consumption • DMA on MSP430 • Three independent transfer channels • Configurable transfer trigger selections • Timer, UART, SPI, ADC, ….. • Byte or word and mixed byte/word transfer capability • Single, block, or burst-block transfer modes • Block sizes up to 65535 bytes or words

  29. DMA Addressing Modes Source/destination address can be configured to be unchange/increment/decrement after each transfer

  30. DMA Transfer Modes • Six transfer modes • Single transfer, block transfer, burst-block transfer, repeated single transfer, repeated block transfer, repeated burst-block transfer • Single transfer • Each transfer requires a separate trigger, DMA is disable after transfer • Must re-enable DMA before receive another trigger • Repeated single transfer: DMA remains enable • Another trigger start another transfer • Block transfer • Transfer of a complete block after one trigger, DMA is disable after transfer • Repeated block transfer: DMA remains enable, • Another trigger start another transfer • Burst-block transfer • Block transfers with CPU activity interleaved, • Repeated burst-block transfer: DMA remains enable • Keep transferring • CPU executes at 20% capacity

  31. Initialization And Usage • Example (DMACTL0) Configure transfer trigger (DMA0SA) Configure source address (DMA0DA) Configure destination address (DMACTL1) Select transfer mode, addressing mode, and/or other setting, and enable DMA (DMA0SZ) Configure block size Use DMA to transfer a string to UART buffer, send it out through UART

  32. Others About DMA • DMA Transfer Cycle Time • DMA transfers are not interruptible by system interrupts

  33. Flash Memory Controller • MSP430 flash memory is bit-, byte-, and word-addressable and programmable • Segment erase and mass erase • Minimum VCC voltage during a flash write or erase operation is 2.7 V • Program code are stored in the flash • Unused flash memory can be use to store other data

  34. Flash Memory Characteristics • Write in bit-, byte-, or word; erase in segment • MSP430F1611 segment size • Information memory: 128 bytes • Main memory: 512 bytes • Erase • Make every bit in the segment as logic 1 • Write • Generate logic 0 in the memory • Flash endurance • Maximum erase/write cycles • In MSP430 datasheet • Minimum: 10000 cycles • Typical: 100000 cycles

  35. Flash Memory Operation • Read, write, erase mode • Default mode is read mode • Write/erase modes are selected with the BLKWRT, WRT, MERAS, and ERASE bits • Flash Memory Timing Generator • Sourced from ACLK, SMCLK, or MCLK • Must be in the range from ~ 257 kHz to ~ 476 kHz • Incorrect frequency may result in unpredictable write/erase operation

  36. Flash Memory Erase • Example Disable all interrupts and watchdog (FCTL2) Setup timing generator (FCTL3) Unlock flash memory (FCTL1) Configure the operation Re-enable interrupt and watchdog (FCTL3) lock flash memory Wait until erase complete Dummy write Password protected

  37. Flash Memory Write • Example Disable all interrupts and watchdog (FCTL2) Setup timing generator (FCTL3) Unlock flash memory (FCTL1) Configure the operation Re-enable interrupt and watchdog (FCTL3) lock flash memory Wait until write complete Write to specific memory address Password protected

  38. MSP430 Application Notes • Sample applications on using an MSP430 • Some useful examples • MSP430 Software Coding Techniques • Random Number Generation Using the MSP430 • CRC Implementation with MSP430 • Digital FIR Filter Design Using the MSP430F16x • Wave Digital Filtering Using the MSP430

  39. MSP430 Software Coding Techniques • Using these methods can greatly reduce debug time and/or provide additional robustness in the field • Some should be used in every program, while some are situation dependent

  40. Techniques • First Things First: Configure the Watchdog and Oscillator • Configuring the watchdog should be among the first actions taken by any MSP430 program • Using a low-frequency crystal on LFXT1 with a device from the 4xx or 2xx families, the code should configure the internal load capacitance (not for MSP430F1611)

  41. Techniques • Always Use Standard Definitions From TI Header Files • This is what we do • Using Intrinsic Functions to Handle Low Power Modes and Other Functions Intrinsic function

  42. Techniques • Write Handlers for Oscillator Faults • In MSP430F1611, you can only delay for some time to ensure the low frequency oscillator to stable • The other MSP430 family has specific circuit to detect • Increasing the MCLK Frequency • Make sure you have enough voltage level to operate at the frequency you set • Or unpredictable behavior can occur

  43. Techniques • Using a low-level initialization function • Problem • By default, when a C compiler generates assembly code, it creates code that initializes all declared memory and inserts it before the first instruction of the main() function • In the event that the amount of declared memory is large • The time required to initialize the long list of variables may be so long that the watchdog expires before the first line of main() can be executed • Solution • Disables the initialization of memory elements that don't need pre-initialization • __no_init int x_array[2500]; • Use a compiler-defined low-level initialization function

  44. Techniques • In-System Programming (ISP) • If using the MSP430 ISP functionality to write to flash memory • Set the correct timing value (257 kHz to ~ 476 kHz) • Set the flash lock bit after the ISP operation is complete • Take care that the cumulative programming time • Provide sufficient VCC • Using Checksums to Verify Flash Integrity • Flash memory data may corrupt, use checksum to verify flash integrity periodically

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