JAJSO72 March 2022 CC1311R3
PRODUCTION DATA
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A large selection of timers are available as part of the CC1311R3 device. These timers are:
A
70-bit 3-channel timer running on the 32 kHz low frequency system clock
(SCLK_LF)
This timer is available in
all power modes except Shutdown. The timer can be calibrated to
compensate for frequency drift when using the LF RCOSC as the low
frequency system clock. If an external LF clock with frequency different
from 32.768 kHz is used, the RTC tick speed can be adjusted to
compensate for this. When using TI-RTOS, the RTC is used as the base
timer in the operating system and should thus only be accessed through
the kernel APIs such as the Clock module. By default, the RTC halts when
a debugger halts the device.
The four flexible GPTIMERs can be used as either 4× 32 bit timers or 8× 16 bit timers, all running on up to 48 MHz. Each of the 16- or 32-bit timers support a wide range of features such as one-shot or periodic counting, pulse width modulation (PWM), time counting between edges and edge counting. The inputs and outputs of the timer are connected to the device event fabric, which allows the timers to interact with signals such as GPIO inputs, other timers, DMA and ADC. The GPTIMERs are available in Active and Idle power modes.
A multichannel 32-bit timer running at 4 MHz is available as part of the device radio. The radio timer is typically used as the timing base in wireless network communication using the 32-bit timing word as the network time. The radio timer is synchronized with the RTC by using a dedicated radio API when the device radio is turned on or off. This ensures that for a network stack, the radio timer seems to always be running when the radio is enabled. The radio timer is in most cases used indirectly through the trigger time fields in the radio APIs and should only be used when running the accurate 48 MHz high frequency crystal is the source of SCLK_HF.
The watchdog timer is used to regain control if the system operates incorrectly due to software errors. It is typically used to generate an interrupt to and reset of the device for the case where periodic monitoring of the system components and tasks fails to verify proper functionality. The watchdog timer runs on a 1.5 MHz clock rate and cannot be stopped once enabled. The watchdog timer pauses to run in Standby power mode and when a debugger halts the device.