SLAU846B June 2023 – November 2024 MSPM0G1105 , MSPM0G1106 , MSPM0G1107 , MSPM0G1505 , MSPM0G1506 , MSPM0G1507 , MSPM0G1519 , MSPM0G3105 , MSPM0G3105-Q1 , MSPM0G3106 , MSPM0G3106-Q1 , MSPM0G3107 , MSPM0G3107-Q1 , MSPM0G3505 , MSPM0G3505-Q1 , MSPM0G3506 , MSPM0G3506-Q1 , MSPM0G3507 , MSPM0G3507-Q1 , MSPM0G3519
MSPM0 devices implement a flat memory map with a 32-bit byte-addressable address space. Byte addresses are unsigned numbers ranging from zero to 232-1.
The processor sees the address space as containing 230 32-bit words, with each word being word-aligned (4-byte aligned). Pointers are always 32 bits, and stack operations (for example, push , pop) increment the stack pointer by 4 addresses (4 bytes). Address calculations by the processor wrap around if they overflow or underflow the 32-bit memory space.
Instruction fetches by the processor are always 16-bit half-word aligned.
Data reads by the processor must be naturally aligned (for example, words must be word aligned, half words must be half-word aligned, etc.).
The processor supports 8-bit byte, 16-bit half-word, and 32-bit word data sizes. Signed and unsigned data is supported, and signed data is stored in CPU registers in 32-bit two's complement format. The Armv6-M instruction set does not provide native instructions supporting operations on 64-bit double-word data.
Load operations from memory to a CPU register can be signed or unsigned when the data size is less than 32 bits. When loading unsigned half-word or byte data to a CPU register, the value is zero-extended to 32 bits automatically. When loading signed half-word or byte data to a CPU register, the value is sign-extended to 32 bits automatically.
Stores from CPU registers to memory are sign agnostic.
All instruction and data accesses use little endian byte order.