SWCU185G January 2018 – June 2024 CC1312PSIP , CC1312R , CC1352P , CC1352R , CC2642R , CC2642R-Q1 , CC2652P , CC2652PSIP , CC2652R , CC2652RB , CC2652RSIP , CC2662R-Q1
When a burst request is detected, the μDMA controller transfers the number of items that is the lesser of the arbitration size or the number of items remaining in the transfer. Therefore, the arbitration size must be the same as the number of data items that the peripheral can accommodate when making a burst request. For example, the UART and SPI, which use a mix of single or burst requests, could generate a burst request based on the FIFO trigger level. In this case, the arbitration size must be set to the amount of data that the FIFO can transfer when the trigger level is reached. A burst transfer runs to completion once it starts and cannot be interrupted, even by a higher-priority channel. Burst transfers complete in a shorter time than the same number of nonburst transfers.
It may be desirable to use only burst transfers and not allow single transfers (for example, when the nature of the data is such that it only makes sense when transferred together as a single unit rather than one piece at a time). The single request can be disabled in the UDMA:SETBURST register. By setting the bit for a channel in this register, the μDMA controller responds only to burst requests for that channel.