SLAA381C December   2007  – September 2018 MSP430F233 , MSP430F235 , MSP430F2410 , MSP430F247 , MSP430F248 , MSP430F249

 

  1.   Migrating From MSP430F13x and MSP430F14x MCUs to MSP430F23x and MSP430F24x MCUs
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Comparison of MSP430F1xx and MSP430F2xx Families
    3. 2 Hardware Considerations for F13x/F14x to F23x/F24x Migration
      1. 2.1 Device Package and Pinout
      2. 2.2 Current Consumption
      3. 2.3 Operating Frequency and Supply Voltage
      4. 2.4 Device Errata
    4. 3 Firmware Considerations for F13x/F14x to F23x/F24x Migration
      1. 3.1 Memory Considerations
        1. 3.1.1 Device Memory Map
        2. 3.1.2 Information Flash Memory
      2. 3.2 Serial Communication – USART and USCI
        1. 3.2.1 UART Mode
        2. 3.2.2 SPI Mode
      3. 3.3 Clock System
        1. 3.3.1 LFXT1 and XT2 Oscillators
        2. 3.3.2 Digitally Controlled Oscillator (DCO)
      4. 3.4 Bootloader (BSL)
      5. 3.5 Interrupt Vectors
      6. 3.6 Beware of Reserved Bits!
      7. 3.7 Timers
      8. 3.8 Analog Comparator
    5. 4 References
  2.   Revision History

Bootloader (BSL)

F23x/F24x MCUs have a new BSL firmware with enhanced security features. Both F13x/F14x and F23x/F24x MCU memory access is protected by a 256-bit password. However, only F23x/F24x MCUs erase the entire device flash memory contents (including the factory-provided calibration constants stored in the INFOA flash segment) on the first attempt to access the device with an incorrect password. This behavior is configurable and needs to be considered for applications that use the BSL interface to provide in-field software upgrade capability.