SLAU846A June 2023 – October 2023 MSPM0G1105 , MSPM0G1106 , MSPM0G1107 , MSPM0G1505 , MSPM0G1506 , MSPM0G1507 , MSPM0G3105 , MSPM0G3105-Q1 , MSPM0G3106 , MSPM0G3106-Q1 , MSPM0G3107 , MSPM0G3107-Q1 , MSPM0G3505 , MSPM0G3505-Q1 , MSPM0G3506 , MSPM0G3506-Q1 , MSPM0G3507 , MSPM0G3507-Q1
LFCLK provides a continuous 32-kHz clock to a variety of peripherals on the device. After a BOOTRST, LFCLK is initially sourced by the internal 32-kHz oscillator (LFOSC). After boot, LFCLK can be switched by software to either the low-frequency crystal oscillator (LFXT) or the low-frequency digital clock input (LFCLK_IN). See the respective oscillator section for instructions on switching the LFCLK source. When the LFCLK source is changed, the change is locked and LFOSC is disabled to save power. It is not possible to again select LFOSC as the LFCLK source without executing a BOOTRST.
LFCLK is active in RUN, SLEEP, STOP, and STANDBY power modes. It is possible to disable both ULPCLK and LFCLK together to most peripherals in STANDBY mode to achieve the lowest possible STANDBY mode power consumption (STANDBY1). To do so, set the STOPCLKSTBY bit in the MCLKCFG register in SYSCTL before entering STANDBY. In this state, the RTC and TIMG0 and TIMG1 are the only clocked peripherals .
LFCLK is a synchronized clock. All LFCLK edges are synchronized to the main system clocks (MCLK and ULPCLK), meaning that the registers of peripherals clocked by LFCLK can be read or written to at any time without any special handling. The RTC is the only exception to this rule, as the RTC receives RTCCLK which is the asynchronous LFCLK.Peripherals can select LFCLK as their functional clock source through their respective CLKSEL mux. Not all peripherals support running from LFCLK. It is possible to run the main clock (MCLK) from LFCK, in which case the entire device runs at the LFCLK rate (32 kHz).