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
The frequency clock counter (FCC) enables flexible in-system testing and calibration of a variety of oscillators and clocks on the device. The FCC counts the number of clock periods seen on the selected source clock within a known fixed trigger period (derived from a secondary reference source) to provide an estimation of the frequency of the source clock.
Application software can use the FCC to measure the frequency of the following source oscillators and clocks (selected through the FCCSELCLK field in the GENCLKCFG register):
The reference clock used to set the trigger time over which pulses of the source clock are counted is configurable (through the FCCTRIGSRC field in the GENCLKCFG register), and can be driven by:
The trigger time period can be set in one of two ways (through the FCCLVLTRIG field in the GENCLKCFG register):
When the trigger source is selected as the external FCC input in level-triggered mode, a user-specified counting period can be set by applying a logic high pulse on the FCC_IN pin of the desired trigger length.
When the trigger source is selected as the LFXT, using rising-edge to rising-edge triggering will cause the FCC to capture the number of source clock pulses which occurred within 1 to 32 32.768-kHz clock periods of the LFXT (30.5 μs).
The FCC counter is 22 bits and supports counting from 0 up to 222 – 1 or 4 194 303.
While the external FCC input (FCC_IN function) can be used as either the FCC clock source or the FCC trigger input, it cannot be used for both functions during the same FCC capture. It must be configured as either the FCC clock source or the FCC trigger.