SLAU847D October 2022 – May 2024 MSPM0L1105 , MSPM0L1106 , MSPM0L1227 , MSPM0L1228 , MSPM0L1228-Q1 , MSPM0L1303 , MSPM0L1304 , MSPM0L1304-Q1 , MSPM0L1305 , MSPM0L1305-Q1 , MSPM0L1306 , MSPM0L1306-Q1 , MSPM0L1343 , MSPM0L1344 , MSPM0L1345 , MSPM0L1346 , MSPM0L2227 , MSPM0L2228 , MSPM0L2228-Q1
The timestamp event can be triggered by an edge detection of any of the tamper I/O or by a power loss detection of the main supply (VDD). This event will capture the RTC state as a timestamp of the first or last occurrence of the timestamp event. The TSCTL register controls which source that triggers a capture event and whether the first of last event is captured. An illustration of the timestamp feature in context of the RTC can be seen in ?.
In the case that a capture event happens, the tamper I/O can be configured to display this status to the outside world via an I/O pin. The signal is sticky and will get set by the first timestamp event. It will stay active till the timestamp is cleared by SW (TSCTL.TSCLR).