SLAZ544T July   2013  – May 2021 MSP430F5239

 

  1. 1Functional Advisories
  2. 2Preprogrammed Software Advisories
  3. 3Debug Only Advisories
  4. 4Fixed by Compiler Advisories
  5. 5Nomenclature, Package Symbolization, and Revision Identification
    1. 5.1 Device Nomenclature
    2. 5.2 Package Markings
      1.      YFF64
      2.      ZQE80
      3.      RGC64
    3. 5.3 Memory-Mapped Hardware Revision (TLV Structure)
  6. 6Advisory Descriptions
    1. 6.1  BSL7
    2. 6.2  COMP10
    3. 6.3  CPU21
    4. 6.4  CPU22
    5. 6.5  CPU40
    6. 6.6  CPU47
    7. 6.7  DMA4
    8. 6.8  DMA7
    9. 6.9  DMA10
    10. 6.10 EEM17
    11. 6.11 EEM19
    12. 6.12 EEM21
    13. 6.13 EEM23
    14. 6.14 JTAG26
    15. 6.15 JTAG27
    16. 6.16 PMAP1
    17. 6.17 PMM9
    18. 6.18 PMM11
    19. 6.19 PMM12
    20. 6.20 PMM14
    21. 6.21 PMM15
    22. 6.22 PMM18
    23. 6.23 PMM20
    24. 6.24 PORT15
    25. 6.25 PORT19
    26. 6.26 PORT33
    27. 6.27 RTC3
    28. 6.28 RTC6
    29. 6.29 SYS12
    30. 6.30 SYS16
    31. 6.31 UCS7
    32. 6.32 UCS9
    33. 6.33 UCS11
    34. 6.34 USCI26
    35. 6.35 USCI34
    36. 6.36 USCI35
    37. 6.37 USCI39
    38. 6.38 USCI40
  7. 7Revision History

DMA4

DMA Module

Category

Functional

Function

Corrupted write access to 20-bit DMA registers

Description

When a 20-bit wide write to a DMA address register (DMAxSA or DMAxDA) is interrupted by a DMA transfer, the register contents may be unpredictable.

Workaround

1. Design the application to guarantee that no DMA access interrupts 20-bit wide accesses to the DMA address registers.

OR

2. When accessing the DMA address registers, enable the Read Modify Write disable bit (DMARMWDIS = 1) or temporarily disable all active DMA channels (DMAEN = 0).

OR

3. Use word access for accessing the DMA address registers. Note that this limits the values that can be written to the address registers to 16-bit values (lower 64K of Flash).