SLAZ586V January   2014  – May 2021 MSP430F67681A

 

  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.      PEU128
      2.      PZ100
    3. 5.3 Memory-Mapped Hardware Revision (TLV Structure)
  6. 6Advisory Descriptions
    1. 6.1  ADC39
    2. 6.2  ADC42
    3. 6.3  ADC69
    4. 6.4  AUXPMM2
    5. 6.5  BSL7
    6. 6.6  BSL14
    7. 6.7  COMP10
    8. 6.8  CPU21
    9. 6.9  CPU22
    10. 6.10 CPU36
    11. 6.11 CPU37
    12. 6.12 CPU40
    13. 6.13 CPU46
    14. 6.14 CPU47
    15. 6.15 DMA4
    16. 6.16 DMA7
    17. 6.17 DMA9
    18. 6.18 DMA10
    19. 6.19 EEM17
    20. 6.20 EEM19
    21. 6.21 EEM23
    22. 6.22 JTAG26
    23. 6.23 JTAG27
    24. 6.24 LCDB6
    25. 6.25 PMM11
    26. 6.26 PMM12
    27. 6.27 PMM14
    28. 6.28 PMM15
    29. 6.29 PMM18
    30. 6.30 PMM20
    31. 6.31 PMM26
    32. 6.32 PORT15
    33. 6.33 PORT19
    34. 6.34 PORT26
    35. 6.35 SD3
    36. 6.36 SYS16
    37. 6.37 UCS11
    38. 6.38 USCI36
    39. 6.39 USCI37
    40. 6.40 USCI41
    41. 6.41 USCI42
    42. 6.42 USCI47
    43. 6.43 USCI50
  7. 7Revision History

DMA7

DMA Module

Category

Functional

Function

DMA request may cause the loss of interrupts

Description

If a DMA request starts executing during the time when a module register containing an interrupt flags is accessed with a read-modify-write instruction, a newly arriving interrupt from the same module can get lost. An interrupt flag set prior to DMA execution would not be affected and remain set.

Workaround

1. Use a read of Interrupt Vector registers to clear interrupt flags and do not use read-modify-write instruction.

OR

2. Disable all DMA channels during read-modify-write instruction of specific module registers containing interrupts flags while these interrupts are activated.