LM3S6110 Luminary Micro, Inc, LM3S6110 Datasheet - Page 377

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LM3S6110

Manufacturer Part Number
LM3S6110
Description
Lm3s6110 Arm Microcontroller
Manufacturer
Luminary Micro, Inc
Datasheet

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15.2.5
15.2.6
15.2.7
15.2.8
15.3
July 25, 2008
Interrupt Selector
The PWM generator also takes the same four (or six) counter events and uses them to generate
an interrupt. Any of these events or a set of these events can be selected as a source for an interrupt;
when any of the selected events occur, an interrupt is generated. The selection of events allows
the interrupt to occur at a specific position within the PWM signal. Note that interrupts are based on
the raw events; delays in the PWM signal edges caused by the dead-band generator are not taken
into account.
Synchronization Methods
There is a global reset capability that can reset the counter of the PWM generator.
The counter load values and comparator match values of the PWM generator can be updated in
two ways. The first is immediate update mode, where a new value is used as soon as the counter
reaches zero. By waiting for the counter to reach zero, a guaranteed behavior is defined, and overly
short or overly long output PWM pulses are prevented.
The other update method is synchronous, where the new value is not used until a global synchronized
update signal is asserted, at which point the new value is used as soon as the counter reaches
zero. This second mode allows multiple items to be updated simultaneously without odd effects
during the update; everything runs from the old values until a point at which they all run from the
new values.
Fault Conditions
There are two external conditions that affect the PWM block; the signal input on the Fault pin and
the stalling of the controller by a debugger. There are two mechanisms available to handle such
conditions: the output signals can be forced into an inactive state and/or the PWM timers can be
stopped.
Each output signal has a fault bit. If set, a fault input signal causes the corresponding output signal
to go into the inactive state. If the inactive state is a safe condition for the signal to be in for an
extended period of time, this keeps the output signal from driving the outside world in a dangerous
manner during the fault condition. A fault condition can also generate a controller interrupt.
Each PWM generator can also be configured to stop counting during a stall condition. The user can
select for the counters to run until they reach zero then stop, or to continue counting and reloading.
A stall condition does not generate a controller interrupt.
Output Control Block
With the PWM generator block producing two raw PWM signals, the output control block takes care
of the final conditioning of the PWM signals before they go to the pins. Via a single register, the set
of PWM signals that are actually enabled to the pins can be modified; this can be used, for example,
to perform commutation of a brushless DC motor with a single register write (and without modifying
the individual PWM generators, which are modified by the feedback control loop). Similarly, fault
control can disable any of the PWM signals as well. A final inversion can be applied to any of the
PWM signals, making them active Low instead of the default active High.
Initialization and Configuration
The following example shows how to initialize the PWM Generator 0 with a 25-KHz frequency, and
with a 25% duty cycle on the PWM0 pin and a 75% duty cycle on the PWM1 pin. This example assumes
the system clock is 20 MHz.
Preliminary
LM3S6110 Microcontroller
377

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