SLAA559E April   2014  – November 2016 MSP430AFE221 , MSP430AFE222 , MSP430AFE223 , MSP430AFE231 , MSP430AFE232 , MSP430AFE233 , MSP430AFE251 , MSP430AFE252 , MSP430AFE253 , MSP430F2001 , MSP430F2002 , MSP430F2003 , MSP430F2011 , MSP430F2012 , MSP430F2013 , MSP430F2013-EP , MSP430F2101 , MSP430F2111 , MSP430F2112 , MSP430F2121 , MSP430F2122 , MSP430F2131 , MSP430F2132 , MSP430F2232 , MSP430F2234 , MSP430F2252 , MSP430F2254 , MSP430F2272 , MSP430F2274 , MSP430F233 , MSP430F2330 , MSP430F235 , MSP430F2350 , MSP430F2370 , MSP430F2410 , MSP430F2416 , MSP430F2417 , MSP430F2418 , MSP430F2419 , MSP430F247 , MSP430F2471 , MSP430F248 , MSP430F2481 , MSP430F249 , MSP430F2491 , MSP430F2616 , MSP430F2617 , MSP430F2618 , MSP430F2619 , MSP430FR5847 , MSP430FR58471 , MSP430FR5848 , MSP430FR5849 , MSP430FR5857 , MSP430FR5858 , MSP430FR5859 , MSP430FR5867 , MSP430FR58671 , MSP430FR5868 , MSP430FR5869 , MSP430FR5870 , MSP430FR5872 , MSP430FR58721 , MSP430FR5887 , MSP430FR5888 , MSP430FR5889 , MSP430FR58891 , MSP430FR5922 , MSP430FR59221 , MSP430FR5947 , MSP430FR59471 , MSP430FR5948 , MSP430FR5949 , MSP430FR5957 , MSP430FR5958 , MSP430FR5959 , MSP430FR5967 , MSP430FR5968 , MSP430FR5969 , MSP430FR59691 , MSP430FR5970 , MSP430FR5972 , MSP430FR59721 , MSP430FR5986 , MSP430FR5987 , MSP430FR5988 , MSP430FR5989 , MSP430FR5989-EP , MSP430FR59891 , MSP430FR5994 , MSP430FR6820 , MSP430FR6822 , MSP430FR68221 , MSP430FR6870 , MSP430FR6872 , MSP430FR68721 , MSP430FR6877 , MSP430FR6879 , MSP430FR68791 , MSP430FR6887 , MSP430FR6888 , MSP430FR6889 , MSP430FR68891 , MSP430FR6920 , MSP430FR6922 , MSP430FR69221 , MSP430FR6927 , MSP430FR69271 , MSP430FR6928 , MSP430FR6970 , MSP430FR6972 , MSP430FR69721 , MSP430FR6977 , MSP430FR6979 , MSP430FR69791 , MSP430FR6987 , MSP430FR6988 , MSP430FR6989 , MSP430FR69891 , MSP430G2001 , MSP430G2101 , MSP430G2102 , MSP430G2111 , MSP430G2112 , MSP430G2121 , MSP430G2131 , MSP430G2132 , MSP430G2152 , MSP430G2153 , MSP430G2201 , MSP430G2202 , MSP430G2203 , MSP430G2210 , MSP430G2211 , MSP430G2212 , MSP430G2213 , MSP430G2221 , MSP430G2230 , MSP430G2231 , MSP430G2232 , MSP430G2233 , MSP430G2252 , MSP430G2253 , MSP430G2302 , MSP430G2303 , MSP430G2312 , MSP430G2313 , MSP430G2332 , MSP430G2333 , MSP430G2352 , MSP430G2353 , MSP430G2402 , MSP430G2403 , MSP430G2412 , MSP430G2413 , MSP430G2432 , MSP430G2433 , MSP430G2452 , MSP430G2453 , MSP430G2513 , MSP430G2533 , MSP430G2553

 

  1.   Migrating from the MSP430F2xx and MSP430G2xx Families to the MSP430FR58xx/FR59xx/68xx/69xx Family
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Introduction
    3. 2 In-System Programming of Nonvolatile Memory
      1. 2.1 Ferroelectric RAM (FRAM) Overview
      2. 2.2 FRAM Cell
      3. 2.3 Protecting FRAM Using the Memory Protection Unit
        1. 2.3.1 Dynamically Partitioning FRAM
      4. 2.4 FRAM Memory Wait States
      5. 2.5 Bootloader (BSL)
      6. 2.6 JTAG and Security
      7. 2.7 Production Programming
    4. 3 Hardware Migration Considerations
    5. 4 Device Calibration Information
    6. 5 Important Device Specifications
    7. 6 Core Architecture Considerations
      1. 6.1 Power Management Module (PMM)
      2. 6.2 Clock System
      3. 6.3 Operating Modes, Wakeup, and Reset
      4. 6.4 Determining the Cause of Reset
      5. 6.5 Interrupt Vectors
      6. 6.6 FRAM and the FRAM Controller
        1. 6.6.1 Flash and FRAM Overview Comparison
        2. 6.6.2 Cache Architecture
      7. 6.7 RAM Controller (RAMCTL)
    8. 7 Peripheral Considerations
      1. 7.1 Watchdog Timer
      2. 7.2 Ports
        1. 7.2.1 Digital Input/Output
        2. 7.2.2 Capacitive Touch I/O
      3. 7.3 Analog-to-Digital Converters
        1. 7.3.1 ADC12 to ADC12_B
        2. 7.3.2 ADC10 to ADC12_B
      4. 7.4 REF_A Module
      5. 7.5 Comparator_A to Comparator_E
      6. 7.6 Hardware Multiplier (HWMPY32)
      7. 7.7 DMA Controller
      8. 7.8 Low-Energy Accelerator (LEA) for Signal Processing
      9. 7.9 Communication Modules
        1. 7.9.1 USI to eUSCI
        2. 7.9.2 USCI to eUSCI
    9. 8 Conclusion
    10. 9 References
  2.   Revision History

Determining the Cause of Reset

In F2xx devices, a PUC can be triggered by multiple sources such as WDT timer expiration, WDT key violation, or flash key violation. To determine the cause of reset, it is necessary to investigate multiple registers, because each reset source is tracked by different interrupt flags and registers.

In the FR59xx devices, all sources of reset are combined into one System Reset Vector Register (SYSRSTIV), and it is no longer necessary to check multiple registers to determine the cause of reset. This register is very useful when debugging and lists all sources from all levels of reset (PUC, POR, and BOR).