SLAU847F October 2022 – March 2026 MSPM0L1105 , MSPM0L1106 , MSPM0L1116 , MSPM0L1117 , MSPM0L1227 , MSPM0L1227-Q1 , MSPM0L1228 , MSPM0L1228-Q1 , MSPM0L1303 , MSPM0L1304 , MSPM0L1304-Q1 , MSPM0L1305 , MSPM0L1305-Q1 , MSPM0L1306 , MSPM0L1306-Q1 , MSPM0L1343 , MSPM0L1344 , MSPM0L1345 , MSPM0L1346 , MSPM0L2116 , MSPM0L2117 , MSPM0L2227 , MSPM0L2227-Q1 , MSPM0L2228 , MSPM0L2228-Q1
In STANDBY mode, the CPU, SRAM, and PD1 peripherals are disabled and in retention. PD0 peripherals, with the exception of the ADC, DAC, and OPA are available with a maximum ULPCLK frequency of 32kHz. . PDB peripherals are available with a frequency of 32kHz. High-speed oscillators such as (SYSPLL, HFXT, HFCLK_IN) and SYSOSC are disabled. Wakeup sources includes digital peripherals like I2C, UART start detection, PD0 timers elapsing, RTC wakeup, GPIO toggle.
STANDBY mode supports asynchronous fast clock request to switch to STOP mode and back to STANDBY. In the case of an event generating an interrupt, the device continues to RUN mode.
DMA is available to be triggered. A DMA trigger wakes the PD1 power domain to make the SRAM and DMA available for processing the DMA transfer, and the DMA transfer is processed at the current MCLK. After the transfer completes, the SRAM is returned to retention and PD1 is disabled automatically.
Analog peripherals (such as an ADC, 12-bit DAC, OPA, and high-speed COMP) are not supported in STANDBY mode. For details on peripheral availability, please refer to the "supported functionality by operating mode" table within the device-specific datasheet.
There are 2 policy options for STANDBY mode: STANDBY0 and STANDBY1.