M0 systick timer

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M0 systick timer

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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by nirvana_xun on Tue Oct 08 08:24:16 MST 2013
in M0's manual, it is said that the systick is optional,does lpc4357's M0 core carry out this feature?
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by NXPARM on Fri Oct 11 02:13:57 MST 2013
the M4's systick is belong to M4 only, i've tried to use M0's systick but failed.
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by TheFallGuy on Thu Oct 10 15:09:11 MST 2013
Yes, I am sure the peripherals are shared.
After booting, the m0 can take complete control of the system
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by starblue on Thu Oct 10 10:04:10 MST 2013

Quote: TheFallGuy
The M0 and the M4 *share* all the peripherals. So, you can chose to use the Systick timer in the M4



Are you sure about that, have you tried it?
The M4 Systick timer is part of the M4 core, so I would assume that the M0 cannot use it.
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by TheFallGuy on Thu Oct 10 09:56:56 MST 2013
The M0 and the M4 *share* all the peripherals. So, you can chose to use the Systick timer in the M4 or the M0. Same with most other peripherals.
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by rocketdawg on Thu Oct 10 09:47:30 MST 2013
One can use the M0 RITimer instead of systick
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lpcware
NXP Employee
NXP Employee
Content originally posted in LPCWare by NXPARM on Wed Oct 09 17:46:04 MST 2013
It has no systick
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