41. Advanced-control timers (TIM1)

In this section, “TIMx” should be understood as “TIM1” since there is only one instance of this type of timer for the products to which this reference manual applies.

41.1 TIM1 introduction

The advanced-control timer (TIM1) consists of a 16-bit autoreload counter driven by a programmable prescaler.

It may be used for a variety of purposes, including measuring the pulse lengths of input signals (input capture) or generating output waveforms (output compare, PWM, complementary PWM with dead-time insertion).

Pulse lengths and waveform periods can be modulated from a few microseconds to several milliseconds using the timer prescaler and the RCC clock controller prescalers.

The advanced-control (TIM1) and general-purpose (TIMy) timers are completely independent, and do not share any resources. They can be synchronized together as described in Section 41.3.30: Timer synchronization .

41.2 TIM1 main features

TIM1 timer features include:

41.3 TIM1 functional description

41.3.1 Block diagram

Figure 397. Advanced-control timer block diagram

Figure 397. Advanced-control timer block diagram. This is a complex block diagram of the TIM1 advanced-control timer. It shows various internal components and their interconnections. On the left, a 32-bit APB bus is connected to several interfaces: an IRQ interface (receiving tim_etr0, tim_etr1, tim_etr2, tim_etr3, tim_etr4, tim_etr5, tim_etr6, tim_etr7, tim_etr8, tim_etr9, tim_etr10, tim_etr11, tim_etr12, tim_etr13, tim_etr14, tim_etr15), a DMA interface (receiving tim_cc1_dma, tim_cc2_dma, tim_cc3_dma, tim_cc4_dma, tim_upd_dma, tim_trgi_dma, tim_com_dma), and a Break and Break2 circuitry block (receiving tim_sys_brk, tim_brk_cmp[8:1], tim_brk2_cmp[8:1]). The central part of the diagram features a clock prescaler (tim_psc_ck) and a counter (tim_cnt_ck) connected to an auto-reload register (tim_arr) and a repetition counter (tim_rcr). Below these are six Capture/Compare registers (CC1R to CC6R) with associated prescalers and input filters/edge detectors for channels TIM_CH1 through TIM_CH4. Each channel has input pins (ti1_in0, ti1_in1, etc.) and output pins (oc1, oc1n, etc.). A trigger controller (tim_trg) is connected to the counter and various input filters. An encoder interface is also present. At the bottom, there are output control blocks for each channel. A legend at the bottom left explains symbols for registers, events, and interrupt & DMA outputs. The diagram is labeled MSV45751V6.
Figure 397. Advanced-control timer block diagram. This is a complex block diagram of the TIM1 advanced-control timer. It shows various internal components and their interconnections. On the left, a 32-bit APB bus is connected to several interfaces: an IRQ interface (receiving tim_etr0, tim_etr1, tim_etr2, tim_etr3, tim_etr4, tim_etr5, tim_etr6, tim_etr7, tim_etr8, tim_etr9, tim_etr10, tim_etr11, tim_etr12, tim_etr13, tim_etr14, tim_etr15), a DMA interface (receiving tim_cc1_dma, tim_cc2_dma, tim_cc3_dma, tim_cc4_dma, tim_upd_dma, tim_trgi_dma, tim_com_dma), and a Break and Break2 circuitry block (receiving tim_sys_brk, tim_brk_cmp[8:1], tim_brk2_cmp[8:1]). The central part of the diagram features a clock prescaler (tim_psc_ck) and a counter (tim_cnt_ck) connected to an auto-reload register (tim_arr) and a repetition counter (tim_rcr). Below these are six Capture/Compare registers (CC1R to CC6R) with associated prescalers and input filters/edge detectors for channels TIM_CH1 through TIM_CH4. Each channel has input pins (ti1_in0, ti1_in1, etc.) and output pins (oc1, oc1n, etc.). A trigger controller (tim_trg) is connected to the counter and various input filters. An encoder interface is also present. At the bottom, there are output control blocks for each channel. A legend at the bottom left explains symbols for registers, events, and interrupt & DMA outputs. The diagram is labeled MSV45751V6.
  1. 1. This feature is not available on all timers, refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals .
  2. 2. See Figure 444: Break and Break2 circuitry overview for details.

41.3.2 TIM1 pins and internal signals

The tables in this section summarize the TIM inputs and outputs

Table 404. TIM input/output pins

Pin nameSignal typeDescription
TIM_CH1
TIM_CH2
TIM_CH3
TIM_CH4
Input/outputTimer multi-purpose channels. Each channel can be used for capture, compare or PWM. TIM_CH1 and TIM_CH2 can also be used as external clock (below 1/4 of the tim_ker_ck clock), external trigger and quadrature encoder inputs. TIM_CH1, TIM_CH2 and TIM_CH3 can be used to interface with digital hall effect sensors.
TIM_CH1N
TIM_CH2N
TIM_CH3N
TIM_CH4N
OutputTimer complementary outputs, derived from TIM_CHx outputs with the possibility to have deadtime insertion.
TIM_ETRInputExternal trigger input. This input can be used as external trigger or as external clock source. This input can receive a clock with a frequency higher than the tim_ker_ck if the tim_etr_in prescaler is used.
TIM_BKIN
TIM_BKIN2
Input/outputBreak and Break2 inputs. These inputs can also be configured in bidirectional mode.

Table 405. TIM internal input/output signals

Internal signal nameSignal typeDescription
tim_ti1_in[15:0]
tim_ti2_in[15:0]
tim_ti3_in[15:0]
tim_ti4_in[15:0]
InputInternal timer inputs bus. The tim_ti1_in[15:0] and tim_ti2_in[15:0] inputs can be used for capture or as external clock (below 1/4 of the tim_ker_ck clock) and for quadrature encoder signals.
tim_etr[15:0]InputExternal trigger internal input bus. These inputs can be used as trigger, external clock or for hardware cycle-by-cycle pulsewidth control. These inputs can receive clock with a frequency higher than the tim_ker_ck if the tim_etr_in prescaler is used.
tim_itr[15:0]InputInternal trigger input bus. These inputs can be used for the slave mode controller or as a input clock (below 1/4 of the tim_ker_ck clock).
tim_trgo/tim_trgo2OutputInternal trigger outputs. These triggers are used by other timers and /or other peripherals.
Table 405. TIM internal input/output signals (continued)
Internal signal nameSignal typeDescription
tim_ocref_clr[7:0]InputTimer tim_ocref_clr input bus. These inputs can be used to clear the tim_ocref signals, typically for hardware cycle-by-cycle pulsewidth control.
tim_brk_cmp[8:1]InputBreak input for internal signals
tim_brk2_cmp[8:1]InputBreak2 input for internal signals
tim_sys_brk[n:0]InputSystem break input. This input gathers the MCU's system level errors.
tim_pclkInputTimer APB clock
tim_ker_ckInputTimer kernel clock
tim_cc_itOutputTimer capture/compare interrupt
tim_upd_itOutputTimer update event interrupt
tim_brk_terri_err_itOutputTimer break, break2, transition error and index error interrupt
tim_trgi_com_dir_idx_itOutputTimer trigger, commutation, direction and index interrupt
tim_cc1_dma
tim_cc2_dma
tim_cc3_dma
tim_cc4_dma
OutputTimer capture / compare 1..4 dma requests
tim_upd_dmaOutputTimer update dma request
tim_trgi_dmaOutputTimer trigger dma request
tim_com_dmaOutputTimer commutation dma request

Table 406, Table 407, Table 408 and Table 409 list the sources connected to the tim_ti[4:1] input multiplexers.

Table 406. Interconnect to the tim_ti1 input multiplexer
tim_ti1 inputsSources
TIM1
tim_ti1_in0TIM1_CH1
tim_ti1_in[15:1]Reserved
Table 407. Interconnect to the tim_ti2 input multiplexer
tim_ti2 inputsSources
TIM1
tim_ti2_in0TIM1_CH2
tim_ti2_in[15:1]Reserved

Table 408. Interconnect to the tim_ti3 input multiplexer

tim_ti3 inputsSources
TIM1
tim_ti3_in0TIM1_CH3
tim_ti3_in[15:1]Reserved

Table 409. Interconnect to the tim_ti4 input multiplexer

tim_ti4 inputsSources
TIM1
tim_ti4_in0TIM1_CH4
tim_ti4_in[15:1]Reserved

Table 410 lists the internal sources connected to the tim_itr input multiplexer.

Table 410. Internal trigger connection

Timer internal trigger input signalTIM1
tim_itr0Reserved
tim_itr1tim2_trgo
tim_itr2tim3_trgo
tim_itr3tim4_trgo
tim_itr4tim5_trgo
tim_itr5tim9_trgo
tim_itr6tim12_trgo
tim_itr7tim13_oc1
tim_itr8tim14_oc1
tim_itr9tim15_trgo
tim_itr10tim16_oc1
tim_itr11tim17_oc1
tim_itr[15:12]Reserved

Table 411 lists the internal sources connected to the tim_etr input multiplexer.

Table 411. Interconnect to the tim_etr input multiplexer

Timer external trigger input signalTimer external trigger signals assignment
TIM1
tim_etr0TIM1_ETR
tim_etr[2:1]Reserved

Table 411. Interconnect to the tim_etr input multiplexer (continued)

Timer external trigger input signalTimer external trigger signals assignment
TIM1
tim_etr3adc1_awa1
tim_etr4adc1_awa2
tim_etr5adc1_awa3
tim_etr6adc2_awa1
tim_etr7adc2_awa2
tim_etr8adc2_awa3
tim_etr[15:9]Reserved

Table 412, Table 413 and Table 414 list the sources connected to the tim_brk and tim_brk2inputs.

Table 412. Timer break interconnect

tim_brk inputsTIM1
TIM_BKINTIM1_BKIN pin
tim_brk_cmp[8:1]Reserved

Table 413. Timer break2 interconnect

tim_brk2 inputsTIM1
TIM_BKIN2TIM1_BKIN2 pin
tim_brk2_cmp[8:1]Reserved

Table 414. System break interconnect

tim_sys_brk inputsTIM1/TIM8Enable bit in SBS_BRK_LOCKUPR register
tim_sys_brk0AXISRAM1 double ECC errorARAM1ECC_BL
tim_sys_brk1AXISRAM3 double ECC errorARAM3ECC_BL
tim_sys_brk2ITCM double ECC errorITCMECC_BL
tim_sys_brk3DTCM double ECC errorDTCMECC_BL
tim_sys_brk4Backup RAM double ECC errorBKRAM ECC_BL
tim_sys_brk5Cortex-M7 LOCKUPCM7LCKUP_BL
tim_sys_brk6Flash memory double ECC errorFLASHECC_BL
tim_sys_brk7Programmable Voltage Detector (PVD)PVD_BL
CSSClock Security SystemNone (always enabled)

41.3.3 Time-base unit

The main block of the programmable advanced-control timer is a 16-bit counter with its related autoreload register. The counter can count up, down or both up and down. The counter clock can be divided by a prescaler.

The counter, the autoreload register and the prescaler register can be written or read by software, even when the counter is running.

The time-base unit includes:

The autoreload register is preloaded. Writing to or reading from the autoreload register accesses the preload register. The content of the preload register are transferred into the shadow register permanently or at each update event (UEV), depending on the autoreload preload enable bit (ARPE) in TIMx_CR1 register. The update event is sent when the counter reaches the overflow (or underflow when downcounting) and if the UDIS bit equals 0 in the TIMx_CR1 register. It can also be generated by software. The generation of the update event is described in detailed for each configuration.

The counter is clocked by the prescaler output tim_cnt_ck, which is enabled only when the counter enable bit (CEN) in TIMx_CR1 register is set (refer also to the slave mode controller description to get more details on counter enabling).

Note: The counter starts counting 1 clock cycle after setting the CEN bit in the TIMx_CR1 register.

Prescaler description

The prescaler divides the counter clock frequency by any factor from 1 to 65536. It is based on a 16-bit counter controlled through a 16-bit register (in the TIMx_PSC register). It can be changed on the fly as this control register is buffered. The new prescaler ratio is taken into account at the next update event.

Figure 398 and Figure 399 give some examples of the counter behavior when the prescaler ratio is changed on the fly.

Figure 398. Counter timing diagram with prescaler division change from 1 to 2

Timing diagram for Figure 398 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Update event (UEV), Prescaler control register, Prescaler buffer, and Prescaler counter. It illustrates a change in prescaler division from 1 to 2.

This timing diagram illustrates the behavior of the timer when the prescaler division is changed from 1 to 2. The signals shown are:

MSv50998V1

Timing diagram for Figure 398 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Update event (UEV), Prescaler control register, Prescaler buffer, and Prescaler counter. It illustrates a change in prescaler division from 1 to 2.

Figure 399. Counter timing diagram with prescaler division change from 1 to 4

Timing diagram for Figure 399 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Update event (UEV), Prescaler control register, Prescaler buffer, and Prescaler counter. It illustrates a change in prescaler division from 1 to 4.

This timing diagram illustrates the behavior of the timer when the prescaler division is changed from 1 to 4. The signals shown are:

MSv50999V1

Timing diagram for Figure 399 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Update event (UEV), Prescaler control register, Prescaler buffer, and Prescaler counter. It illustrates a change in prescaler division from 1 to 4.

41.3.4 Counter modes

Upcounting mode

In upcounting mode, the counter counts from 0 to the autoreload value (content of the TIMx_ARR register), then restarts from 0 and generates a counter overflow event.

If the repetition counter is used, the update event (UEV) is generated after upcounting is repeated for the number of times programmed in the repetition counter register (TIMx_RCR) + 1. Else the update event is generated at each counter overflow.

Setting the UG bit in the TIMx_EGR register (by software or by using the slave mode controller) also generates an update event.

The UEV event can be disabled by software by setting the UDIS bit in the TIMx_CR1 register. This is to avoid updating the shadow registers while writing new values in the preload registers. Then no update event occurs until the UDIS bit has been written to 0. However, the counter restarts from 0, as well as the counter of the prescaler (but the prescale rate does not change). In addition, if the URS bit (update request selection) in TIMx_CR1 register is set, setting the UG bit generates an update event UEV but without setting the UIF flag (thus no interrupt or DMA request is sent). This is to avoid generating both update and capture interrupts when clearing the counter on the capture event.

When an update event occurs, all the registers are updated and the update flag (UIF bit in TIMx_SR register) is set (depending on the URS bit):

The following figures show some examples of the counter behavior for different clock frequencies when TIMx_ARR = 0x36.

Figure 400. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 1

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 1. It shows signals: tim_psc_ck (constant square wave), CEN (goes high), tim_cnt_ck (square wave starting when CEN goes high), Counter register (values 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07), Counter overflow (pulses at 36), Update event (UEV) (pulses at 36), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) (pulses at 36).

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 1. The diagram shows the relationship between the prescaler clock (tim_psc_ck), the counter enable (CEN), the counter clock (tim_cnt_ck), the counter register values, the counter overflow signal, the update event (UEV), and the update interrupt flag (UIF). The counter register values are shown in hexadecimal: 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07. The counter overflow, UEV, and UIF signals are shown as pulses occurring when the counter reaches 36. MSV50997V1

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 1. It shows signals: tim_psc_ck (constant square wave), CEN (goes high), tim_cnt_ck (square wave starting when CEN goes high), Counter register (values 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07), Counter overflow (pulses at 36), Update event (UEV) (pulses at 36), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) (pulses at 36).

Figure 401. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 2

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 2. It shows signals: tim_psc_ck (constant square wave), CEN (goes high), tim_cnt_ck (square wave with half the frequency of tim_psc_ck, starting when CEN goes high), Counter register (values 0034, 0035, 0036, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003), Counter overflow (pulses at 0036), Update event (UEV) (pulses at 0036), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) (pulses at 0036).

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 2. The diagram shows the relationship between the prescaler clock (tim_psc_ck), the counter enable (CEN), the counter clock (tim_cnt_ck), the counter register values, the counter overflow signal, the update event (UEV), and the update interrupt flag (UIF). The counter register values are shown in hexadecimal: 0034, 0035, 0036, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003. The counter overflow, UEV, and UIF signals are shown as pulses occurring when the counter reaches 0036. MSV62300V1

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 2. It shows signals: tim_psc_ck (constant square wave), CEN (goes high), tim_cnt_ck (square wave with half the frequency of tim_psc_ck, starting when CEN goes high), Counter register (values 0034, 0035, 0036, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003), Counter overflow (pulses at 0036), Update event (UEV) (pulses at 0036), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) (pulses at 0036).

Figure 402. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 4

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 4. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a counter when the internal clock is divided by 4. The signals shown are:

Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationships between the signals. The counter increments from 0035 to 0036, then overflows to 0000, and continues to 0001. The overflow, UEV, and UIF signals are all active at the 0000 count.

MSv62301V1

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 4. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 403. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by N

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by N. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a counter when the internal clock is divided by N. The signals shown are:

Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationships between the signals. The counter increments from 1F to 20, then overflows to 00, and continues. The overflow, UEV, and UIF signals are all active at the 00 count.

MSv62302V1

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by N. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 404. Counter timing diagram, update event when ARPE = 0 (TIMx_ARR not preloaded)

Timing diagram showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 31 to 07), Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), and Auto-reload preload register (FF to 36). Includes a note 'Write a new value in TIMx_ARR'.

The timing diagram illustrates the operation of an advanced-control timer (TIM1) when ARPE = 0 and the TIMx_ARR register is not preloaded. The signals shown are:

MSV62303V1

Timing diagram showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 31 to 07), Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), and Auto-reload preload register (FF to 36). Includes a note 'Write a new value in TIMx_ARR'.

Figure 405. Counter timing diagram, update event when ARPE = 1
(TIMx_ARR preloaded)

Timing diagram for Figure 405 showing the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), Auto-reload preload register, and Auto-reload shadow register. The diagram illustrates the counter counting from F0 to 07, with an update event occurring at the overflow point (F5 to 00). The auto-reload preload register is updated with the value 36, which is then copied to the shadow register. An arrow indicates the write of a new value in TIMx_ARR.

The timing diagram shows the following signals and registers over time:

An arrow labeled "Write a new value in TIMx_ARR" points to the transition in the Auto-reload preload register where the value changes from F5 to 36.

MSV62304V1

Timing diagram for Figure 405 showing the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), Auto-reload preload register, and Auto-reload shadow register. The diagram illustrates the counter counting from F0 to 07, with an update event occurring at the overflow point (F5 to 00). The auto-reload preload register is updated with the value 36, which is then copied to the shadow register. An arrow indicates the write of a new value in TIMx_ARR.

Downcounting mode

In downcounting mode, the counter counts from the autoreload value (content of the TIMx_ARR register) down to 0, then restarts from the autoreload value and generates a counter underflow event.

If the repetition counter is used, the update event (UEV) is generated after downcounting is repeated for the number of times programmed in the repetition counter register (TIMx_RCR) + 1. Else the update event is generated at each counter underflow.

Setting the UG bit in the TIMx_EGR register (by software or by using the slave mode controller) also generates an update event.

The UEV update event can be disabled by software by setting the UDIS bit in TIMx_CR1 register. This is to avoid updating the shadow registers while writing new values in the preload registers. Then no update event occurs until UDIS bit has been written to 0. However, the counter restarts from the current autoreload value, whereas the counter of the prescaler restarts from 0 (but the prescale rate doesn't change).

In addition, if the URS bit (update request selection) in TIMx_CR1 register is set, setting the UG bit generates an update event UEV but without setting the UIF flag (thus no interrupt or DMA request is sent). This is to avoid generating both update and capture interrupts when clearing the counter on the capture event.

When an update event occurs, all the registers are updated and the update flag (UIF bit in TIMx_SR register) is set (depending on the URS bit):

The following figures show some examples of the counter behavior for different clock frequencies when TIMx_ARR = 0x36.

Figure 406. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 1

Timing diagram showing tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow (cnt_udf), Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) over time.

The timing diagram illustrates the operation of a timer counter. The top signal, tim_psc_ck , is a periodic square wave representing the prescaler clock. Below it, CEN (Counter Enable) is shown as a high-level signal. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a square wave that is active only when CEN is high. The Counter register displays a sequence of hexadecimal values: 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 36, 35, 34, 33, 32, 31, 30, and 2F. The counter decrements from 05 down to 00, then reloads to 36 (0x36) and continues to decrement. The Counter underflow (cnt_udf) signal is a pulse that goes high when the counter reaches 00 and reloads to 36. The Update event (UEV) signal is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow. The Update interrupt flag (UIF) signal is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow and update event. Vertical dashed lines indicate the clock edges used for sampling and updating. The diagram is labeled MSV62305V1 in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow (cnt_udf), Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF) over time.

Figure 407. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 2

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 2. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a counter with the internal clock divided by 2. The top signal, tim_psc_ck , is a high-frequency square wave. Below it, CEN (Counter Enable) is shown as a high-level signal. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a square wave with a frequency half that of tim_psc_ck . The Counter register displays a sequence of values: 0002, 0001, 0000, 0036, 0035, 0034, 0033. The Counter underflow signal is a pulse that goes high when the counter reaches 0000. The Update event (UEV) is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow. The Update interrupt flag (UIF) is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow. The diagram is labeled MSv62306V1.

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 2. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 408. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 4

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 4. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a counter with the internal clock divided by 4. The top signal, tim_psc_ck , is a high-frequency square wave. Below it, CEN (Counter Enable) is shown as a high-level signal. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a square wave with a frequency one-quarter that of tim_psc_ck . The Counter register displays a sequence of values: 0001, 0000, 0000, 0001. The Counter underflow signal is a pulse that goes high when the counter reaches 0000. The Update event (UEV) is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow. The Update interrupt flag (UIF) is a pulse that goes high at the same time as the underflow. The diagram is labeled MSv62307V1.

Timing diagram for internal clock divided by 4. It shows the relationship between tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register values, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 409. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by N

Timing diagram for Figure 409 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a counter when the internal clock is divided by N. The top signal, tim_psc_ck , is a periodic square wave. Below it, tim_cnt_ck is a signal that toggles state at every rising edge of tim_psc_ck . The Counter register shows a sequence of values: 20, 1F, 00, 36. The transition from 1F to 00 represents an underflow. The Counter underflow signal is a pulse that goes high when the counter reaches 00. The Update event (UEV) and Update interrupt flag (UIF) are also pulses that go high at the underflow event (00) and remain high until the counter reaches 36, at which point they return to their initial state. The diagram is labeled MSv62308V1.

Timing diagram for Figure 409 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 410. Counter timing diagram, update event when repetition counter is not used

Timing diagram for Figure 410 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), and Auto-reload preload register.

This timing diagram shows the counter's behavior when the repetition counter is not used. The tim_psc_ck signal is a periodic square wave. The CEN (Counter Enable) signal is shown as a high level. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a periodic square wave derived from tim_psc_ck . The Counter register displays a sequence of values: 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 36, 35, 34, 33, 32, 31, 30, 2F. The transition from 01 to 00 is an underflow. The Counter underflow , Update event (UEV) , and Update interrupt flag (UIF) signals all go high at the 00 value and return to their initial state when the counter reaches 36. The Auto-reload preload register shows a value of FF, which is being updated to 36. An arrow points to the register with the text 'Write a new value in TIMx_ARR'. The diagram is labeled MSv62309V1.

Timing diagram for Figure 410 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), and Auto-reload preload register.

Center-aligned mode (up/down counting)

In center-aligned mode, the counter counts from 0 to the autoreload value (content of the TIMx_ARR register) – 1, generates a counter overflow event, then counts from the

autoreload value down to 1 and generates a counter underflow event. Then it restarts counting from 0.

Center-aligned mode is active when the CMS bits in TIMx_CR1 register are not equal to 00. The Output compare interrupt flag of channels configured in output is set when: the counter counts down (Center aligned mode 1, CMS = 01), the counter counts up (Center aligned mode 2, CMS = 10) the counter counts up and down (Center aligned mode 3, CMS = 11).

In this mode, the DIR direction bit in the TIMx_CR1 register cannot be written. It is updated by hardware and gives the current direction of the counter.

The update event can be generated at each counter overflow and at each counter underflow or by setting the UG bit in the TIMx_EGR register (by software or by using the slave mode controller) also generates an update event. In this case, the counter restarts counting from 0, as well as the counter of the prescaler.

The UEV update event can be disabled by software by setting the UDIS bit in the TIMx_CR1 register. This is to avoid updating the shadow registers while writing new values in the preload registers. Then no update event occurs until UDIS bit has been written to 0. However, the counter continues counting up and down, based on the current autoreload value.

In addition, if the URS bit (update request selection) in TIMx_CR1 register is set, setting the UG bit generates an UEV update event but without setting the UIF flag (thus no interrupt or DMA request is sent). This is to avoid generating both update and capture interrupts when clearing the counter on the capture event.

When an update event occurs, all the registers are updated and the update flag (UIF bit in TIMx_SR register) is set (depending on the URS bit):

The following figures show some examples of the counter behavior for different clock frequencies.

Figure 411. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 1, TIMx_ARR = 0x6

Timing diagram for Figure 411 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values: 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 05, 04, 03), Counter underflow, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of an advanced-control timer in center-aligned mode 1. The tim_psc_ck signal is a high-frequency square wave. The CEN (Counter Enable) signal is a horizontal line that goes high to enable the counter. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a square wave with a frequency half that of tim_psc_ck . The Counter register shows a sequence of values: 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 05, 04, 03. The Counter underflow signal pulses low when the counter reaches 00. The Counter overflow signal pulses low when the counter reaches 06. The Update event (UEV) signal pulses low at the underflow and overflow events. The Update interrupt flag (UIF) signal goes high at the underflow event and returns low at the overflow event. The diagram is labeled MSV62310V1.

Timing diagram for Figure 411 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values: 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 05, 04, 03), Counter underflow, Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 412. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 2

Timing diagram for Figure 412 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values: 0003, 0002, 0001, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003), Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of an advanced-control timer with the internal clock divided by 2. The tim_psc_ck signal is a high-frequency square wave. The CEN signal is a horizontal line that goes high to enable the counter. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a square wave with a frequency half that of tim_psc_ck . The Counter register shows a sequence of values: 0003, 0002, 0001, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003. The Counter underflow signal pulses low when the counter reaches 0000. The Update event (UEV) signal pulses low at the underflow event. The Update interrupt flag (UIF) signal goes high at the underflow event and returns low at the next underflow event. The diagram is labeled MSV62311V1.

Timing diagram for Figure 412 showing signals: tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values: 0003, 0002, 0001, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003), Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 413. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by 4, TIMx_ARR = 0x36

Timing diagram for Figure 413 showing counter overflow. Signals include tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 0034, 0035, 0036, 0035), Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the counter's behavior during an overflow. The tim_psc_ck signal is a high-frequency square wave. The CEN signal is a high-level enable. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a lower-frequency square wave derived from the prescaler clock. The Counter register shows values 0034, 0035, 0036, and 0035. A Counter overflow pulse occurs when the counter reaches 0036. This overflow triggers an Update event (UEV) and sets the Update interrupt flag (UIF) . Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationship between the counter register values and the overflow event.

Note: Here, center_aligned mode 2 or 3 is updated with an UIF on overflow

MSV62312V1

Timing diagram for Figure 413 showing counter overflow. Signals include tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 0034, 0035, 0036, 0035), Counter overflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 414. Counter timing diagram, internal clock divided by N

Timing diagram for Figure 414 showing counter underflow. Signals include tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 20, 1F, 01, 00), Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

This timing diagram illustrates the counter's behavior during an underflow. The tim_psc_ck signal is a high-frequency square wave. The tim_cnt_ck signal is a lower-frequency square wave derived from the prescaler clock. The Counter register shows values 20, 1F, 01, and 00. A Counter underflow pulse occurs when the counter reaches 00. This underflow triggers an Update event (UEV) and sets the Update interrupt flag (UIF) . Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationship between the counter register values and the underflow event.

MSV62313V1

Timing diagram for Figure 414 showing counter underflow. Signals include tim_psc_ck, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register (values 20, 1F, 01, 00), Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), and Update interrupt flag (UIF).

Figure 415. Counter timing diagram, update event with ARPE = 1 (counter underflow)

Timing diagram for TIM1 counter showing signals like tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), Auto-reload preload register, and Auto-reload active register over time.

The timing diagram illustrates the operation of the TIM1 counter with ARPE = 1. The signals shown are:

MSV62314V1

Timing diagram for TIM1 counter showing signals like tim_psc_ck, CEN, tim_cnt_ck, Counter register, Counter underflow, Update event (UEV), Update interrupt flag (UIF), Auto-reload preload register, and Auto-reload active register over time.

Figure 416. Counter timing diagram, Update event with ARPE = 1 (counter overflow)

Figure 416. Counter timing diagram, Update event with ARPE = 1 (counter overflow). The diagram shows the relationship between the prescaler clock (tim_psc_ck), counter enable (CEN), counter clock (tim_cnt_ck), counter register values, counter overflow, update event (UEV), update interrupt flag (UIF), auto-reload preload register, and auto-reload active register. The counter register values are shown in hexadecimal: F7, F8, F9, FA, FB, FC, 36, 35, 34, 33, 32, 31, 30, 2F. The auto-reload preload register is shown with values FD and 36. The auto-reload active register is shown with values FD and 36. The update event (UEV) is generated when the counter overflows from FC to 36. The update interrupt flag (UIF) is set when the counter overflows. The auto-reload preload register is updated when a new value is written in TIMx_ARR. The auto-reload active register is updated when the counter overflows.

The timing diagram illustrates the operation of an advanced-control timer (TIM1) in counter mode with ARPE = 1. The signals shown are:

MSv62315V1

Figure 416. Counter timing diagram, Update event with ARPE = 1 (counter overflow). The diagram shows the relationship between the prescaler clock (tim_psc_ck), counter enable (CEN), counter clock (tim_cnt_ck), counter register values, counter overflow, update event (UEV), update interrupt flag (UIF), auto-reload preload register, and auto-reload active register. The counter register values are shown in hexadecimal: F7, F8, F9, FA, FB, FC, 36, 35, 34, 33, 32, 31, 30, 2F. The auto-reload preload register is shown with values FD and 36. The auto-reload active register is shown with values FD and 36. The update event (UEV) is generated when the counter overflows from FC to 36. The update interrupt flag (UIF) is set when the counter overflows. The auto-reload preload register is updated when a new value is written in TIMx_ARR. The auto-reload active register is updated when the counter overflows.

41.3.5 Repetition counter

Section 41.3.3: Time-base unit describes how the update event (UEV) is generated with respect to the counter overflows/underflows. It is actually generated only when the repetition counter has reached zero. This can be useful when generating PWM signals.

This means that data are transferred from the preload registers to the shadow registers (TIMx_ARR autoreload register, TIMx_PSC prescaler register, but also TIMx_CCRx capture/compare registers in compare mode) every N+1 counter overflows or underflows, where N is the value in the TIMx_RCR repetition counter register.

The repetition counter is decremented:

    • • At each counter overflow in upcounting mode,
    • • At each counter underflow in downcounting mode,
    • • At each counter overflow and at each counter underflow in center-aligned mode.
  1. Although this limits the maximum number of repetition to 32768 PWM cycles, it makes it possible to update the duty cycle twice per PWM period. When refreshing compare registers only once per PWM period in center-aligned mode, maximum resolution is \( 2 \times T_{ck} \) , due to the symmetry of the pattern.

The repetition counter is an autoreload type; the repetition rate is maintained as defined by the TIMx_RCR register value (refer to Figure 417 ). When the update event is generated by software (by setting the UG bit in TIMx_EGR register) or by hardware through the slave mode controller, it occurs immediately whatever the value of the repetition counter is and the repetition counter is reloaded with the content of the TIMx_RCR register.

In Center aligned mode, for odd values of RCR, the update event occurs either on the overflow or on the underflow depending on when the RCR register was written and when the counter was launched: if the RCR was written before launching the counter, the UEV occurs on the underflow. If the RCR was written after launching the counter, the UEV occurs on the overflow.

For example, for RCR = 3, the UEV is generated each 4th overflow or underflow event depending on when the RCR was written.

Figure 417. Update rate examples depending on mode and TIMx_RCR register settings

Timing diagrams showing update event (UEV) rates for Counter-aligned and Edge-aligned modes with various TIMx_RCR settings (0, 1, 2, 3, and 3 with re-synchronization).

The figure displays timing diagrams for a timer counter (TIMx_CNT) and the resulting Update Event (UEV) frequency across different modes and RCR settings.

Legend:
UEV → Update event: Preload registers transferred to active registers and update interrupt generated
Update Event if the repetition counter underflow occurs when the counter is equal to the auto-reload value.

MSv31195V1

Timing diagrams showing update event (UEV) rates for Counter-aligned and Edge-aligned modes with various TIMx_RCR settings (0, 1, 2, 3, and 3 with re-synchronization).

41.3.6 External trigger input

The timer features an external trigger input tim_etr_in. It can be used as:

Figure 418 below describes the tim_etr_in input conditioning. The input polarity is defined with the ETP bit in TIMxSMCR register. The trigger can be prescaled with the divider programmed by the ETPS[1:0] bitfield and digitally filtered with the ETF[3:0] bitfield. The resulting signal (tim_etrfl) is available for three purposes: as an external clock, to condition

the output (typically to reset a PWM output for a current limitation), and as a trigger for the Slave mode controller.

Figure 418. External trigger input block

Figure 418. External trigger input block diagram. The diagram shows the signal flow from various sources to the external trigger input (tim_etr_in) and then through a divider and filter to produce the external trigger output (tim_etrp).

The diagram illustrates the external trigger input block. It starts with multiple potential sources for the tim_etr_in signal:

These sources are connected to a multiplexer. The selection is controlled by the ETRSEL[3:0] bitfield in the TIMx_AF1 register. The output of the multiplexer is tim_etr_in . This signal is then processed by a Divider (with options /1, /2, /4, /8 ). The division ratio is set by the ETPS[1:0] bitfield in the TIMx_SMCR register. The output of the divider is tim_etrp . This signal is then passed through a Filter downcounter . The filter configuration is set by the ETF[3:0] bitfield in the TIMx_SMCR register. The final output is tim_etrp , which is sent to the Output mode controller, the CK_PSC circuitry, and the Slave mode controller. The diagram also shows the ETP bitfield in the TIMx_SMCR register, which enables the external trigger input.

Figure 418. External trigger input block diagram. The diagram shows the signal flow from various sources to the external trigger input (tim_etr_in) and then through a divider and filter to produce the external trigger output (tim_etrp).

The tim_etr_in input comes from multiple sources: input pins (default configuration), or internal sources. The selection is done with the ETRSEL[3:0] bitfield in the TIMx_AF1 register.

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for the list of sources connected to the etr_in input in the product.

41.3.7 Clock selection

The counter clock can be provided by the following clock sources:

Internal clock source ( tim_ker_ck )

If the slave mode controller is disabled ( SMS = 000 ), then the CEN , DIR (in the TIMx_CR1 register) and UG bits (in the TIMx_EGR register) are actual control bits and can be changed only by software (except UG which remains cleared automatically). As soon as the CEN bit is written to 1, the prescaler is clocked by the internal clock tim_ker_ck .

Figure 419 shows the behavior of the control circuit and the upcounter in normal mode, without prescaler.

Figure 419. Control circuit in normal mode, internal clock divided by 1

Timing diagram for Figure 419 showing signals tim_ker_ck, CEN, UG, counter initialization (internal), tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, and Counter register values over time.

The diagram shows the following signals and their relationship over time:

MSv62317V2

Timing diagram for Figure 419 showing signals tim_ker_ck, CEN, UG, counter initialization (internal), tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, and Counter register values over time.

External clock source mode 1

This mode is selected when SMS = 111 in the TIMx_SMCR register. The counter can count at each rising or falling edge on a selected input.

Figure 420. tim_ti2 external clock connection example

Block diagram for Figure 420 showing the connection of tim_ti2 external clock source, including TIMx_TISEL, TIM_CH2, Filter, Edge detector, TIMx_SMCR, and the counter clock output tim_psc_ck.

The diagram illustrates the connection of the tim_ti2 external clock source:

MSv62318V3

Block diagram for Figure 420 showing the connection of tim_ti2 external clock source, including TIMx_TISEL, TIM_CH2, Filter, Edge detector, TIMx_SMCR, and the counter clock output tim_psc_ck.

1. Codes ranging from 01000 to 11111 are reserved.

For example, to configure the upcounter to count in response to a rising edge on the tim_ti2 input, use the following procedure:

  1. 1. Configure channel 2 to detect rising edges on the tim_ti2 input by writing CC2S = 01 in the TIMx_CCMR1 register.
  2. 2. Configure the input filter duration by writing the IC2F[3:0] bits in the TIMx_CCMR1 register (if no filter is needed, keep IC2F = 0000).
  3. 3. Select rising edge polarity by writing CC2P = 0 and CC2NP = 0 in the TIMx_CCER register.
  4. 4. Configure the timer in external clock mode 1 by writing SMS = 111 in the TIMx_SMCR register.
  5. 5. Select tim_ti2 as the trigger input source by writing TS = 00110 in the TIMx_SMCR register.
  6. 6. Enable the counter by writing CEN = 1 in the TIMx_CR1 register.

Note: The capture prescaler is not used for triggering, it is not necessary to configure it.

When a rising edge occurs on tim_ti2, the counter counts once and the TIF flag is set.

The delay between the rising edge on tim_ti2 and the actual clock of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on tim_ti2 input.

Figure 421. Control circuit in external clock mode 1

Timing diagram for Figure 421. Control circuit in external clock mode 1. The diagram shows five signal lines over time. 1. tim_ti2: A digital signal with two rising edges. 2. CEN: Counter Enable signal, shown as a high-level signal. 3. tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck: The counter clock signal, which is a pulse that occurs after each rising edge of tim_ti2. 4. Counter register: Shows the count values 34, 35, and 36. The count increments by 1 at each rising edge of tim_ti2. 5. TIF: Timer Interrupt Flag, which is set (goes high) at each rising edge of tim_ti2 and is cleared by writing TIF=0. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationship between the rising edges of tim_ti2 and the counter clock pulses. Arrows point from the text 'Write TIF=0' to the falling edges of the TIF signal.
Timing diagram for Figure 421. Control circuit in external clock mode 1. The diagram shows five signal lines over time. 1. tim_ti2: A digital signal with two rising edges. 2. CEN: Counter Enable signal, shown as a high-level signal. 3. tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck: The counter clock signal, which is a pulse that occurs after each rising edge of tim_ti2. 4. Counter register: Shows the count values 34, 35, and 36. The count increments by 1 at each rising edge of tim_ti2. 5. TIF: Timer Interrupt Flag, which is set (goes high) at each rising edge of tim_ti2 and is cleared by writing TIF=0. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationship between the rising edges of tim_ti2 and the counter clock pulses. Arrows point from the text 'Write TIF=0' to the falling edges of the TIF signal.

External clock source mode 2

This mode is selected by writing ECE = 1 in the TIMx_SMCR register.

The counter counts at each rising or falling edge on the external trigger input tim_etr_in.

The Figure 422 gives an overview of the external trigger input block.

Figure 422. External trigger input block

Figure 422. External trigger input block diagram showing the signal flow from TIM_ETR and tim_etr[15:1] through a multiplexer, filter, and downcounter to the encoder mode selection. The diagram includes control signals like TIMx_AF1[17:14], ETP, ETPS[1:0], ETF[3:0], ECE, and SMS[2:0] from the TIMx_SMCR register. The output is tim_psc_ck.

The diagram illustrates the external trigger input block for TIM1. It shows the following components and signal flow:

Figure 422. External trigger input block diagram showing the signal flow from TIM_ETR and tim_etr[15:1] through a multiplexer, filter, and downcounter to the encoder mode selection. The diagram includes control signals like TIMx_AF1[17:14], ETP, ETPS[1:0], ETF[3:0], ECE, and SMS[2:0] from the TIMx_SMCR register. The output is tim_psc_ck.
  1. 1. Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals .

For example, to configure the upcounter to count each 2 rising edges on tim_etr_in, use the following procedure:

  1. 1. As no filter is needed in this example, write ETF[3:0] = 0000 in the TIMx_SMCR register.
  2. 2. Set the prescaler by writing ETPS[1:0] = 01 in the TIMx_SMCR register
  3. 3. Select rising edge detection on the tim_etr_in input by writing ETP = 0 in the TIMx_SMCR register
  4. 4. Enable external clock mode 2 by writing ECE = 1 in the TIMx_SMCR register.
  5. 5. Enable the counter by writing CEN = 1 in the TIMx_CR1 register.

The counter counts once each 2 tim_etr_in rising edges.

The delay between the rising edge on tim_etr_in and the actual clock of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on the tim_etrp signal. As a consequence, the maximum frequency which can be correctly captured by the counter is at most ¼ of tim_ker_ck frequency. When the ETRP signal is faster, the user must apply a division of the external signal by a proper ETPS prescaler setting.

Figure 423. Control circuit in external clock mode 2

Timing diagram for Figure 423 showing signals tim_ker_ck, CEN, tim_etr_in, tim_etrp, tim_etr, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, and Counter register values 34, 35, 36.

The diagram shows the relationship between several signals over time. tim_ker_ck is a periodic square wave. CEN is a signal that goes high and stays high. tim_etr_in and tim_etrp are signals with various pulse widths. tim_etr is a signal that is high when tim_etr_in is high and CEN is high. tim_cnt_ck and tim_psc_ck are signals that are high when tim_etr is high. The Counter register shows values 34, 35, and 36, with the value 35 being the result of counting the tim_cnt_ck pulses.

Timing diagram for Figure 423 showing signals tim_ker_ck, CEN, tim_etr_in, tim_etrp, tim_etr, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, and Counter register values 34, 35, 36.

41.3.8 Capture/compare channels

Each capture/compare channel is built around a capture/compare register (including a shadow register), an input stage for capture (with digital filter, multiplexing, and prescaler, except for channels 5 and 6) and an output stage (with comparator and output control).

Figure 424 to Figure 427 give an overview of one capture/compare channel.

The input stage samples the corresponding tim_tix input to generate a filtered signal tim_tixf. Then, an edge detector with polarity selection generates a signal (tim_tixfpy) which can be used as trigger input by the slave mode controller or as the capture command. It is prescaled before the capture register (ICxPS).

Figure 424. Capture/compare channel (example: channel 1 input stage)

Block diagram of the capture/compare channel input stage for channel 1, showing components like TIMx_TISEL, Filter downcounter, Edge detector, and Dividers.

The diagram illustrates the input stage of a capture/compare channel. It starts with TIM_CH1 and tim_t1_in[15:1] inputs. A multiplexer selects between these based on TIMx_TISEL (TI1SEL[3:0]). The selected signal passes through a Filter downcounter (controlled by ICF[3:0] and TIMx_CCMR1 ) to produce tim_t1f . This signal then goes through an Edge detector (controlled by CC1P/CC1NP and TIMx_CCER ) to generate tim_t1f_rising and tim_t1f_falling signals. These signals are combined into tim_t1f_ed and sent to the slave mode controller. Another multiplexer selects between tim_t1f_rising , tim_t1f_falling , tim_t2f_rising (from channel 2), tim_t2f_falling (from channel 2), tim_trc (from slave mode controller), and tim_t1_fp1 based on CC1S[1:0] and ICPS[1:0] (controlled by TIMx_CCMR1 ). The selected signal is then divided by a Divider (/1, /2, /4, /8) controlled by CC1E (controlled by TIMx_CCER ) to produce the final output tim_ic1f .

Block diagram of the capture/compare channel input stage for channel 1, showing components like TIMx_TISEL, Filter downcounter, Edge detector, and Dividers.

The output stage generates an intermediate waveform which is then used for reference: tim_ocxref (active high). The polarity acts at the end of the chain.

Figure 425. Capture/compare channel 1 main circuit

Figure 425: Capture/compare channel 1 main circuit diagram. It shows the internal logic for channel 1, including input and output modes, registers (Capture/compare preload register, compare shadow register), a counter, and a comparator. The input mode uses CC1S[1], CC1S[0], IC1PS, CC1E, CC1G, and TIMx_EGR signals. The output mode uses CC1S[1], CC1S[0], OC1PE, and UEV signals. The counter outputs CNT>CCR1 and CNT=CCR1 to the comparator.
Figure 425: Capture/compare channel 1 main circuit diagram. It shows the internal logic for channel 1, including input and output modes, registers (Capture/compare preload register, compare shadow register), a counter, and a comparator. The input mode uses CC1S[1], CC1S[0], IC1PS, CC1E, CC1G, and TIMx_EGR signals. The output mode uses CC1S[1], CC1S[0], OC1PE, and UEV signals. The counter outputs CNT>CCR1 and CNT=CCR1 to the comparator.

Figure 426. Output stage of capture/compare channel (channel 1, idem ch. 2, 3 and 4)

Figure 426: Output stage of capture/compare channel diagram. This diagram shows the output logic for channel 1, which is identical for channels 2, 3, and 4. It includes an output mode controller, an output selector, a dead-time generator, and output enable circuits. Inputs include tim_etr, ocref_clr_int, CNT>CCR1, CNT=CCR1, tim_ocxref, and tim_oc5ref. The output selector produces tim_oc1ref, which is used by the dead-time generator to produce tim_oc1_dt and tim_oc1n_dt. These signals are then processed by comparators and output enable circuits to produce the final outputs tim_oc1 and tim_oc1n. Various control registers like TIMx_CCMR1, TIMx_BDTR, TIMx_CCER, and TIMx_CR2 are shown with their respective bits.
Figure 426: Output stage of capture/compare channel diagram. This diagram shows the output logic for channel 1, which is identical for channels 2, 3, and 4. It includes an output mode controller, an output selector, a dead-time generator, and output enable circuits. Inputs include tim_etr, ocref_clr_int, CNT>CCR1, CNT=CCR1, tim_ocxref, and tim_oc5ref. The output selector produces tim_oc1ref, which is used by the dead-time generator to produce tim_oc1_dt and tim_oc1n_dt. These signals are then processed by comparators and output enable circuits to produce the final outputs tim_oc1 and tim_oc1n. Various control registers like TIMx_CCMR1, TIMx_BDTR, TIMx_CCER, and TIMx_CR2 are shown with their respective bits.

1. tim_ocxref , where x is the rank of the complementary channel

Figure 427. Output stage of capture/compare channel (channel 5, idem ch. 6)

Figure 427. Output stage of capture/compare channel (channel 5, idem ch. 6). The diagram shows the internal logic of the output stage. It starts with an 'Output mode controller' block receiving inputs 'CNT > CCR5', 'CNT = CCR5', 'tim_etrfr', and 'ocref_clr_int'. The controller outputs 'tim_oc5ref' to the master mode controller and to a multiplexer. The multiplexer has inputs '0' and '1', with 'CC5E' (from TIMx_CCER) controlling it. The output of the multiplexer goes through an inverter and another multiplexer. This second multiplexer has inputs '0' and '1', with 'CC5P' (from TIMx_CCER) controlling it. The output of this multiplexer goes to an 'Output enable circuit' block. This block also receives inputs from 'CC5E' (from TIMx_CCER), 'MOE' (from TIMx_BDTR), 'OSSI' (from TIMx_BDTR), and 'OIS5' (from TIMx_CR2). The final output is 'tim_oc5(1)'.
Figure 427. Output stage of capture/compare channel (channel 5, idem ch. 6). The diagram shows the internal logic of the output stage. It starts with an 'Output mode controller' block receiving inputs 'CNT > CCR5', 'CNT = CCR5', 'tim_etrfr', and 'ocref_clr_int'. The controller outputs 'tim_oc5ref' to the master mode controller and to a multiplexer. The multiplexer has inputs '0' and '1', with 'CC5E' (from TIMx_CCER) controlling it. The output of the multiplexer goes through an inverter and another multiplexer. This second multiplexer has inputs '0' and '1', with 'CC5P' (from TIMx_CCER) controlling it. The output of this multiplexer goes to an 'Output enable circuit' block. This block also receives inputs from 'CC5E' (from TIMx_CCER), 'MOE' (from TIMx_BDTR), 'OSSI' (from TIMx_BDTR), and 'OIS5' (from TIMx_CR2). The final output is 'tim_oc5(1)'.

1. Not available externally.

The capture/compare block is made of one preload register and one shadow register. Write and read always access the preload register.

In capture mode, captures are actually done in the shadow register, which is copied into the preload register.

In compare mode, the content of the preload register is copied into the shadow register which is compared to the counter.

41.3.9 Input capture mode

In Input capture mode, the capture/compare registers (TIMx_CCRx) are used to latch the value of the counter after a transition detected by the corresponding ICx signal. When a capture occurs, the corresponding CCxIF flag (TIMx_SR register) is set and an interrupt or a DMA request can be sent if they are enabled. If a capture occurs while the CCxIF flag was already high, then the overcapture flag CCxOF (TIMx_SR register) is set. CCxIF can be cleared by software by writing it to 0 or by reading the captured data stored in the TIMx_CCRx register. CCxOF is cleared when it is written with 0.

The following example shows how to capture the counter value in TIMx_CCR1 when tim_ti1 input rises. To do this, use the following procedure:

have been detected (sampled at \( f_{DTS} \) frequency). Then write IC1F bits to 0011 in the TIMx_CCMR1 register.

When an input capture occurs:

In order to handle the overcapture, it is recommended to read the data before the overcapture flag. This is to avoid missing an overcapture which may happen after reading the flag and before reading the data.

Note: IC interrupt and/or DMA requests can be generated by software by setting the corresponding CCxG bit in the TIMx_EGR register.

41.3.10 PWM input mode

This mode is used to measure both the period and the duty cycle of a PWM signal connected to single tim_tix input:

This mode is a particular case of input capture mode. The set-up procedure is similar with the following differences:

The period and the pulsewidth of a PWM signal applied on tim_ti1 can be measured using the following procedure:

Figure 428. PWM input mode timing

Timing diagram for PWM input mode. The diagram shows four horizontal lines: tim_ti1 (PWM signal), TIMx_CNT (counter values), TIMx_CCR1 (capture register 1), and TIMx_CCR2 (capture register 2). The TIMx_CNT line shows a sequence of values: 0004, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003, 0004, 0000. The TIMx_CCR1 line shows a value of 0004. The TIMx_CCR2 line shows a value of 0002. Three vertical arrows indicate capture events: 1. A rising edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC1 capture, IC2 capture, and counter reset. 2. A falling edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC2 capture and pulse width measurement. 3. A rising edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC1 capture and pulse width measurement. The diagram is labeled MSv62325V1.
Timing diagram for PWM input mode. The diagram shows four horizontal lines: tim_ti1 (PWM signal), TIMx_CNT (counter values), TIMx_CCR1 (capture register 1), and TIMx_CCR2 (capture register 2). The TIMx_CNT line shows a sequence of values: 0004, 0000, 0001, 0002, 0003, 0004, 0000. The TIMx_CCR1 line shows a value of 0004. The TIMx_CCR2 line shows a value of 0002. Three vertical arrows indicate capture events: 1. A rising edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC1 capture, IC2 capture, and counter reset. 2. A falling edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC2 capture and pulse width measurement. 3. A rising edge of tim_ti1 corresponds to an IC1 capture and pulse width measurement. The diagram is labeled MSv62325V1.

41.3.11 Forced output mode

In output mode (CCxS bits = 00 in the TIMx_CCMRx register), each output compare signal (tim_ocxref and then tim_ocx/tim_ocxn) can be forced to active or inactive level directly by software, independently of any comparison between the output compare register and the counter.

To force an output compare signal (tim_ocxref/tim_ocx) to its active level, user just needs to write 0101 in the OCxM bits in the corresponding TIMx_CCMRx register. Thus tim_ocxref is forced high (tim_ocxref is always active high) and tim_ocx get opposite value to CCxP polarity bit.

For example: CCxP = 0 (tim_ocx active high) => tim_ocx is forced to high level.

The tim_ocxref signal can be forced low by writing the OCxM bits to 0100 in the TIMx_CCMRx register.

Anyway, the comparison between the TIMx_CCRx shadow register and the counter is still performed and allows the flag to be set. Interrupt and DMA requests can be sent accordingly. This is described in the output compare mode section below.

41.3.12 Output compare mode

This function is used to control an output waveform or indicate when a period of time has elapsed. Channels 1 to 4 can be output, while channel 5 and 6 are only available inside the microcontroller (for instance, for compound waveform generation or for ADC triggering).

When a match is found between the capture/compare register and the counter, the output compare function:

The TIMx_CCRx registers can be programmed with or without preload registers using the OCxPE bit in the TIMx_CCMRx register.

In output compare mode, the update event UEV has no effect on tim_ocxref and tim_ocx output. The timing resolution is one count of the counter. Output compare mode can also be used to output a single pulse (in One-pulse mode).

Procedure

  1. 1. Select the counter clock (internal, external, prescaler).
  2. 2. Write the desired data in the TIMx_ARR and TIMx_CCRx registers.
  3. 3. Set the CCxIE bit if an interrupt request is to be generated.
  4. 4. Select the output mode. For example:
    • – Write OCxM = 0011 to toggle tim_ocx output pin when CNT matches CCRx
    • – Write OCxPE = 0 to disable preload register
    • – Write CCxP = 0 to select active high polarity
    • – Write CCxE = 1 to enable the output
  5. 5. Enable the counter by setting the CEN bit in the TIMx_CR1 register.

The TIMx_CCRx register can be updated at any time by software to control the output waveform, provided that the preload register is not enabled (OCxPE = 0, else TIMx_CCRx shadow register is updated only at the next update event UEV). An example is given in Figure 429 .

Figure 429. Output compare mode, toggle on tim_oc1

Timing diagram for Output compare mode, toggle on tim_oc1. The diagram shows three horizontal timelines: CNT (Counter), CCR1 (Capture/Compare Register 1), and tim_oc1ref = tim_oc1 (Output compare signal). CNT starts at 0039, increments through 003A, 003B, and eventually reaches B200 and B201. CCR1 is initially set to 003A and is updated to B201. An arrow points from the text 'Write B201h in the CC1R register' to the CCR1 value B201. The tim_oc1ref signal is shown as a square wave that toggles its state when the CNT value matches the CCR1 value. Two arrows point from the rising and falling edges of the tim_oc1ref signal to the text 'Match detected on CCR1 Interrupt generated if enabled'. The diagram is labeled MSV62326V1 in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram for Output compare mode, toggle on tim_oc1. The diagram shows three horizontal timelines: CNT (Counter), CCR1 (Capture/Compare Register 1), and tim_oc1ref = tim_oc1 (Output compare signal). CNT starts at 0039, increments through 003A, 003B, and eventually reaches B200 and B201. CCR1 is initially set to 003A and is updated to B201. An arrow points from the text 'Write B201h in the CC1R register' to the CCR1 value B201. The tim_oc1ref signal is shown as a square wave that toggles its state when the CNT value matches the CCR1 value. Two arrows point from the rising and falling edges of the tim_oc1ref signal to the text 'Match detected on CCR1 Interrupt generated if enabled'. The diagram is labeled MSV62326V1 in the bottom right corner.

41.3.13 PWM mode

Pulse width modulation mode is used to generate a signal with a frequency determined by the value of the TIMx_ARR register and a duty cycle determined by the value of the TIMx_CCRx register.

The PWM mode can be selected independently on each channel (one PWM per tim_ocx output) by writing 0110 (PWM mode 1) or 0111 (PWM mode 2) in the OCxM bits in the TIMx_CCMRx register. The corresponding preload register must be enabled by setting the OCxPE bit in the TIMx_CCMRx register, and eventually the autoreload preload register (in upcounting or center-aligned modes) by setting the ARPE bit in the TIMx_CR1 register.

As the preload registers are transferred to the shadow registers only when an update event occurs, before starting the counter, all registers must be initialized by setting the UG bit in the TIMx_EGR register.

tim_ocx polarity is software programmable using the CCxP bit in the TIMx_CCER register. It can be programmed as active high or active low. tim_ocx output is enabled by a combination of the CCxE, CCxNE, MOE, OSSI, and OSSR bits (TIMx_CCER and TIMx_BDTR registers). Refer to the TIMx_CCER register description for more details.

In PWM mode (1 or 2), TIMx_CNT and TIMx_CCRx are always compared to determine whether \( TIMx\_CCRx \leq TIMx\_CNT \) or \( TIMx\_CNT \leq TIMx\_CCRx \) (depending on the direction of the counter).

The timer is able to generate PWM in edge-aligned mode or center-aligned mode depending on the CMS bits in the TIMx_CR1 register.

PWM edge-aligned mode

Upcounting is active when the DIR bit in the TIMx_CR1 register is low. Refer to Upcounting mode .

In the following example, the mode is PWM mode 1. The reference PWM signal tim_ocxref is high as long as TIMx_CNT < TIMx_CCRx else it becomes low. If the compare value in TIMx_CCRx is greater than the autoreload value (in TIMx_ARR) then tim_ocxref is held at 1. If the compare value is zero then tim_ocxref is held at 0.

Figure 430 shows some edge-aligned PWM waveforms in an example where TIMx_ARR = 8.

Figure 430. Edge-aligned PWM waveforms (ARR = 8)

Timing diagram showing edge-aligned PWM waveforms for different compare register (CCR) values. The counter register (TIMx_CNT) counts from 0 to 8 and then reloads to 0. The diagram shows four cases: CCRx=4, CCRx=8, CCRx>8, and CCRx=0. For each case, the tim_ocxref signal and the CCxIF flag are shown. For CCRx=4, tim_ocxref is high from 0 to 4 and low from 4 to 8. For CCRx=8, tim_ocxref is high from 0 to 8 and low from 8 to 0. For CCRx>8, tim_ocxref is always high. For CCRx=0, tim_ocxref is always low. The CCxIF flag is set when the counter reaches the compare value (e.g., at 4 for CCRx=4) and is reset when the counter reaches the autoreload value (8).
Timing diagram showing edge-aligned PWM waveforms for different compare register (CCR) values. The counter register (TIMx_CNT) counts from 0 to 8 and then reloads to 0. The diagram shows four cases: CCRx=4, CCRx=8, CCRx>8, and CCRx=0. For each case, the tim_ocxref signal and the CCxIF flag are shown. For CCRx=4, tim_ocxref is high from 0 to 4 and low from 4 to 8. For CCRx=8, tim_ocxref is high from 0 to 8 and low from 8 to 0. For CCRx>8, tim_ocxref is always high. For CCRx=0, tim_ocxref is always low. The CCxIF flag is set when the counter reaches the compare value (e.g., at 4 for CCRx=4) and is reset when the counter reaches the autoreload value (8).

Downcounting is active when DIR bit in TIMx_CR1 register is high. Refer to the Downcounting mode

In PWM mode 1, the reference signal tim_ocxref is low as long as TIMx_CNT > TIMx_CCRx else it becomes high. If the compare value in TIMx_CCRx is greater than the autoreload value in TIMx_ARR, then tim_ocxref is held at 1. 0% PWM is not possible in this mode.

PWM center-aligned mode

Center-aligned mode is active when the CMS bits in TIMx_CR1 register are different from 00 (all the remaining configurations having the same effect on the tim_ocxref/tim_ocx signals). The compare flag is set when the counter counts up, when it counts down or both when it counts up and down depending on the CMS bits configuration. The direction bit

(DIR) in the TIMx_CR1 register is updated by hardware and must not be changed by software. Refer to Center-aligned mode (up/down counting) .

Figure 431 shows some center-aligned PWM waveforms in an example where:

Figure 431. Center-aligned PWM waveforms (ARR = 8)

Timing diagram showing center-aligned PWM waveforms for different CCRx values (4, 7, 8, >8, 0) with ARR=8. The diagram shows the counter register values, the resulting PWM signal (tim_ocref), and the capture/compare interrupt flag (CCxIF) status for various CMS settings.

The figure illustrates the relationship between the counter register values and the resulting PWM waveforms for different capture/compare register (CCRx) values. The counter register values are shown at the top, ranging from 0 to 8 and then back down to 0, with an additional '1' at the end. The PWM signal (tim_ocref) is shown for various CCRx values: CCRx=4, CCRx=7, CCRx=8, CCRx>8, and CCRx=0. The CCxIF flag status is indicated for each CCRx value, showing the conditions under which the flag is set (e.g., CMS=01, CMS=10, CMS=11). The diagram also includes vertical dashed lines representing the counter values and arrows indicating the direction of the counter (up/down). The bottom right corner contains the identifier MSv62328V2.

Timing diagram showing center-aligned PWM waveforms for different CCRx values (4, 7, 8, >8, 0) with ARR=8. The diagram shows the counter register values, the resulting PWM signal (tim_ocref), and the capture/compare interrupt flag (CCxIF) status for various CMS settings.

Hints on using center-aligned mode:

Dithering mode

The PWM mode effective resolution can be increased by enabling the dithering mode, using the DITHEN bit in the TIMx_CR1 register. This applies to both the CCR (for duty cycle resolution increase) and ARR (for PWM frequency resolution increase).

The operating principle is to have the actual CCR (or ARR) value slightly changed (adding or not one timer clock period) over 16 consecutive PWM periods, with predefined patterns. This allows a 16-fold resolution increase, considering the average duty cycle or PWM period. Figure 432 presents the dithering principle applied to four consecutive PWM cycles.

Figure 432. Dithering principle

Figure 432. Dithering principle. A diagram showing five rows of PWM waveforms over four consecutive cycles. The top row shows a standard PWM with a high pulse of 7 clock cycles and a low pulse of 5 clock cycles, labeled 'Average duty cycle' and 'DC = 7/5'. The subsequent rows show the effect of dithering: 'DC = (7+1/4)/5' adds a 1/4 clock cycle to the high pulse; 'DC = (7+1/2)/5' adds a 1/2 clock cycle; 'DC = (7+3/4)/5' adds a 3/4 clock cycle; and the bottom row shows 'DC = 8/5' where the high pulse is 8 clock cycles. Shaded areas indicate the fractional clock cycle additions. A '1 clock cycle' label with arrows indicates the duration of one full cycle (high + low). The diagram is labeled MSV45752V1.
Figure 432. Dithering principle. A diagram showing five rows of PWM waveforms over four consecutive cycles. The top row shows a standard PWM with a high pulse of 7 clock cycles and a low pulse of 5 clock cycles, labeled 'Average duty cycle' and 'DC = 7/5'. The subsequent rows show the effect of dithering: 'DC = (7+1/4)/5' adds a 1/4 clock cycle to the high pulse; 'DC = (7+1/2)/5' adds a 1/2 clock cycle; 'DC = (7+3/4)/5' adds a 3/4 clock cycle; and the bottom row shows 'DC = 8/5' where the high pulse is 8 clock cycles. Shaded areas indicate the fractional clock cycle additions. A '1 clock cycle' label with arrows indicates the duration of one full cycle (high + low). The diagram is labeled MSV45752V1.

When the dithering mode is enabled, the register coding is changed as follows (see Figure 433 for example):

Note: The following sequence must be followed when resetting the DITHEN bit:

  1. 1. CEN and ARPE bits must be reset.
  2. 2. The DITHEN bit must be reset.
  3. 3. The CCIF flags must be cleared.
  4. 4. The CEN bit can be set (eventually with ARPE = 1).

Figure 433. Data format and register coding in dithering mode

Figure 433: Data format and register coding in dithering mode. Shows a 20-bit register (b19 to b0). The top part shows the format: MSB (b19-b4) is a 16-bit integer part, and LSB (b3-b0) is a 4-bit fractional part. The bottom part shows an example for value 326: the integer part is 20 and the fractional part is 6. Arrows indicate that the base compare value is 20 during 16 periods, and an additional 6 cycles are spread over those 16 periods.

b19 b0

Register format in dithering mode: MSB: 16-bits, integer part | LSB: 4-bits fractional part

Example: b19 [ 326 ] b0

[ 20 ] [ 6 ]

↓ ↓

Base compare value is 20 during 16 periods | Additional 6 cycles are spread over the 16 periods

MSv45753V2

Figure 433: Data format and register coding in dithering mode. Shows a 20-bit register (b19 to b0). The top part shows the format: MSB (b19-b4) is a 16-bit integer part, and LSB (b3-b0) is a 4-bit fractional part. The bottom part shows an example for value 326: the integer part is 20 and the fractional part is 6. Arrows indicate that the base compare value is 20 during 16 periods, and an additional 6 cycles are spread over those 16 periods.

The minimum frequency is given by the following formula:

\[ \text{Resolution} = \frac{F_{\text{Tim}}}{F_{\text{pwm}}} \Rightarrow F_{\text{pwmMin}} = \frac{F_{\text{Tim}}}{\text{Max}_{\text{Resolution}}} \]

\[ \text{Dithering mode disabled: } F_{\text{pwmMin}} = \frac{F_{\text{Tim}}}{65536} \]

\[ \text{Dithering mode enabled: } F_{\text{pwmMin}} = \frac{F_{\text{Tim}}}{65535 + \frac{15}{16}} \]

Note: The maximum TIMx_ARR and TIMxCCRy values are limited to 0xFFFFEF in dithering mode (corresponds to 65534 for the integer part and 15 for the dithered part).

As shown on Figure 434 , the dithering mode is used to increase the PWM resolution whatever the PWM frequency.

Figure 434. PWM resolution vs frequency

Figure 434. PWM resolution vs frequency. A graph showing PWM resolution (Y-axis) versus PWM frequency (X-axis). The Y-axis has markers for 20-bit and 16-bit. The X-axis has a marker for F_PWM min. Two curves are shown: 'Dithering' and 'No Dithering'. Both curves start at the minimum frequency and decrease as frequency increases. The 'Dithering' curve starts at 20-bit resolution, while the 'No Dithering' curve starts at 16-bit resolution. A vertical dashed line at F_PWM min connects the starting points of both curves to the X-axis. The identifier MSV47464V2 is in the bottom right corner of the graph area.

Figure 434 is a graph showing PWM resolution (Y-axis) versus PWM frequency (X-axis). The Y-axis has markers for 20-bit and 16-bit. The X-axis has a marker for \( F_{\text{PWM min}} \) . Two curves are shown: "Dithering" and "No Dithering". Both curves start at the minimum frequency and decrease as frequency increases. The "Dithering" curve starts at 20-bit resolution, while the "No Dithering" curve starts at 16-bit resolution. A vertical dashed line at \( F_{\text{PWM min}} \) connects the starting points of both curves to the X-axis. The identifier MSV47464V2 is in the bottom right corner of the graph area.

Figure 434. PWM resolution vs frequency. A graph showing PWM resolution (Y-axis) versus PWM frequency (X-axis). The Y-axis has markers for 20-bit and 16-bit. The X-axis has a marker for F_PWM min. Two curves are shown: 'Dithering' and 'No Dithering'. Both curves start at the minimum frequency and decrease as frequency increases. The 'Dithering' curve starts at 20-bit resolution, while the 'No Dithering' curve starts at 16-bit resolution. A vertical dashed line at F_PWM min connects the starting points of both curves to the X-axis. The identifier MSV47464V2 is in the bottom right corner of the graph area.

The duty cycle and/or period changes are spread over 16 consecutive periods, as described in Figure 435 .

Figure 435. PWM dithering pattern

Timing diagram showing PWM dithering pattern for Counter period, CCR1, Compare1, CCR2, Compare2, CCR3, Compare3, CCR4, Compare4, ARR, and Auto-Reload registers over 16 periods.

The figure illustrates the PWM dithering pattern over 16 counter periods. The registers and their values are as follows:

MSV45755V1

Timing diagram showing PWM dithering pattern for Counter period, CCR1, Compare1, CCR2, Compare2, CCR3, Compare3, CCR4, Compare4, ARR, and Auto-Reload registers over 16 periods.

The autoreload and compare values increments are spread following specific patterns described in Table 415 . The dithering sequence is done to have increments distributed as evenly as possible and minimize the overall ripple.

Table 415. CCR and ARR register change dithering pattern

LSB valuePWM period
12345678910111213141516
0000----------------
0001+1---------------
0010+1-------+1-------
0011+1---+1---+1-------
0100+1---+1---+1---+1---
0101+1-+1-+1---+1---+1---
0110+1-+1-+1---+1-+1-+1---

Table 415. CCR and ARR register change dithering pattern (continued)

LSB valuePWM period
12345678910111213141516
0111+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1---
1000+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-
1001+1+1+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-
1010+1+1+1-+1-+1-+1+1+1-+1-+1-
1011+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1-+1-
1100+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-
1101+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-
1110+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-
1111+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-

The dithering mode is also available in center-aligned PWM mode (CMS bits in TIMx_CR1 register are not equal to 00). In this case, the dithering pattern is applied over eight consecutive PWM periods, considering the up and down counting phases as shown in Figure 436.

Figure 436. Dithering effect on duty cycle in center-aligned PWM mode

Figure 436 shows three diagrams illustrating the dithering effect on duty cycle in center-aligned PWM mode. The first diagram, labeled 'No dithering', shows a standard PWM signal. The second diagram, labeled 'Dithering up', shows the signal with a higher duty cycle. The third diagram, labeled 'Dithering down', shows the signal with a lower duty cycle. The diagrams illustrate how the dithering pattern affects the up and down counting phases of the PWM signal.
Figure 436 shows three diagrams illustrating the dithering effect on duty cycle in center-aligned PWM mode. The first diagram, labeled 'No dithering', shows a standard PWM signal. The second diagram, labeled 'Dithering up', shows the signal with a higher duty cycle. The third diagram, labeled 'Dithering down', shows the signal with a lower duty cycle. The diagrams illustrate how the dithering pattern affects the up and down counting phases of the PWM signal.

Table 416 shows how the dithering pattern is added in center-aligned PWM mode.

Table 416. CCR register change dithering pattern in center-aligned PWM mode

LSB valuePWM period
12345678
UpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDn
0000----------------
0001+1---------------
0010+1-------+1-------
0011+1---+1---+1-------
0100+1---+1---+1---+1---
0101+1-+1-+1---+1---+1---
0110+1-+1-+1---+1-+1-+1---

Table 416. CCR register change dithering pattern in center-aligned PWM mode (continued)

LSB valuePWM period
12345678
UpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDnUpDn
0111+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1---
1000+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-
1001+1+1+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-+1-
1010+1+1+1-+1-+1-+1+1+1-+1-+1-
1011+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1-+1-
1100+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-
1101+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-+1+1+1-+1+1+1-
1110+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-
1111+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1-

41.3.14 Asymmetric PWM mode

Asymmetric mode allows two center-aligned PWM signals to be generated with a programmable phase shift. While the frequency is determined by the value of the TIMx_ARR register, the duty cycle and the phase-shift are determined by a pair of TIMx_CCRx register. One register controls the PWM during up-counting, the second during down counting, so that PWM is adjusted every half PWM cycle:

Asymmetric PWM mode can be selected independently on two channel (one tim_ocx output per pair of CCR registers) by writing 1110 (Asymmetric PWM mode 1) or 1111 (Asymmetric PWM mode 2) in the OCxM bits in the TIMx_CCMRx register.

Note: The OCxM[3:0] bitfield is split into two parts for compatibility reasons, the most significant bit is not contiguous with the three least significant ones.

When a given channel is used as asymmetric PWM channel, its complementary channel can also be used. For instance, if an tim_oc1refc signal is generated on channel 1 (Asymmetric PWM mode 1), it is possible to output either the tim_oc2ref signal on channel 2, or an tim_oc2refc signal resulting from asymmetric PWM mode 1.

Figure 437 represents an example of signals that can be generated using asymmetric PWM mode (channels 1 to 4 are configured in asymmetric PWM mode 2). Together with the deadtime generator, this allows a full-bridge phase-shifted DC to DC converter to be controlled.

Figure 437. Generation of 2 phase-shifted PWM signals with 50% duty cycle

Timing diagram showing the generation of two phase-shifted PWM signals with 50% duty cycle. The top row shows the Counter register values from 0 to 8, then 7 down to 0, then 1. The second row shows the tim_oc1refc signal, which is high from counter value 0 to 8 and low from 8 to 0. The third row shows the tim_oc3refc signal, which is high from counter value 3 to 5 and low otherwise. The diagram is labeled MSV62329V1.

Counter register: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1

tim_oc1refc
CCR1=0
CCR2=8

tim_oc3refc
CCR3=3
CCR4=5

MSV62329V1

Timing diagram showing the generation of two phase-shifted PWM signals with 50% duty cycle. The top row shows the Counter register values from 0 to 8, then 7 down to 0, then 1. The second row shows the tim_oc1refc signal, which is high from counter value 0 to 8 and low from 8 to 0. The third row shows the tim_oc3refc signal, which is high from counter value 3 to 5 and low otherwise. The diagram is labeled MSV62329V1.

41.3.15 Combined PWM mode

Combined PWM mode allows two edge or center-aligned PWM signals to be generated with programmable delay and phase shift between respective pulses. While the frequency is determined by the value of the TIMx_ARR register, the duty cycle and delay are determined by the two TIMx_CCRx registers. The resulting signals, tim_ocxrefc, are made of an OR or AND logical combination of two reference PWMs:

Combined PWM mode can be selected independently on two channels (one tim_ocx output per pair of CCR registers) by writing 1100 (Combined PWM mode 1) or 1101 (Combined PWM mode 2) in the OCxM bits in the TIMx_CCMRx register.

When a given channel is used as combined PWM channel, its complementary channel must be configured in the opposite PWM mode (for instance, one in Combined PWM mode 1 and the other in Combined PWM mode 2).

Note: The OCxM[3:0] bitfield is split into two parts for compatibility reasons, the most significant bit is not contiguous with the three least significant ones.

Figure 438 represents an example of signals that can be generated using combined PWM mode, obtained with the following configuration:

Figure 438. Combined PWM mode on channel 1 and 3

Timing diagrams for Combined PWM mode on channel 1 and 3. The top diagram shows Combined PWM mode 1 where tim_oc1refc is the OR of tim_oc1ref and tim_oc2ref. The bottom diagram shows Combined PWM mode 2 where tim_oc3refc is the AND of tim_oc3ref and tim_oc4ref. Both diagrams show the relationship between capture/compare registers (CCR1-4), reference signals (tim_oc1ref, tim_oc2ref, tim_oc3ref, tim_oc4ref), and combined reference signals (tim_oc1refc, tim_oc3refc) over time.

Combined PWM mode 1: \( tim\_oc1refc = tim\_oc1ref \text{ OR } tim\_oc2ref \)

Combined PWM mode 2: \( tim\_oc3refc = tim\_oc3ref \text{ AND } tim\_oc4ref \)

MSV74198V1

Timing diagrams for Combined PWM mode on channel 1 and 3. The top diagram shows Combined PWM mode 1 where tim_oc1refc is the OR of tim_oc1ref and tim_oc2ref. The bottom diagram shows Combined PWM mode 2 where tim_oc3refc is the AND of tim_oc3ref and tim_oc4ref. Both diagrams show the relationship between capture/compare registers (CCR1-4), reference signals (tim_oc1ref, tim_oc2ref, tim_oc3ref, tim_oc4ref), and combined reference signals (tim_oc1refc, tim_oc3refc) over time.

41.3.16 Combined 3-phase PWM mode

Combined 3-phase PWM mode allows one to three center-aligned PWM signals to be generated with a single programmable signal ANDed in the middle of the pulses. The \( tim\_oc5ref \) signal is used to define the resulting combined signal. The 3-bits \( GC5C[3:1] \) in the \( TIMx\_CCR5 \) allow selection on which reference signal the \( tim\_oc5ref \) is combined. The resulting signals, \( tim\_ocxrefc \) , are made of an AND logical combination of two reference PWMs:

Combined 3-phase PWM mode can be selected independently on channels 1 to 3 by setting at least one of the 3-bits \( GC5C[3:1] \) .

Figure 439. 3-phase combined PWM signals with multiple trigger pulses per period

Timing diagram showing 3-phase combined PWM signals with multiple trigger pulses per period. The diagram displays various timer signals including ARR, CCR5, CCR6, CCR1, CCR4, CCR2, CCR3, Counter, tim_oc5ref, tim_oc1refc, tim_oc2refc, tim_oc3refc, Preload, Active, tim_oc4ref, tim_oc6ref, and tim_trgo2. The Counter signal is a sawtooth wave. The Preload signal shows values 100, xxx, and 100. The Active signal shows values 001 and 100. The tim_trgo2 signal shows multiple trigger pulses per period.

The figure is a timing diagram illustrating the relationship between various timer signals in an advanced-control timer (TIM1). The signals are plotted over time, showing their state changes and timing relationships. The Counter signal is a sawtooth wave that increases linearly and then resets. The Preload signal shows the value 100, followed by a transition to 'xxx', and then back to 100. The Active signal shows the value 001, followed by a transition to 100. The tim_trgo2 signal shows multiple trigger pulses per period, which are used for ADC synchronization. The other signals (ARR, CCR5, CCR6, CCR1, CCR4, CCR2, CCR3, tim_oc5ref, tim_oc1refc, tim_oc2refc, tim_oc3refc, tim_oc4ref, tim_oc6ref) show various PWM and reference signals.

Timing diagram showing 3-phase combined PWM signals with multiple trigger pulses per period. The diagram displays various timer signals including ARR, CCR5, CCR6, CCR1, CCR4, CCR2, CCR3, Counter, tim_oc5ref, tim_oc1refc, tim_oc2refc, tim_oc3refc, Preload, Active, tim_oc4ref, tim_oc6ref, and tim_trgo2. The Counter signal is a sawtooth wave. The Preload signal shows values 100, xxx, and 100. The Active signal shows values 001 and 100. The tim_trgo2 signal shows multiple trigger pulses per period.

The tim_trgo2 waveform shows how the ADC can be synchronized on given 3-phase PWM signals. Refer to Section 41.3.31: ADC triggers for more details.

41.3.17 Complementary outputs and dead-time insertion

The advanced-control timers (TIM1) can output two complementary signals and manage the switching-off and the switching-on instants of the outputs.

This time is generally known as dead-time and it has to be adjusted depending on the devices that are connected to the outputs and their characteristics (such as intrinsic delays of level-shifters, or delays due to power switches).

The polarity of the outputs (main output tim_ocx or complementary tim_ocxn) can be selected independently for each output. This is done by writing to the CCxP and CCxNP bits in the TIMx_CCER register.

The complementary signals tim_ocx and tim_ocxn are activated by a combination of several control bits: the CCxE and CCxNE bits in the TIMx_CCER register and the MOE, OISx, OISxN, OSSI, and OSSR bits in the TIMx_BDTR and TIMx_CR2 registers. Refer to Table 424: Output control bits for complementary tim_ocx and tim_ocxn channels with break feature for more details. In particular, the dead-time is activated when switching to the idle state (MOE falling down to 0).

Dead-time insertion is enabled by setting both CCxE and CCxNE bits, and the MOE bit if the break circuit is present. There is one 10-bit dead-time generator for each channel. From a

reference waveform tim_ocxref , it generates two outputs tim_ocx and tim_ocxn . If tim_ocx and tim_ocxn are active high:

If the delay is greater than the width of the active output ( tim_ocx or tim_ocxn ) then the corresponding pulse is not generated.

The following figures show the relationships between the output signals of the dead-time generator and the reference signal tim_ocxref considering CCxP = 0 , CCxNP = 0 , MOE = 1 , CCxE = 1 and CCxNE = 1 in these examples.

Figure 440. Complementary output with symmetrical dead-time insertion

Timing diagram showing three waveforms: tim_ocxref, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. tim_ocxref is a periodic square wave. tim_ocx is a delayed version of tim_ocxref, with its rising edge delayed by 'delay' from the reference rising edge. tim_ocxn is the complement of tim_ocx, with its falling edge delayed by 'delay' from the reference falling edge. The diagram illustrates symmetrical dead-time insertion. A small text 'MSV62332V1' is visible in the bottom right corner of the diagram area.
Timing diagram showing three waveforms: tim_ocxref, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. tim_ocxref is a periodic square wave. tim_ocx is a delayed version of tim_ocxref, with its rising edge delayed by 'delay' from the reference rising edge. tim_ocxn is the complement of tim_ocx, with its falling edge delayed by 'delay' from the reference falling edge. The diagram illustrates symmetrical dead-time insertion. A small text 'MSV62332V1' is visible in the bottom right corner of the diagram area.

The DTAE bit in the TIMx_DTR2 is used to differentiate the deadtime values for rising and falling edges of the reference signal, as shown on Figure 441 .

In asymmetrical mode ( DTAE = 1 ), the rising edge-referred deadtime is defined by the DTG[7:0] bitfield in the TIMx_BDTR register, while the falling edge-referred is defined by the DTGF[7:0] bitfield in the TIMx_DTR2 register. The DTAE bit must be written before enabling the counter and must not be modified while CEN = 1 .

It is possible to have the deadtime value updated on-the-fly during pwm operation, using a preload mechanism. The deadtime bitfield DTG[7:0] and DTGF[7:0] are preloaded when the DTPE bit is set, in the TIMx_DTR2 register. The preload value is loaded in the active register on the next update event.

Note: If the DTPE bit is enabled while the counter is enabled, any new value written since last update is discarded and previous value is used.

Figure 441. Asymmetrical deadtime

Timing diagram showing symmetrical and asymmetrical deadtime between tim_ocxref, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn signals. The top section shows symmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 0) where deadtime is equal on both rising and falling edges. The bottom section shows asymmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 1) where deadtime is different on rising and falling edges. Deadtime is programmable via DTG[7:0] bits.

The figure displays two sets of timing diagrams for three signals: tim_ocxref , tim_ocx , and tim_ocxn .
The top set, labeled Symmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 0) , shows that the deadtime interval between the falling edge of tim_ocxref and the falling edge of tim_ocx is equal to the deadtime interval between the rising edge of tim_ocxref and the rising edge of tim_ocx . Both intervals are labeled DTG[7:0] .
The bottom set, labeled Asymmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 1) , shows that these two deadtime intervals are different. The interval following the falling edge of tim_ocxref is labeled DTGF[7:0] , while the interval following the rising edge is labeled DTG[7:0] .
A small code MSv62333V1 is visible in the bottom right corner of the diagram area.

Timing diagram showing symmetrical and asymmetrical deadtime between tim_ocxref, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn signals. The top section shows symmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 0) where deadtime is equal on both rising and falling edges. The bottom section shows asymmetrical deadtime (DTAE = 1) where deadtime is different on rising and falling edges. Deadtime is programmable via DTG[7:0] bits.

Figure 442. Dead-time waveforms with delay greater than the negative pulse

Timing diagram showing dead-time delay when the delay is greater than the negative pulse width of tim_ocxref.

This timing diagram shows the signals tim_ocxref , tim_ocx , and tim_ocxn . The tim_ocxref signal has a narrow negative pulse. The tim_ocx signal is delayed relative to tim_ocxref . A horizontal double-headed arrow labeled delay indicates the time interval from the falling edge of tim_ocxref to the rising edge of tim_ocx . This delay is shown to be longer than the duration of the negative pulse of tim_ocxref . A small code MSv62334V1 is visible in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing dead-time delay when the delay is greater than the negative pulse width of tim_ocxref.

Figure 443. Dead-time waveforms with delay greater than the positive pulse

Timing diagram showing dead-time delay when the delay is greater than the positive pulse width of tim_ocxref.

This timing diagram shows the signals tim_ocxref , tim_ocx , and tim_ocxn . The tim_ocxref signal has a narrow positive pulse. The tim_ocx signal is delayed relative to tim_ocxref . A horizontal double-headed arrow labeled delay indicates the time interval from the rising edge of tim_ocxref to the falling edge of tim_ocx . This delay is shown to be longer than the duration of the positive pulse of tim_ocxref . A small code MSv62335V1 is visible in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing dead-time delay when the delay is greater than the positive pulse width of tim_ocxref.

The dead-time delay is the same for each of the channels and is programmable with the DTG bits in the TIMx_BDTR register. Refer to Section 41.6.20: TIM1 break and dead-time register (TIM1_BDTR) for delay calculation.

Redirecting tim_ocxref to tim_ocx or tim_ocxn

In output mode (forced, output compare or PWM), tim_ocxref can be redirected to the tim_ocx output or to tim_ocxn output by configuring the CCxE and CCxNE bits in the TIMx_CCER register.

This is used to send a specific waveform (such as PWM or static active level) on one output while the complementary remains at its inactive level. Other alternative possibilities are to have both outputs at inactive level or both outputs active and complementary with dead-time.

Note: When only tim_ocxn is enabled (CCxE = 0, CCxNE = 1), it is not complemented and becomes active as soon as tim_ocxref is high. For example, if CCxNP = 0 then tim_ocxn = tim_ocxref. On the other hand, when both tim_ocx and tim_ocxn are enabled (CCxE = CCxNE = 1) tim_ocx becomes active when tim_ocxref is high whereas tim_ocxn is complemented and becomes active when tim_ocxref is low.

41.3.18 Using the break function

The purpose of the break function is to protect power switches driven by PWM signals generated with the timers. The two break inputs are usually connected to fault outputs of power stages and 3-phase inverters. When activated, the break circuitry shuts down the PWM outputs and forces them to a predefined safe state. A number of internal MCU events can also be selected to trigger an output shut-down.

The break features two channels. A break channel which gathers both system-level fault (clock failure, ECC/parity errors,...) and application fault (from input pins and built-in comparator), and can force the outputs to a predefined level (either active or inactive) after a deadtime duration. A break2 channel which only includes application faults and is able to force the outputs to an inactive state.

The output enable signal and output levels during break are depending on several control bits:

When exiting from reset, the break circuit is disabled and the MOE bit is low. The break functions can be enabled by setting the BKE and BK2E bits in the TIMx_BDTR register. The break input polarities can be selected by configuring the BKP and BK2P bits in the same register. BKEx and BKPx can be modified at the same time. When the BKEx and BKPx bits are written, a delay of one APB clock cycle is applied before the writing is effective. Consequently, it is necessary to wait one APB clock period to correctly read back the bit after the write operation.

Because MOE falling edge can be asynchronous, a resynchronization circuit has been inserted between the actual signal (acting on the outputs) and the synchronous control bit (accessed in the TIMx_BDTR register). It results in some delays between the asynchronous

and the synchronous signals. In particular, if MOE is set to 1 whereas it was low, a delay must be inserted (dummy instruction) before reading it correctly. This is because the write acts on the asynchronous signal whereas the read reflects the synchronous signal.

The sources for break (tim_brk) channel are:

The sources for break2 (tim_brk2) are:

Break events can also be generated by software using BG and B2G bits in the TIMx_EGR register.

All sources are ORed before entering the timer tim_brk or tim_brk2 inputs, as per Figure 444 below.

Figure 444. Break and Break2 circuitry overview

Figure 444. Break and Break2 circuitry overview. This block diagram illustrates the internal logic for generating break signals in an advanced-control timer. The top section shows the 'tim_sys_brk' signal generation, which is an OR of five AND gates. Each AND gate takes an 'Enable' input (tim_sys_brk0 through tim_sys_brkx) and a 'CSS' input. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'tim_sys_brk' and is connected to the 'SBIF' flag. The middle section shows the 'tim_brk' signal generation. It starts with 'BKINP' (from TIMx_BKIN from AF controller) and 'tim_brk_cmp[4:1]' inputs. 'BKINP' is inverted and ANDed with 'BKNE'. 'tim_brk_cmp[4:1]' is inverted and ANDed with 'BKCMP1E..BKCMP4P'. These two results are ORed and then ANDed with 'BKNE'. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BKP'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2F[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2P'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2P'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BKE'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'tim_brk' and is connected to the 'BIF' flag. The bottom section shows the 'tim_brk2' signal generation. It starts with 'BK2INP' (from TIMx_BKIN2 from AF controller) and 'tim_brk2_cmp[4:1]' inputs. 'BK2INP' is inverted and ANDed with 'BK2NE'. 'tim_brk2_cmp[4:1]' is inverted and ANDed with 'BK2CMP1E..BK2CMP4P'. These two results are ORed and then ANDed with 'BK2NE'. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2F[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2P'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2P'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2E'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'tim_brk2' and is connected to the 'B2IF' flag. The diagram also includes 'Software break requests: BG' and 'Software break requests: B2G' inputs to the final OR gates for 'tim_brk' and 'tim_brk2' respectively. The identifier 'MSV62336V2' is in the bottom right corner.
Figure 444. Break and Break2 circuitry overview. This block diagram illustrates the internal logic for generating break signals in an advanced-control timer. The top section shows the 'tim_sys_brk' signal generation, which is an OR of five AND gates. Each AND gate takes an 'Enable' input (tim_sys_brk0 through tim_sys_brkx) and a 'CSS' input. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'tim_sys_brk' and is connected to the 'SBIF' flag. The middle section shows the 'tim_brk' signal generation. It starts with 'BKINP' (from TIMx_BKIN from AF controller) and 'tim_brk_cmp[4:1]' inputs. 'BKINP' is inverted and ANDed with 'BKNE'. 'tim_brk_cmp[4:1]' is inverted and ANDed with 'BKCMP1E..BKCMP4P'. These two results are ORed and then ANDed with 'BKNE'. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BKP'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2F[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2P'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2P'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BKE'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'tim_brk' and is connected to the 'BIF' flag. The bottom section shows the 'tim_brk2' signal generation. It starts with 'BK2INP' (from TIMx_BKIN2 from AF controller) and 'tim_brk2_cmp[4:1]' inputs. 'BK2INP' is inverted and ANDed with 'BK2NE'. 'tim_brk2_cmp[4:1]' is inverted and ANDed with 'BK2CMP1E..BK2CMP4P'. These two results are ORed and then ANDed with 'BK2NE'. The output of this OR gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2F[3:0]'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2P'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'Application break requests' and is connected to a 'Filter' block. The output of the 'Filter' block is labeled 'BK2P'. This is followed by an inverter and an AND gate with 'BK2E'. The output of this AND gate is labeled 'tim_brk2' and is connected to the 'B2IF' flag. The diagram also includes 'Software break requests: BG' and 'Software break requests: B2G' inputs to the final OR gates for 'tim_brk' and 'tim_brk2' respectively. The identifier 'MSV62336V2' is in the bottom right corner.

Note: An asynchronous (clockless) operation is only guaranteed when the programmable filter is disabled. If it is enabled, a fail safe clock mode (for example by using the internal PLL and/or the CSS) must be used to guarantee that break events are handled.

When one of the breaks occurs (selected level on one of the break inputs):

their active level together. Note that because of the resynchronization on MOE, the dead-time duration is slightly longer than usual (around 2 tim_ker_ck clock cycles).

Note: If the MOE is reset by the CPU while the AOE bit is set, the outputs are in idle state and forced to inactive level or Hi-Z depending on OSSI value. If both the MOE and AOE bits are reset by the CPU, the outputs are in disabled state and driven with the level programmed in the OISx bit in the TIMx_CR2 register.

The break inputs are active on level. Thus, the MOE cannot be set while the break input is active (neither automatically nor by software). In the meantime, the status flag BIF and B2IF cannot be cleared.

In addition to the break input and the output management, a write protection has been implemented inside the break circuit to safeguard the application. It is used to freeze the configuration of several parameters (dead-time duration, tim_ocx/tim_ocxn polarities and state when disabled, OCxM configurations, break enable, and polarity). The application can choose from three levels of protection selected by the LOCK bits in the TIMx_BDTR register. Refer to Section 41.6.20 . The LOCK bits can be written only once after an MCU reset.

Figure 445 shows an example of behavior of the outputs in response to a break.

Figure 445. Various output behavior in response to a break event on tim_brk (OSSI = 1)

Timing diagram showing various output behaviors in response to a break event on tim_brk (OSSI = 1).

The diagram illustrates the response of various timer outputs to a break event (MOE \( \downarrow \) ). The break event is indicated by a vertical dashed line. The outputs shown are:

MSv62337V1

Timing diagram showing various output behaviors in response to a break event on tim_brk (OSSI = 1).

The two break inputs have different behaviors on timer outputs:

The tim_brk has a higher priority than tim_brk2 input, as described in Table 417 .

Note: tim_brk2 must only be used with OSSR = OSSI = 1.

Table 417. Behavior of timer outputs versus tim_brk/tim_brk2 inputs

tim_brktim_brk2Timer outputs stateTypical use case
tim_ocxn output (low side switches)tim_ocx output (high side switches)
ActiveX
  • – Inactive then forced output state (after a deadtime)
  • – Outputs disabled if OSSI = 0 (control taken over by GPIO logic)
ON after deadtime insertionOFF
InactiveActiveInactiveOFFOFF

Figure 446 gives an example of tim_ocx and tim_ocxn output behavior in case of active signals on tim_brk and tim_brk2 inputs. In this case, both outputs have active high polarities (CCxP = CCxNP = 0 in TIMx_CCER register).

Figure 446. PWM output state following tim_brk and tim_brk2 assertion (OSSI = 1)

Timing diagram showing the PWM output state following tim_brk and tim_brk2 assertion. The diagram shows four signals: tim_brk2, tim_brk, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. The I/O state is divided into Active, Inactive, and Idle periods. Deadtime is indicated between the Active and Inactive periods for the output signals.

The timing diagram illustrates the behavior of PWM outputs (tim_ocx and tim_ocxn) when the break inputs (tim_brk and tim_brk2) are asserted. The diagram is divided into three main I/O states: Active, Inactive, and Idle.
1. Active State: Both tim_brk and tim_brk2 are inactive. The outputs tim_ocx and tim_ocxn are active.
2. Assertion: tim_brk2 becomes active first, followed by tim_brk.
3. Inactive State: Both tim_brk and tim_brk2 are active. The outputs tim_ocx and tim_ocxn transition to an inactive state. A 'Deadtime' interval is shown between the active and inactive states for the outputs.
4. Release: tim_brk becomes inactive first, followed by tim_brk2.
5. Idle State: Both tim_brk and tim_brk2 are inactive again. The outputs return to an active state. Another 'Deadtime' interval is shown between the inactive and active states for the outputs.
The diagram also includes labels for 'tim_brk2', 'tim_brk', 'tim_ocx', and 'tim_ocxn' signals, and a reference code 'MSV62338V1'.

Timing diagram showing the PWM output state following tim_brk and tim_brk2 assertion. The diagram shows four signals: tim_brk2, tim_brk, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. The I/O state is divided into Active, Inactive, and Idle periods. Deadtime is indicated between the Active and Inactive periods for the output signals.
Figure 447. PWM output state following tim_brk assertion (OSSI = 0) Timing diagram showing the PWM output state following a break assertion. The diagram shows three signals: tim_brk, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. The tim_brk signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes low at a certain point. The tim_ocx and tim_ocxn signals are shown as PWM signals. The tim_ocx signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes high at the same point as the tim_brk signal goes low. The tim_ocxn signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes low at the same point as the tim_brk signal goes low. The diagram is divided into three regions: 'Active', 'Inactive', and 'Disabled'. The 'Active' region is before the break assertion. The 'Inactive' region is between the break assertion and the 'Disabled' region. The 'Disabled' region is after the break assertion. The 'Inactive' region is further divided into two sub-regions by vertical dashed lines, with a double-headed arrow between them labeled 'Deadtime'. The I/O state for tim_ocx and tim_ocxn in the 'Disabled' region is defined by the GPIO controller (HI-Z). The diagram is labeled MSv62339V1 in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram showing the PWM output state following a break assertion. The diagram shows three signals: tim_brk, tim_ocx, and tim_ocxn. The tim_brk signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes low at a certain point. The tim_ocx and tim_ocxn signals are shown as PWM signals. The tim_ocx signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes high at the same point as the tim_brk signal goes low. The tim_ocxn signal is shown as a horizontal line that goes low at the same point as the tim_brk signal goes low. The diagram is divided into three regions: 'Active', 'Inactive', and 'Disabled'. The 'Active' region is before the break assertion. The 'Inactive' region is between the break assertion and the 'Disabled' region. The 'Disabled' region is after the break assertion. The 'Inactive' region is further divided into two sub-regions by vertical dashed lines, with a double-headed arrow between them labeled 'Deadtime'. The I/O state for tim_ocx and tim_ocxn in the 'Disabled' region is defined by the GPIO controller (HI-Z). The diagram is labeled MSv62339V1 in the bottom right corner.

41.3.19 Bidirectional break inputs

The TIM1 features bidirectional break I/Os, as represented on Figure 448 .

This provides support for:

The tim_brk and tim_brk2 inputs are configured in bidirectional mode using the BKBID and BK2BID bits in the TIMxBDTR register. The BKBID programming bits can be locked in read-only mode using the LOCK bits in the TIMxBDTR register (in LOCK level 1 or above).

The bidirectional mode is available for both the tim_brk and tim_brk2 inputs, and require the I/O to be configured in open-drain mode with active low polarity (using BKINP , BKP , BK2INP and BK2P bits). Any break request coming either from system (for example CSS ), from on-chip peripherals, or from break inputs forces a low level on the break input to signal the fault event. The bidirectional mode is inhibited if the polarity bits are not correctly set (active high polarity), for safety purposes.

The break software events ( BG and B2G ) also cause the break I/O to be forced to 0 to indicate to the external components that the timer is entered in break state. However, this is valid only if the break is enabled ( BKE or B2KE = 1). When a software break event is generated with BKE or B2KE = 0), the outputs are put in safe state and the break flag is set, but there is no effect on the TIMx_BKIN and TIMx_BKIN2 I/Os.

A safe disarming mechanism prevents the system to be definitively locked-up (a low level on the break input triggers a break which enforces a low level on the same input).

When the BKDSRM ( BK2DSRM ) bit is set to 1, this releases the break output to clear a fault signal and to give the possibility to re-arm the system.

At no point the break protection circuitry can be disabled:

Table 418. Break protection disarming conditions

MOEBKBID
(BK2BID)
BKDSRM
(BK2DSRM)
Break protection state
00XArmed
010Armed
011Disarmed
1XXArmed

Arming and rearming break circuitry

The break circuitry (in input or bidirectional mode) is armed by default (peripheral reset configuration).

The following procedure must be followed to re-arm the protection after a break (break2) event:

From this point, the break circuitry is armed and active, and the MOE bit can be set to re-enable the PWM outputs.

Figure 448. Output redirection (tim_brk2 request not represented)

Figure 448. Output redirection (tim_brk2 request not represented). This block diagram illustrates the internal logic of the break circuitry. On the left, 'Other break inputs' and a 'Bidirectional Break I/O TIM_BKIN' (with AF input active low and AF output open drain) are connected to an 'AF controller'. The AF controller outputs 'tim_brk_cmp[8:1]' and 'BKIN inputs from AF controller'. These signals pass through an OR gate, then a 'Filter' block labeled 'BKF[3:0]', and then a 'BKP' block. The output of the BKP block is connected to an AND gate. This AND gate also receives 'Application break requests' and a 'tim_sys_brk' signal. The output of this AND gate is connected to a 'Software break requests: BG' block, which generates a 'BIF flag'. The output of the BIF flag is connected to a 'BRK request' block, which generates a 'tim_brk' signal. Below the main logic, a 'Bidirectional mode control logic' block receives 'System break request' and 'tim_brk request' signals. It is controlled by 'MOE', 'BKBID', and 'BKDSRM' bits. The output of this control logic is connected to the 'AF controller' and the 'tim_brk_cmp[8:1]' OR gate. The diagram is labeled 'MSv62340V2' in the bottom right corner.
Figure 448. Output redirection (tim_brk2 request not represented). This block diagram illustrates the internal logic of the break circuitry. On the left, 'Other break inputs' and a 'Bidirectional Break I/O TIM_BKIN' (with AF input active low and AF output open drain) are connected to an 'AF controller'. The AF controller outputs 'tim_brk_cmp[8:1]' and 'BKIN inputs from AF controller'. These signals pass through an OR gate, then a 'Filter' block labeled 'BKF[3:0]', and then a 'BKP' block. The output of the BKP block is connected to an AND gate. This AND gate also receives 'Application break requests' and a 'tim_sys_brk' signal. The output of this AND gate is connected to a 'Software break requests: BG' block, which generates a 'BIF flag'. The output of the BIF flag is connected to a 'BRK request' block, which generates a 'tim_brk' signal. Below the main logic, a 'Bidirectional mode control logic' block receives 'System break request' and 'tim_brk request' signals. It is controlled by 'MOE', 'BKBID', and 'BKDSRM' bits. The output of this control logic is connected to the 'AF controller' and the 'tim_brk_cmp[8:1]' OR gate. The diagram is labeled 'MSv62340V2' in the bottom right corner.

41.3.20 Clearing the tim_ocxref signal on an external event

The tim_ocxref signal of a given channel can be cleared when a high level is applied on the tim_ocref_clr_int input (OCxCE enable bit in the corresponding TIMx_CCMRx register set to 1). tim_ocxref remains low until the next transition to the active state, on the following PWM

cycle. This function can only be used in Output compare and PWM modes. It does not work in Forced mode.

tim_etr_in must be configured as follows:

  1. 1. The external trigger prescaler must be kept off: bits ETPS[1:0] of the TIMx_SMCR register set to 00.
  2. 2. The external clock mode 2 must be disabled: bit ECE of the TIMx_SMCR register set to 0.
  3. 3. The external trigger polarity (ETP) and the external trigger filter (ETF) can be configured according to application needs (as per polarity of the source connected to the trigger and eventual need to remove noise using the filter).

Figure 449 shows the behavior of the tim_ocxref signal when the tim_etr input becomes high, for both values of the enable bit OCxCE. In this example, the timer TIMx is programmed in PWM mode.

Figure 449. Clearing TIMx tim_ocxref

Timing diagram showing the relationship between Counter (CNT), tim_etr, and tim_ocxref signals. The diagram illustrates how the tim_ocxref signal is cleared when the external trigger (tim_etr) goes high, depending on the OCxCE bit setting.

The figure is a timing diagram with four horizontal signal lines. The top line, labeled 'Counter (CNT) (CCRx)', shows a sawtooth waveform representing the timer counter. The second line, labeled 'tim_etr', shows a rectangular pulse that goes high and then low. The third line, labeled 'tim_ocxref (OCxCE = '0')', shows a signal that is initially high and then goes low when the counter reaches the CCRx value. The fourth line, labeled 'tim_ocxref (OCxCE = '1')', shows a signal that is initially low and then goes high when the counter reaches the CCRx value. Two arrows point to the third and fourth lines with the text 'tim_ocref_clr_int becomes high' and 'tim_ocref_clr_int still high' respectively. The diagram is labeled 'MSV62342V1' in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing the relationship between Counter (CNT), tim_etr, and tim_ocxref signals. The diagram illustrates how the tim_ocxref signal is cleared when the external trigger (tim_etr) goes high, depending on the OCxCE bit setting.

Note: In case of a PWM with a 100% duty cycle (if \( CCRx > ARR \) ), then tim_ocxref is enabled again at the next counter overflow.

41.3.21 6-step PWM generation

When complementary outputs are used on a channel, preload bits are available on the OCxM, CCxE, and CCxNE bits. The preload bits are transferred to the shadow bits at the COM commutation event. Thus one can program in advance the configuration for the next step and change the configuration of all the channels at the same time. COM can be generated by software by setting the COM bit in the TIMx_EGR register or by hardware (on tim_trgi rising edge).

A flag is set when the COM event occurs (COMIF bit in the TIMx_SR register), which can generate an interrupt (if the COMIE bit is set in the TIMx_DIER register) or a DMA request (if the COMDE bit is set in the TIMx_DIER register).

Figure 450 describes the behavior of the tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs when a COM event occurs, in three different examples of programmed configurations.

Figure 450. 6-step generation, COM example (OSSR = 1)

Timing diagram showing Counter (CNT), tim_ocxref, COM event, and three examples of tim_ocx and tim_ocxn output behaviors. The diagram illustrates how the outputs change state based on programmed configurations (CCxE, CCxNE, OCxM) when a COM event occurs. The counter (CNT) is shown as a sawtooth wave. tim_ocxref is a periodic signal. The COM event is a pulse. Example 1 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. Example 2 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. Example 3 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. The diagram includes annotations for register writes and initial configurations.

The figure is a timing diagram illustrating the behavior of timer outputs (tim_ocx and tim_ocxn) during a 6-step generation mode, triggered by a COM event. The diagram is divided into several horizontal tracks:

The diagram is labeled with "MSV62343V1" in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing Counter (CNT), tim_ocxref, COM event, and three examples of tim_ocx and tim_ocxn output behaviors. The diagram illustrates how the outputs change state based on programmed configurations (CCxE, CCxNE, OCxM) when a COM event occurs. The counter (CNT) is shown as a sawtooth wave. tim_ocxref is a periodic signal. The COM event is a pulse. Example 1 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. Example 2 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. Example 3 shows tim_ocx and tim_ocxn outputs. The diagram includes annotations for register writes and initial configurations.

41.3.22 One-pulse mode

One-pulse mode (OPM) is a particular case of the previous modes. It allows the counter to be started in response to a stimulus and to generate a pulse with a programmable length after a programmable delay.

Starting the counter can be controlled through the slave mode controller. Generating the waveform can be done in output compare mode or PWM mode. One-pulse mode is selected by setting the OPM bit in the TIMx_CR1 register. This makes the counter stop automatically at the next update event UEV.

A pulse can be correctly generated only if the compare value is different from the counter initial value. Before starting (when the timer is waiting for the trigger), the configuration must be:

Figure 451. Example of one pulse mode.

Timing diagram for one pulse mode. The diagram shows four waveforms over time (t). 1. tim_ti2: A short positive pulse that triggers the timer. 2. tim_oc1ref: The output compare reference signal, which goes high when the counter matches CCR1 and low when it reaches ARR. 3. tim_oc1: The actual output signal, which follows tim_oc1ref. 4. Counter: A graph showing the counter value (TIMx_ARR, TIMx_CCR1) starting at 0, increasing in steps until it reaches TIMx_CCR1 (causing a pulse on tim_oc1), and then continuing to increase until it reaches TIMx_ARR (resetting the pulse). The time from the rising edge of tim_ti2 to the start of the pulse on tim_oc1 is labeled t_DELAY. The duration of the pulse on tim_oc1 is labeled t_PULSE. The diagram is labeled MSv62344V1.
Timing diagram for one pulse mode. The diagram shows four waveforms over time (t). 1. tim_ti2: A short positive pulse that triggers the timer. 2. tim_oc1ref: The output compare reference signal, which goes high when the counter matches CCR1 and low when it reaches ARR. 3. tim_oc1: The actual output signal, which follows tim_oc1ref. 4. Counter: A graph showing the counter value (TIMx_ARR, TIMx_CCR1) starting at 0, increasing in steps until it reaches TIMx_CCR1 (causing a pulse on tim_oc1), and then continuing to increase until it reaches TIMx_ARR (resetting the pulse). The time from the rising edge of tim_ti2 to the start of the pulse on tim_oc1 is labeled t_DELAY. The duration of the pulse on tim_oc1 is labeled t_PULSE. The diagram is labeled MSv62344V1.

In the following example, the user wants to generate a positive pulse on tim_oc1 with a length of \( t_{PULSE} \) and after a delay of \( t_{DELAY} \) as soon as a positive edge is detected on the tim_ti2 input pin.

Use tim_ti2fp2 as trigger 1:

The OPM waveform is defined by writing the compare registers (taking into account the clock frequency and the counter prescaler).

TIMx_ARR register, generate an update by setting the UG bit and wait for external trigger event on tim_ti2. CC1P is written to 0 in this example.

In this example, the DIR and CMS bits in the TIMx_CR1 register must be low.

Since only one pulse (Single mode) is needed, a 1 must be written in the OPM bit in the TIMx_CR1 register to stop the counter at the next update event (when the counter rolls over from the autoreload value back to 0). When OPM bit in the TIMx_CR1 register is set to 0, so the Repetitive mode is selected.

Particular case: tim_ocx fast enable:

In One-pulse mode, the edge detection on tim_tix input set the CEN bit which enables the counter. Then the comparison between the counter and the compare value makes the output toggle. But several clock cycles are needed for these operations and it limits the minimum delay \( t_{\text{DELAY min}} \) that can be achieved.

To output a waveform with the minimum delay, the OCxFE bit can be set in the TIMx_CCMRx register. Then tim_ocxref (and tim_ocx) are forced in response to the stimulus, without taking in account the comparison. Its new level is the same as if a compare match had occurred. OCxFE acts only if the channel is configured in PWM1 or PWM2 mode.

41.3.23 Retriggerable One-pulse mode

This mode allows the counter to be started in response to a stimulus and to generate a pulse with a programmable length, but with the following differences with nonretriggerable one-pulse mode described in Section 41.3.22 :

The timer must be in Slave mode, with the bits SMS[3:0] = 1000 (Combined Reset + trigger mode) in the TIMx_SMCR register, and the OCxM[3:0] bits set to 1000 or 1001 for retriggerable OPM mode 1 or 2.

If the timer is configured in Up-counting mode, the corresponding CCRx must be set to 0 (the ARR register sets the pulse length). If the timer is configured in Down-counting mode, CCRx must be above or equal to ARR.

Note: The OCxM[3:0] and SMS[3:0] bitfields are split into two parts for compatibility reasons, the most significant bit are not contiguous with the three least significant ones.

This mode must not be used with center-aligned PWM modes. It is mandatory to have CMS[1:0] = 00 in TIMx_CR1.

Figure 452. Retriggerable one-pulse mode

Timing diagram for retriggerable one-pulse mode. The top signal, tim_trgi, shows three positive pulses. The middle signal, Counter, shows a sawtooth wave that starts at the first and third pulses of tim_trgi and resets at the second pulse. The bottom signal, tim_ocx, shows a pulse that starts at the first pulse of tim_trgi and ends at the second pulse.

Timing diagram showing three signals over time: tim_trgi (top), Counter (middle), and tim_ocx (bottom). tim_trgi has three positive pulses. Counter is a sawtooth wave that starts at the first and third pulses of tim_trgi and resets at the second pulse. tim_ocx is a pulse that starts at the first pulse of tim_trgi and ends at the second pulse.

Timing diagram for retriggerable one-pulse mode. The top signal, tim_trgi, shows three positive pulses. The middle signal, Counter, shows a sawtooth wave that starts at the first and third pulses of tim_trgi and resets at the second pulse. The bottom signal, tim_ocx, shows a pulse that starts at the first pulse of tim_trgi and ends at the second pulse.

41.3.24 Pulse on compare mode

A pulse can be generated upon compare match event. A signal with a programmable pulsewidth generated when the counter value equals a given compare value, for debugging or synchronization purposes.

This mode is available for any slave mode selection, including encoder modes, in edge and center aligned counting modes. It is solely available for channel 3 and channel 4. The pulse generator is unique and is shared by the two channels, as shown on Figure 453.

Figure 453. Pulse generator circuitry

Block diagram of the pulse generator circuitry. It shows two input signals, CCR3 match and CCR4 match, each passing through an 'Enable' block. The outputs of these blocks are connected to an OR gate. The output of the OR gate is connected to a 'Pulse generator' block. The 'Pulse generator' block also receives inputs from 'PWPRSC [2:0]' and 'PW[7:0]'. The output of the 'Pulse generator' is connected to two 'R/S' flip-flops. The 'Set' inputs of these flip-flops are connected to the output of the 'Pulse generator'. The 'Reset' inputs of these flip-flops are connected to a 'Reset' block. The outputs of the 'R/S' flip-flops are connected to two AND gates. The outputs of the AND gates are labeled tim_oc3 and tim_oc4. The 'OC3M = 1010' and 'OC4M = 1010' signals are also connected to the 'Enable' blocks.

Block diagram of the pulse generator circuitry. Two input signals, CCR3 match and CCR4 match , pass through Enable blocks (controlled by OC3M = 1010 and OC4M = 1010 respectively) and are combined in an OR gate. The output of the OR gate is connected to a Pulse generator block, which also receives inputs from PWPRSC [2:0] and PW[7:0] . The output of the Pulse generator is connected to two R/S flip-flops. The Set inputs of these flip-flops are connected to the output of the Pulse generator . The Reset inputs of these flip-flops are connected to a Reset block. The outputs of the R/S flip-flops are connected to two AND gates. The outputs of the AND gates are labeled tim_oc3 and tim_oc4 .

Block diagram of the pulse generator circuitry. It shows two input signals, CCR3 match and CCR4 match, each passing through an 'Enable' block. The outputs of these blocks are connected to an OR gate. The output of the OR gate is connected to a 'Pulse generator' block. The 'Pulse generator' block also receives inputs from 'PWPRSC [2:0]' and 'PW[7:0]'. The output of the 'Pulse generator' is connected to two 'R/S' flip-flops. The 'Set' inputs of these flip-flops are connected to the output of the 'Pulse generator'. The 'Reset' inputs of these flip-flops are connected to a 'Reset' block. The outputs of the 'R/S' flip-flops are connected to two AND gates. The outputs of the AND gates are labeled tim_oc3 and tim_oc4. The 'OC3M = 1010' and 'OC4M = 1010' signals are also connected to the 'Enable' blocks.

Figure 454 shows how the pulse is generated for edge-aligned and encoder operating modes.

Figure 454. Pulse generation on compare event, for edge-aligned and encoder modes

Figure 454: Pulse generation on compare event, for edge-aligned and encoder modes. The figure contains two timing diagrams. The top diagram shows the Counter, CMP3, Triggers, and tim_ocx signals. The Counter is a sawtooth wave. CMP3 is a dashed line representing a compare value. Triggers are vertical arrows indicating falling edges of the Counter. tim_ocx is a pulse signal that goes high on a trigger and low after a programmed pulsewidth. A second trigger occurs while the pulse is still high, causing the pulse to be extended, as indicated by the text 'Extended pulsewidth due to re-trigger'. The bottom diagram shows the same signals but with the Counter running in reverse (encoder mode). The pulse generation logic is the same, but the Counter decreases. The text 'MSv62347V1' is in the bottom right corner.
Figure 454: Pulse generation on compare event, for edge-aligned and encoder modes. The figure contains two timing diagrams. The top diagram shows the Counter, CMP3, Triggers, and tim_ocx signals. The Counter is a sawtooth wave. CMP3 is a dashed line representing a compare value. Triggers are vertical arrows indicating falling edges of the Counter. tim_ocx is a pulse signal that goes high on a trigger and low after a programmed pulsewidth. A second trigger occurs while the pulse is still high, causing the pulse to be extended, as indicated by the text 'Extended pulsewidth due to re-trigger'. The bottom diagram shows the same signals but with the Counter running in reverse (encoder mode). The pulse generation logic is the same, but the Counter decreases. The text 'MSv62347V1' is in the bottom right corner.

This output compare mode is selected using the OC3M[3:0] and OC4M[3:0] bitfields in TIMx_CCMR2 register.

The pulsewidth is programmed using the PW[7:0] bitfield in the register, using a specific clock prescaled according to PWPRSC[2:0] bits, as follows:

\[ t_{PW} = PW[7:0] \times t_{PWG} \]

\[ \text{where } t_{PWG} = (2^{(PWPRSC[2:0])}) \times t_{tim\_ker\_ck} \]

gives the resolution and maximum values depending on the prescaler value.

The pulse is retriggerable: a new trigger while the pulse is ongoing, causes the pulse to be extended.

Note: If the two channels are enabled simultaneously, the pulses are issued independently as long as the trigger on one channel is not overlapping the pulse generated on the concurrent output. On the opposite, if the two triggers are overlapping, the pulse width related to the first arriving trigger is extended (because of the retrigger), while the pulse width of the last arriving trigger is correct (as shown on Figure 455).

Figure 455. Extended pulsewidth in case of concurrent triggers

Timing diagram showing extended pulsewidth in case of concurrent triggers. The diagram displays four waveforms: Trigger CMP3, Trigger CMP4, tim_oc3, and tim_oc4. Trigger CMP3 and Trigger CMP4 are shown as vertical dashed lines representing falling edges. tim_oc3 and tim_oc4 are shown as solid lines representing output pulses. The diagram illustrates that the pulsewidth of tim_oc3 is extended due to overlapping CMP4 trigger events. The text 'Extended pulsewidth due to overlapping CMP4 trigger' is present. The diagram is labeled MSv62348V1.
Timing diagram showing extended pulsewidth in case of concurrent triggers. The diagram displays four waveforms: Trigger CMP3, Trigger CMP4, tim_oc3, and tim_oc4. Trigger CMP3 and Trigger CMP4 are shown as vertical dashed lines representing falling edges. tim_oc3 and tim_oc4 are shown as solid lines representing output pulses. The diagram illustrates that the pulsewidth of tim_oc3 is extended due to overlapping CMP4 trigger events. The text 'Extended pulsewidth due to overlapping CMP4 trigger' is present. The diagram is labeled MSv62348V1.

41.3.25 Encoder interface mode

Quadrature encoder

To select Encoder Interface mode write SMS = 0001 in the TIMx_SMCR register if the counter is counting on tim_ti1 edges only, SMS = 0010 if it is counting on tim_ti2 edges only and SMS = 0011 if it is counting on both tim_ti1 and tim_ti2 edges.

Select the tim_ti1 and tim_ti2 polarity by programming the CC1P and CC2P bits in the TIMx_CCER register. When needed, the input filter can be programmed as well. CC1NP and CC2NP must be kept low.

The two inputs tim_ti1 and tim_ti2 are used to interface to an quadrature encoder. Refer to Table 419 . The counter is clocked by each valid transition on tim_ti1fp1 or tim_ti2fp2 (tim_ti1 and tim_ti2 after input filter and polarity selection, tim_ti1fp1 = tim_ti1 if not filtered and not inverted, tim_ti2fp2 = tim_ti2 if not filtered and not inverted) assuming that it is enabled (CEN bit in TIMx_CR1 register written to 1). The sequence of transitions of the two inputs is evaluated and generates count pulses as well as the direction signal. Depending on the sequence the counter counts up or down, the DIR bit in the TIMx_CR1 register is modified by hardware accordingly. The DIR bit is calculated at each transition on any input (tim_ti1 or tim_ti2), whatever the counter is counting on tim_ti1 only, tim_ti2 only or both tim_ti1 and tim_ti2.

Encoder interface mode acts simply as an external clock with direction selection. This means that the counter just counts continuously between 0 and the autoreload value in the TIMx_ARR register (0 to ARR or ARR down to 0 depending on the direction). So the TIMx_ARR must be configured before starting. In the same way, the capture, compare, prescaler, repetition counter, trigger output features continue to work as normal. Encoder mode and External clock mode 2 are not compatible and must not be selected together.

In this mode, the counter is modified automatically following the speed and the direction of the quadrature encoder and its content, therefore, always represents the encoder's position. The count direction correspond to the rotation direction of the connected sensor. The table summarizes the possible combinations, assuming tim_ti1 and tim_ti2 do not switch at the same time.

Table 419. Counting direction versus encoder signals (CC1P = CC2P = 0)
Active edgeSMS[3:0]Level on opposite signal
(tim_ti1fp1 for tim_ti2,
tim_ti2fp2 for tim_ti1)
tim_ti1fp1 signaltim_ti2fp2 signal
RisingFallingRisingFalling
Counting on tim_ti1 only
x1 mode
1110HighDownUpNo countNo count
LowNo countNo countNo countNo count
Counting on tim_ti2 only
x1 mode
1111HighNo countNo countUpDown
LowNo countNo countNo countNo count
Counting on tim_ti1 only
x2 mode
0001HighDownUpNo countNo count
LowUpDownNo countNo count
Counting on tim_ti2 only
x2 mode
0010HighNo countNo countUpDown
LowNo countNo countDownUp
Counting on tim_ti1 and
tim_ti2
x4 mode
0011HighDownUpUpDown
LowUpDownDownUp

A quadrature encoder can be connected directly to the MCU without external interface logic. However, comparators are normally used to convert the encoder's differential outputs to digital signals. This greatly increases noise immunity. The third encoder output which indicate the mechanical zero position, may be connected to the external trigger input and trigger a counter reset.

Figure 456 gives an example of counter operation, showing count signal generation and direction control. It also shows how input jitter is compensated where both edges are selected. This might occur if the sensor is positioned near to one of the switching points. For this example the configuration is the following:

Figure 456. Example of counter operation in encoder interface mode.

Timing diagram for Figure 456 showing forward, jitter, backward, jitter, and forward operation phases for tim_ti1, tim_ti2, and the Counter.

This timing diagram illustrates the operation of a timer counter in encoder interface mode. It shows three signal lines: tim_ti1 , tim_ti2 , and Counter . The diagram is divided into five phases: forward , jitter , backward , jitter , and forward . In the first forward phase, the counter is labeled up and increases in steps. In the backward phase, the counter is labeled down and decreases in steps. In the final forward phase, the counter is labeled up again. The jitter phases show brief periods of signal noise or transitions. The source code MSv62349V1 is noted in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for Figure 456 showing forward, jitter, backward, jitter, and forward operation phases for tim_ti1, tim_ti2, and the Counter.

Figure 457 gives an example of counter behavior when tim_ti1fp1 polarity is inverted (same configuration as above except CC1P = 1).

Figure 457. Example of encoder interface mode with tim_ti1fp1 polarity inverted.

Timing diagram for Figure 457 showing forward, jitter, backward, jitter, and forward operation phases with inverted tim_ti1fp1 polarity for tim_ti1, tim_ti2, and the Counter.

This timing diagram shows the counter behavior with tim_ti1fp1 polarity inverted. It follows the same five phases as Figure 456: forward , jitter , backward , jitter , and forward . In the first forward phase, the counter is labeled down and decreases in steps. In the backward phase, the counter is labeled up and increases in steps. In the final forward phase, the counter is labeled down again. The jitter phases are also present. The source code MSv62350V1 is noted in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for Figure 457 showing forward, jitter, backward, jitter, and forward operation phases with inverted tim_ti1fp1 polarity for tim_ti1, tim_ti2, and the Counter.

Figure 458 shows the timer counter value during a speed reversal, for various counting modes.

Figure 458. Quadrature encoder counting modes

Timing diagram showing quadrature encoder counting modes. The diagram displays three signal traces: tim_ti1 (square wave), tim_ti2 (square wave), and DIR bit (logic level). Below these are three counter value sequences: Counter x4, Counter x2, and Counter x1. Counter x4 shows a sequence of values: 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2. Counter x2 shows a sequence of values: 8, 9, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8, 7, 6. Counter x1 shows a sequence of values: 9, 0, 1, 0, 9, 8. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing of counter updates relative to the encoder signals. The diagram is labeled MSV62351V1 in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram showing quadrature encoder counting modes. The diagram displays three signal traces: tim_ti1 (square wave), tim_ti2 (square wave), and DIR bit (logic level). Below these are three counter value sequences: Counter x4, Counter x2, and Counter x1. Counter x4 shows a sequence of values: 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2. Counter x2 shows a sequence of values: 8, 9, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8, 7, 6. Counter x1 shows a sequence of values: 9, 0, 1, 0, 9, 8. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing of counter updates relative to the encoder signals. The diagram is labeled MSV62351V1 in the bottom right corner.

The timer, when configured in Encoder Interface mode provides information on the sensor's current position. Dynamic information can be obtained (speed, acceleration, deceleration) by measuring the period between two encoder events using a second timer configured in capture mode. The output of the encoder which indicates the mechanical zero can be used for this purpose. Depending on the time between two events, the counter can also be read at regular times. This can be done by latching the counter value into a third input capture register if available (then the capture signal must be periodic and can be generated by another timer). When available, it is also possible to read its value through a DMA request.

The IUFREMAP bit in the TIMx_CR1 register forces a continuous copy of the update interrupt flag (UIF) into the timer counter register's bit 31 (TIMxCNT[31]). This allows both the counter value and a potential roll-over condition signaled by the UIFCPY flag to be read in an atomic way. It eases the calculation of angular speed by avoiding race conditions caused, for instance, by a processing shared between a background task (counter reading) and an interrupt (update interrupt).

There is no latency between the UIF and UIFCPY flag assertions.

In 32-bit timer implementations, when the IUFREMAP bit is set, bit 31 of the counter is overwritten by the UIFCPY flag upon read access (the counter's most significant bit is only accessible in write mode).

Clock plus direction encoder mode

In addition to the quadrature encoder mode, the timer offers support for other types of encoders.

In the clock plus direction mode shown on Figure 459, the clock is provided on a single line, on tim_ti2, while the direction is forced using the tim_ti1 input.

This mode is enabled with the SMS[3:0] bitfield in the TIMx_SMCR register, as following:

The polarity of the direction signal on tim_ti1 is set with the CC1P bit: 0 corresponds to positive polarity (up-counting when tim_ti1 is high and down-counting when tim_ti1 is low) and CC1P = 1 corresponds to negative polarity (up-counting when tim_ti1 is low).

Figure 459. Direction plus clock encoder mode

Timing diagram for Figure 459: Direction plus clock encoder mode. The diagram shows four waveforms over time. The top waveform is tim_ti1, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The second waveform is tim_ti2, a periodic square wave. The third waveform, labeled 'Counter x2 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 11 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 11 back to 6 while tim_ti1 is low. The fourth waveform, labeled 'Counter x1 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 9 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 9 back to 6 while tim_ti1 is low. The source identifier MSv62352V1 is in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram for Figure 459: Direction plus clock encoder mode. The diagram shows four waveforms over time. The top waveform is tim_ti1, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The second waveform is tim_ti2, a periodic square wave. The third waveform, labeled 'Counter x2 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 11 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 11 back to 6 while tim_ti1 is low. The fourth waveform, labeled 'Counter x1 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 9 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 9 back to 6 while tim_ti1 is low. The source identifier MSv62352V1 is in the bottom right corner.

Directional clock encoder mode

In the directional clock mode on Figure 460 , the clocks are provided on two lines, with a single one at once, depending on the direction, so as to have one up-counting clock line and one down-counting clock line.

This mode is enabled with the SMS[3:0] bitfield in the TIMx_SMCR register, as following:

Figure 460. Directional clock encoder mode (CC1P = CC2P = 0)

Timing diagram for Figure 460: Directional clock encoder mode (CC1P = CC2P = 0). The diagram shows five waveforms over time. The top waveform is tim_ti1, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The second waveform is tim_ti2, a periodic square wave. The third waveform is the DIR bit, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The fourth waveform, labeled 'Counter x2 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 11 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 11 back to 5 while tim_ti1 is low. The fifth waveform, labeled 'Counter x1 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 8 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 8 back to 5 while tim_ti1 is low. The source identifier MSv62353V1 is in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram for Figure 460: Directional clock encoder mode (CC1P = CC2P = 0). The diagram shows five waveforms over time. The top waveform is tim_ti1, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The second waveform is tim_ti2, a periodic square wave. The third waveform is the DIR bit, which is high for the first half and low for the second half. The fourth waveform, labeled 'Counter x2 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 11 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 11 back to 5 while tim_ti1 is low. The fifth waveform, labeled 'Counter x1 mode', shows the counter value increasing from 6 to 8 while tim_ti1 is high, and then decreasing from 8 back to 5 while tim_ti1 is low. The source identifier MSv62353V1 is in the bottom right corner.

Figure 461. Directional clock encoder mode (CC1P = CC2P = 1)

Timing diagram showing tim_ti1, tim_ti2, DIR bit, Counter x2 mode, and Counter x1 mode signals over time. The diagram illustrates the relationship between the two encoder signals and the resulting counter direction and speed. Counter x2 mode counts from 6 to 11 and then back down to 5. Counter x1 mode counts from 7 to 9 and then back down to 6. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing of signal transitions.
Timing diagram showing tim_ti1, tim_ti2, DIR bit, Counter x2 mode, and Counter x1 mode signals over time. The diagram illustrates the relationship between the two encoder signals and the resulting counter direction and speed. Counter x2 mode counts from 6 to 11 and then back down to 5. Counter x1 mode counts from 7 to 9 and then back down to 6. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing of signal transitions.

Table 420 here-below details how the directional clock mode operates, for any input transition.

Table 420. Counting direction versus encoder signals and polarity settings

Directional clock modeSMS[3:0]Level on opposite signal (tim_ti1fp1 for tim_ti2, tim_ti2fp2 for tim_ti1)tim_ti1fp1 signaltim_ti2fp2 signal
RisingFallingRisingFalling
x2 mode
CCxP = 0
1100HighDownDownUpUp
LowNo countNo countNo countNo count
x2 mode
CCxP = 1
1100HighNo countNo countNo countNo count
LowDownDownUpUp
x1 mode
CCxP = 0
1101HighNo countDownNo countUp
LowNo countNo countNo countNo count
x1 mode
CCxP = 1
1101HighNo countNo countNo countNo count
LowDownNo countUpNo count

Index input

The counter can be reset by an index signal coming from the encoder, indicating an absolute reference position. The index signal must be connected to the tim_etr_in input. It can be filtered using the digital input filter.

The index functionality is enabled with the IE bit in the TIMX_ECR register. The IE bit must be set only in encoder mode, when the SMS[3:0] bitfield has the following values: 0001, 0010, 011, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111.

Available encoders are proposed with several options for index pulse conditioning, as per Figure 462 :

Figure 462. Index gating options

Timing diagram showing five waveforms: Channel A, Channel B, Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated. Channel A and B are square waves. Gated A & B is a pulse that is high only when both A and B are high. Gated A is a pulse that is high only when A is high and B is low. Ungated is a pulse that is high when A is high and B is low, but its width is not constrained by the edges of A or B. Vertical dashed lines indicate the alignment of the gated pulses with the edges of the input channels. The diagram is labeled MSv45765V1 in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram showing five waveforms: Channel A, Channel B, Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated. Channel A and B are square waves. Gated A & B is a pulse that is high only when both A and B are high. Gated A is a pulse that is high only when A is high and B is low. Ungated is a pulse that is high when A is high and B is low, but its width is not constrained by the edges of A or B. Vertical dashed lines indicate the alignment of the gated pulses with the edges of the input channels. The diagram is labeled MSv45765V1 in the bottom right corner.

The circuitry tolerates jitter on index signal, whatever the gating mode, as shown on Figure 463 .

In ungated mode, the signal must be strictly below two encoder periods. If the pulselength is greater or equal to two encoder periods, the counter is reset multiple times.

Figure 463. Jittered Index signals

Timing diagram showing five waveforms: Channel A, Channel B, Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated. Channel A and B are square waves. Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated are pulses that are high when A is high and B is low. The Gated A & B and Gated A pulses have sloped edges, indicating jitter. The Ungated pulse has a long duration, with a double-headed arrow below it labeled 'Max pulselength ungated mode'. The diagram is labeled MSv45766V1 in the bottom right corner.
Timing diagram showing five waveforms: Channel A, Channel B, Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated. Channel A and B are square waves. Gated A & B, Gated A, and Ungated are pulses that are high when A is high and B is low. The Gated A & B and Gated A pulses have sloped edges, indicating jitter. The Ungated pulse has a long duration, with a double-headed arrow below it labeled 'Max pulselength ungated mode'. The diagram is labeled MSv45766V1 in the bottom right corner.

The timer supports the three gating options identically, without any specific programming needed. It is only necessary to define on which encoder state (for example channel A and

channel B state combination) the index must be synchronized, using the IPOS[1:0] bitfield in the TIMx_ECR register.

The index detection event acts differently depending on counting direction to ensure symmetrical operation during speed reversal:

This allows the index to be generated on the very same mechanical angular position whatever the counting direction. Figure 464 shows at which position is the index generated, for a simplistic example (an encoder providing four edges par mechanical rotation).

Figure 464. Index generation for IPOS[1:0] = 11

State transition diagram for encoder index generation at IPOS[1:0] = 11.
graph LR
    S1("AB = 00
State 1
Rotor angle = 0°") S2("AB = 01
State 2
Rotor angle = 90°") S3("AB = 11
State 3
Rotor angle = 180°") S4("AB = 10
State 4
Rotor angle = 270°") S1 -- Up-counting --> S2 S2 -- Up-counting --> S3 S3 -- Up-counting --> S4 S4 -- Up-counting --> S1 S1 -- Down-counting --> S4 S4 -- Down-counting --> S3 S3 -- Down-counting --> S2 S2 -- Down-counting --> S1 style S3 stroke-width:2px note["The index event is always generated here"] note -.-> S3

The diagram illustrates the four states of an encoder based on the AB signal combination. State 1 (AB=00) corresponds to 0°, State 2 (AB=01) to 90°, State 3 (AB=11) to 180°, and State 4 (AB=10) to 270°. Up-counting follows the sequence 1-2-3-4, while down-counting follows 1-4-3-2. The index event is specifically triggered at State 3 (180°). Diagram reference: MSv45767V1.

State transition diagram for encoder index generation at IPOS[1:0] = 11.

Figure 465 presents waveforms and corresponding values for IPOS[1:0] = 11. It shows that the instant at which the counter value is forced is automatically adjusted depending on the counting direction:

An interrupt can be issued upon index detection event.

The arrows are indicating on which transition is the index event interrupt generated.

Figure 465. Counter reading with index gated on channel A (IPOS[1:0] = 11)

Timing diagram showing waveforms for Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter.

The timing diagram displays the relationship between encoder signals and the counter. - Channel A and Channel B are quadrature signals. - Index signal is high when both ChA and ChB are high (State 11). - DIR bit indicates counting direction (0 for up, 1 for down). - Counter values sequence: 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (up-counting phase), then 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 (down-counting phase). - During up-counting (DIR=0), the counter resets to 0 at the rising edge of the Index signal (when entering state 11). - During down-counting (DIR=1), the counter is set to TIMx_ARR (shown as 7) at the falling edge of the Index signal (when exiting state 11). Diagram reference: MSv45768V1.

Timing diagram showing waveforms for Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter.

Figure 466. presents waveforms and corresponding values for the ungated mode. The arrows are indicating on which transition is the index event generated.

Timing diagram for ungated mode showing Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter waveforms. The counter sequence is 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7. Arrows indicate index events at the rising edge of Channel B when Channel A is high, and at the falling edge of Channel B when Channel A is low.

Figure 466. Counter reading with index ungated (IPOS[1:0] = 00)

The diagram shows five waveforms over time. Channel A is a square wave. Channel B is another square wave. The Index signal is a pulse that goes high at specific transitions of Channel B. The DIR bit is a signal that changes state. The Counter shows a sequence of values: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7. Arrows point from the Index pulse transitions to the corresponding Counter values and Channel B transitions. The text 'MSv45769V1' is in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for ungated mode showing Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter waveforms. The counter sequence is 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7. Arrows indicate index events at the rising edge of Channel B when Channel A is high, and at the falling edge of Channel B when Channel A is low.

Figure 467. shows how the 'gated on A & B' mode is handled, for various pulse alignment scenario. The arrows are indicating on which transition is the index event generated.

Timing diagram for gated mode showing Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter waveforms. The counter sequence is 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Arrows indicate index events at the rising edge of Channel B when Channel A is high, and at the falling edge of Channel B when Channel A is low.

Figure 467. Counter reading with index gated on channel A and B

The diagram shows five waveforms over time. Channel A is a square wave. Channel B is another square wave. The Index signal is a pulse that goes high at specific transitions of Channel B. The DIR bit is a signal that changes state. The Counter shows a sequence of values: 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Arrows point from the Index pulse transitions to the corresponding Counter values and Channel B transitions. The text 'MSv45770V1' is in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for gated mode showing Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter waveforms. The counter sequence is 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Arrows indicate index events at the rising edge of Channel B when Channel A is high, and at the falling edge of Channel B when Channel A is low.

Figure 468 and Figure 469 detail the case where the subsequent index pulse may be narrower than one quarter of the encoder clock period.

Figure 468. Encoder mode behavior in case of narrow index pulse (IPOS[1:0] = 11)

Timing diagrams for encoder mode behavior with narrow index pulse. Top diagram: 'Index leading state transition' shows Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter signals. Bottom diagram: 'Index delayed versus state transition' shows the same signals with a delay in the Index signal. Both diagrams show the counter counting up and then down based on the DIR bit and index pulse.

The figure consists of two timing diagrams illustrating the encoder mode behavior of a timer (TIM1) when a narrow index pulse is present (IPOS[1:0] = 11).

Top Diagram: Index leading state transition

Bottom Diagram: Index delayed versus state transition

MSv45771V1

Timing diagrams for encoder mode behavior with narrow index pulse. Top diagram: 'Index leading state transition' shows Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter signals. Bottom diagram: 'Index delayed versus state transition' shows the same signals with a delay in the Index signal. Both diagrams show the counter counting up and then down based on the DIR bit and index pulse.

Figure 469. Counter reset Narrow index pulse (closer view, ARR = 0x07)

Timing diagram showing counter reset on narrow index pulse. The diagram is split into two sections. The top section shows Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter (values 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3). The bottom section shows the same signals but with Counter values 4, 5, 6, 0, 1, 2, 3. In both, a narrow pulse on the Index line triggers a counter reset to 0.

The figure illustrates the timing for a counter reset triggered by a narrow index pulse. It consists of two vertically stacked timing diagrams. Each diagram shows five signals over time: Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter. In the top diagram, the counter counts from 5 to 6 to 7. When a narrow positive pulse occurs on the Index line, the counter resets to 0 and then continues counting 1, 2, 3. In the bottom diagram, the counter counts from 4 to 5 to 6. Again, a narrow positive pulse on the Index line causes the counter to reset to 0 and then continue counting 1, 2, 3. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationships between the signals. The DIR bit remains constant throughout both sequences. The label 'MSv45772V1' is present in the bottom right corner of the diagram area.

Timing diagram showing counter reset on narrow index pulse. The diagram is split into two sections. The top section shows Channel A, Channel B, Index, DIR bit, and Counter (values 5, 6, 7, 0, 1, 2, 3). The bottom section shows the same signals but with Counter values 4, 5, 6, 0, 1, 2, 3. In both, a narrow pulse on the Index line triggers a counter reset to 0.

Figure 470 shows how the index is managed in x1 and x2 modes.

Timing diagram for encoder index behavior in x1 and x2 modes. It shows Channel A and B quadrature signals, an Index signal that is high when both A and B are high, a DIR bit indicating count direction, and the resulting values for Counter x2 and Counter x1. Vertical dashed lines align signal transitions and counter resets.

Figure 470. Index behavior in x1 and x2 mode (IPOS[1:0] = 01)

AB = IPOS[1:0] = 01

Channel A

Channel B

Index

DIR bit

Counter x2: 10 | 11 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8

Counter x1: 5 | 6 | 7 | 0 | 1 | 3

MSv45773V1

Timing diagram for encoder index behavior in x1 and x2 modes. It shows Channel A and B quadrature signals, an Index signal that is high when both A and B are high, a DIR bit indicating count direction, and the resulting values for Counter x2 and Counter x1. Vertical dashed lines align signal transitions and counter resets.

Directional index sensitivity

The IDIR[1:0] bitfield in the TIMx_ECR register allows the index to be active only in a selected counting direction.

Figure 471 shows the relationship between index and counter reset events, depending on IDIR[1:0] value.

Diagram showing directional index sensitivity. A DIR bit signal defines UP-counting and Down-counting regions. A Counter signal shows a sawtooth waveform. Index input pulses occur periodically. Three 'Counter reset' rows show when the counter is actually reset to zero based on IDIR[1:0] settings: 00 (both directions), 01 (up only), and 10 (down only).

Figure 471. Directional index sensitivity

DIR bit: UP-counting | Down-counting

Counter

Index input

Counter reset:

IDIR[1:0]=00

IDIR[1:0]=01

IDIR[1:0]=10

MSv45774V1

Diagram showing directional index sensitivity. A DIR bit signal defines UP-counting and Down-counting regions. A Counter signal shows a sawtooth waveform. Index input pulses occur periodically. Three 'Counter reset' rows show when the counter is actually reset to zero based on IDIR[1:0] settings: 00 (both directions), 01 (up only), and 10 (down only).

Special first index event management

The FIDX bit in the TIMx_ECR register allows the index to be taken only once, as shown on Figure 472 . Once the first index has arrived, any subsequent index is ignored. If needed, the circuitry can be rearmed by writing the FIDX bit to 0 and setting it again to 1.

Figure 472. Counter reset as function of FIDX bit setting

Timing diagram for Figure 472 showing counter reset behavior with FIDX bit settings.

The diagram shows four horizontal timelines. The top timeline, labeled 'Counter', shows a sawtooth wave that increases linearly and then drops abruptly to zero. The second timeline, labeled 'Index input', shows a series of narrow pulses. The third and fourth timelines, collectively labeled 'Counter reset', show the effect of the FIDX bit. The 'FIDX = 0' line shows a pulse for each index input. The 'FIDX = 1' line shows a pulse only for the first index input, with subsequent index inputs being ignored. The diagram is labeled MSv45775V1 in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for Figure 472 showing counter reset behavior with FIDX bit settings.

Index blanking

The index event can be blanked using the tim_ti3 or tim_ti4 inputs. During the blanking window, the index events are no longer resetting the counter, as shown on the Figure 473 below.

This mode is enabled using the IBLK[1:0] bitfield in the TIMx_ECR register, as following:

Figure 473. Index blanking

Timing diagram for Figure 473 showing index blanking behavior.

The diagram shows five horizontal timelines. The top timeline, labeled 'Counter', shows a sawtooth wave. The second timeline, labeled 'Index input', shows a series of narrow pulses. The third timeline, labeled 'Blanking signal TI3 (CC3P=0)', shows a rectangular pulse that is high during the first two index pulses and low during the subsequent three. The fourth and fifth timelines, collectively labeled 'Counter reset', show the effect of the IBLK[1:0] bitfield. The 'IBLK[1:0] = 00' line shows a pulse for each index input. The 'IBLK[1:0] = 01' line shows a pulse only for the first index input, with subsequent index inputs being ignored while the blanking signal is high. The diagram is labeled MSv45776V1 in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram for Figure 473 showing index blanking behavior.

Index management in nonquadrature mode

Figure 474 and Figure 475 detail how the index is managed in directional clock mode and clock plus direction mode, when the SMS[3:0] bitfield is equal to 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101.

For both of these modes, the index sensitivity is set with the IPOS[0] bit as following:

The IPOS[1] bit is not-significant.

Figure 474. Index behavior in clock + direction mode, IPOS[0] = 1

Timing diagram for Figure 474 showing index behavior in clock + direction mode with IPOS[0] = 1. The diagram displays four waveforms: tim_ti1 (a constant high signal), tim_ti2 (a square wave), Index (a pulse that goes high when tim_ti2 is high and tim_ti1 is high), Counter x2 mode (counting 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 7, 6, 5), and Counter x1 mode (counting 7, 0, 1, 2, 1, 7). Arrows indicate that the Index pulse is detected on the rising edge of tim_ti2 when tim_ti1 is high. The diagram is labeled MSv62355V1.
Timing diagram for Figure 474 showing index behavior in clock + direction mode with IPOS[0] = 1. The diagram displays four waveforms: tim_ti1 (a constant high signal), tim_ti2 (a square wave), Index (a pulse that goes high when tim_ti2 is high and tim_ti1 is high), Counter x2 mode (counting 7, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 7, 6, 5), and Counter x1 mode (counting 7, 0, 1, 2, 1, 7). Arrows indicate that the Index pulse is detected on the rising edge of tim_ti2 when tim_ti1 is high. The diagram is labeled MSv62355V1.

Figure 475. Index behavior in directional clock mode, IPOS[0] = 1

Timing diagram for Figure 475 showing index behavior in directional clock mode with IPOS[0] = 1. The diagram displays four waveforms: tim_ti1 (a constant high signal), tim_ti2 (a square wave), DIR bit (which is high when tim_ti1 is high and tim_ti2 is high), Counter x2 mode (counting 9, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8), and Counter x1 mode (counting 9, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 9). Arrows indicate that the Index pulse is detected on the rising edge of tim_ti2 when tim_ti1 is high. The diagram is labeled MSv62356V1.
Timing diagram for Figure 475 showing index behavior in directional clock mode with IPOS[0] = 1. The diagram displays four waveforms: tim_ti1 (a constant high signal), tim_ti2 (a square wave), DIR bit (which is high when tim_ti1 is high and tim_ti2 is high), Counter x2 mode (counting 9, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 9, 8), and Counter x1 mode (counting 9, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 9). Arrows indicate that the Index pulse is detected on the rising edge of tim_ti2 when tim_ti1 is high. The diagram is labeled MSv62356V1.

Encoder error management

For encoder configurations where two quadrature signals are available, it is possible to detect transition errors. The reading on the two inputs corresponds to a 2-bit gray code which can be represented as a state diagram, on Figure 476. A single bit is expected to change at once. An erroneous transition sets the TERRF interrupt flag in the TIMx_SR

status register. A transition error interrupt is generated if the TERRIE bit is set in the TIMx_DIER register.

Figure 476. State diagram for quadrature encoded signals

State diagram for quadrature encoded signals showing four states (00, 01, 10, 11) and their transitions.

The diagram illustrates the state transitions for quadrature encoded signals. It features four circular nodes arranged in a square, labeled 00 (top-left), 01 (top-right), 10 (bottom-left), and 11 (bottom-right). Solid double-headed arrows represent correct transitions between adjacent states: 00 to 01, 01 to 11, 11 to 10, and 10 to 00. Dashed double-headed arrows represent erroneous transitions between diagonal states: 00 to 11 and 01 to 10. A legend at the bottom left shows a solid arrow for 'Correct transitions' and a dashed arrow for 'Erroneous transitions'. The code MSv45779V1 is in the bottom right corner.

State diagram for quadrature encoded signals showing four states (00, 01, 10, 11) and their transitions.

For encoder having an index signal, it is possible to detect abnormal operation resulting in an excess of pulses per revolution. An encoder with N pulses per revolution provides \( 4 \times N \) counts per revolution. The index signal resets the counter every \( 4 \times N \) clock periods.

If the counter value is incremented from TIMx_ARR to 0 or decremented from 0 to TIMx_ARR value without any index event, this is reported as an index position error.

The overflow threshold is programmed using the TIMx_ARR register. A 1000 lines encoder results in a counter value being between 0 and 3999 (in 4x reading mode). The overflow detection threshold must be programmed by setting \( \text{TIMx\_ARR} = 3999 + 1 = 4000 \) .

The error assertion is delayed to the transition 0 to 1 when in up-counting. This is cope with narrow index pulses in gated A and B mode, as shown on Figure 477 .

Figure 477. Up-counting encoder error detection

Timing diagram for up-counting encoder error detection showing two scenarios: one where an error is detected at the 0-to-1 transition, and another where the error is asserted after an index pulse.

The figure consists of two timing diagrams illustrating up-counting encoder error detection. Both diagrams show the following signals over time:

Top Diagram:

Bottom Diagram:

MSV62357V1

Timing diagram for up-counting encoder error detection showing two scenarios: one where an error is detected at the 0-to-1 transition, and another where the error is asserted after an index pulse.

In down-counting mode, the detection is conditioned by a preliminary transition from 1 to 0. This is to cope with narrow index pulses in gated A and B mode, as shown on Figure 478 , to avoid any false error detection in case the encoder dithers between TIMx_ARR and 0 immediately after the index detection.

Figure 478. Down-counting encode error detection

Timing diagram for down-counting encode error detection. The diagram is split into two horizontal sections. The top section shows a 'No error' scenario where the counter transitions from 0 to 7 after an index pulse, with a note 'No error: transition from 0 to TIMx_ARR following an index'. The bottom section shows an 'Error detected' scenario where the counter transitions from 0 to 7 without a preceding index pulse, with a note 'Error detected' at the transition and 'Error asserted' when the IERRF flag goes high. Signals shown are tim_ti1, tim_ti2, Index, IERRF, and Counter values (2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5 in top; 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4 in bottom).

The figure illustrates two timing scenarios for down-counting encode error detection. In the top scenario, the counter reaches 0, an index pulse occurs, and then the counter transitions to 7. This is labeled 'No error: transition from 0 to TIMx_ARR following an index'. In the bottom scenario, the counter reaches 0 and then transitions to 7 without an index pulse. This transition is labeled 'Error detected', and the subsequent assertion of the IERRF flag is labeled 'Error asserted'. The signals shown are tim_ti1, tim_ti2, Index, IERRF, and the Counter value.

Timing diagram for down-counting encode error detection. The diagram is split into two horizontal sections. The top section shows a 'No error' scenario where the counter transitions from 0 to 7 after an index pulse, with a note 'No error: transition from 0 to TIMx_ARR following an index'. The bottom section shows an 'Error detected' scenario where the counter transitions from 0 to 7 without a preceding index pulse, with a note 'Error detected' at the transition and 'Error asserted' when the IERRF flag goes high. Signals shown are tim_ti1, tim_ti2, Index, IERRF, and Counter values (2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5 in top; 2, 1, 0, 7, 6, 5, 4 in bottom).

An index error sets the IERRF interrupt flag in the TIMx_SR status register. An index error interrupt is generated if the IERRIE bit is set in the TIMx_DIER register.

Functional encoder interrupts

The following interrupts are also available in encoder mode

Slave mode selection preload for run-time encoder mode update

It may be necessary to switch from one encoder mode to another during run-time. This is typically done at high-speed to decrease the update interrupt rate, by switching from x4 to x2 to x1 mode, as shown on Figure 479 .

For this purpose, the SMS[3:0] bit can be preloaded. This is enabled by setting the SMSPE enable bit in the TIMx_SMCR register. The trigger for the transfer from SMS[3:0] preload to active value can be selected with the SMSPS bit in the TIMx_SMCR register.

Figure 479. Encoder mode change with preload transferred on update (SMSPS = 0)

Timing diagram showing encoder mode change from x4 to x2 to x1 mode. The top row shows the encoder clock signal. The second row shows 'Update event' pulses. The third row shows 'Preload value' for SMS[3:0] bits: SMS = 0011 for x4 mode, SMS = 0001 for x2 mode, and SMS = 1110 for x1 mode. The bottom row shows 'Active value' for SMS[3:0] bits, which matches the preload values. Vertical dashed lines indicate the transition points between modes, triggered by update events.
Timing diagram showing encoder mode change from x4 to x2 to x1 mode. The top row shows the encoder clock signal. The second row shows 'Update event' pulses. The third row shows 'Preload value' for SMS[3:0] bits: SMS = 0011 for x4 mode, SMS = 0001 for x2 mode, and SMS = 1110 for x1 mode. The bottom row shows 'Active value' for SMS[3:0] bits, which matches the preload values. Vertical dashed lines indicate the transition points between modes, triggered by update events.

Encoder clock output

The encoder mode operating principle is not perfectly suited for high-resolution velocity measurements, at low speed, as it requires a relatively long integration time to have a sufficient number of clock edges and a precise measurement.

At low speed, a better solution is to do an edge-to-edge clock period measurement. This can be achieved using a slave timer. The timer can output the encoder clock information on the tim_trgo output. The slave timer can then perform a period measurement and provide velocity information for each and every encoder clock edge.

This mode is enabled by setting the MMS[3:0] bitfield to 1000, in the TIMx_CR2 register. It is valid for the following SMS[3:0] values: 0001, 0010, 0011, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111. Any other SMS[3:0] code is not allowed and may lead to unexpected behavior.

41.3.26 Direction bit output

It is possible to output a direction signal out of the timer, on the tim_oc3n and tim_oc4 output signals (copy of the DIR bit in the TIMx_CR1 register). This is achieved by setting the OC3M[3:0] or the OC4M[3:0] bitfield to 1011 in the TIMx_CCMR2 register.

This feature can be used for monitoring the counting direction (or rotation direction) in encoder mode, or to have a signal indicating the up/down phases in center-aligned PWM mode.

41.3.27 UIF bit remapping

The IUFREMAP bit in the TIMx_CR1 register forces a continuous copy of the update interrupt flag UIF into the timer counter register's bit 31 (TIMxCNT[31]). This allows both the counter value and a potential roll-over condition signaled by the UIFCPY flag to be read in an atomic way. In particular cases, it can ease the calculations by avoiding race conditions, caused for instance by a processing shared between a background task (counter reading) and an interrupt (update interrupt).

There is no latency between the UIF and UIFCPY flags assertion.

41.3.28 Timer input XOR function

The TI1S bit in the TIMx_CR2 register, allows the input filter of channel 1 to be connected to the output of an XOR gate, combining the three input pins tim_ti1, tim_ti2 and tim_ti3.

The XOR output can be used with all the timer input functions such as trigger or input capture. It is convenient to measure the interval between edges on two input signals, as per Figure 480 .

Figure 480. Measuring time interval between edges on three signals

Timing diagram showing three input signals (tim_ti1, tim_ti2, tim_ti3), their XOR output, and the resulting TIMx Counter output. The diagram illustrates how the XOR output triggers the counter to measure time intervals between edges.

The figure is a timing diagram showing five waveforms over time. From top to bottom, they are:

Vertical dashed lines mark the time points of signal transitions. The counter is reset by the XOR signal, allowing it to measure the time intervals between specific edges.

Timing diagram showing three input signals (tim_ti1, tim_ti2, tim_ti3), their XOR output, and the resulting TIMx Counter output. The diagram illustrates how the XOR output triggers the counter to measure time intervals between edges.

MSV75854V1

41.3.29 Interfacing with Hall sensors

This is done using the advanced-control timers to generate PWM signals to drive the motor and another timer TIMx referred to as “interfacing timer” in Figure 481 . The “interfacing timer” captures the three timer input pins (tim_ti1, tim_ti2 and tim_ti3) connected through a XOR to the tim_ti1 input channel (selected by setting the TI1S bit in the TIMx_CR2 register).

The slave mode controller is configured in reset mode; the slave input is tim_ti1f_ed. Thus, each time one of the three inputs toggles, the counter restarts counting from 0. This creates a time base triggered by any change on the Hall inputs.

On the “interfacing timer”, capture/compare channel 1 is configured in capture mode, capture signal is tim_trc (See Figure 424 ). The captured value, which corresponds to the time elapsed between two changes on the inputs, gives information about motor speed.

The “interfacing timer” can be used in output mode to generate a pulse which changes the configuration of the channels of the advanced-control timer (by triggering a COM event). The advanced-control timer is used to generate PWM signals to drive the motor. To do this, the interfacing timer channel must be programmed so that a positive pulse is generated after a programmed delay (in output compare or PWM mode). This pulse is sent to the advanced-control timer through the tim_trgo output.

In this example the user wants to change the PWM configuration of the advanced-control timer after a programmed delay each time a change occurs on the Hall inputs connected to one of the TIMx timers.

In the advanced-control timer, the right tim_itrx input must be selected as trigger input, the timer is programmed to generate PWM signals, the capture/compare control signals are preloaded (CCPC = 1 in the TIMx_CR2 register) and the COM event is controlled by the trigger input (CCUS = 1 in the TIMx_CR2 register). The PWM control bits (CCxE, OCxM) are written after a COM event for the next step (this can be done in an interrupt subroutine generated by the rising edge of tim_oc2ref).

Figure 481 describes this example.

Figure 481. Example of Hall sensor interface

Timing diagram for Figure 481. Example of Hall sensor interface. The diagram shows the relationship between Hall sensor inputs (tim_ti1, tim_ti2, tim_ti3), the timer counter (CNT), capture/compare registers (CCR1, CCR2), trigger output (tim_trgo), and output compare signals (tim_oc1, tim_oc1n, tim_oc2, tim_oc2n, tim_oc3, tim_oc3n).

The timing diagram illustrates the operation of a Hall sensor interface using advanced-control timers (TIM1). The signals shown are:

Arrows at the bottom indicate the points where the user should write to CCxE, CCxNE, and OCxM registers for the next step. The diagram is labeled MSv62360V1.

Timing diagram for Figure 481. Example of Hall sensor interface. The diagram shows the relationship between Hall sensor inputs (tim_ti1, tim_ti2, tim_ti3), the timer counter (CNT), capture/compare registers (CCR1, CCR2), trigger output (tim_trgo), and output compare signals (tim_oc1, tim_oc1n, tim_oc2, tim_oc2n, tim_oc3, tim_oc3n).

41.3.30 Timer synchronization

The TIMx timers are linked together internally for timer synchronization or chaining. Refer to Section 42.4.23: Timer synchronization for details. They can be synchronized in several modes: Reset mode, Gated mode, Trigger mode, Reset + trigger, and gated + reset modes.

Slave mode: Reset mode

The counter and its prescaler can be reinitialized in response to an event on a trigger input. Moreover, if the URS bit from the TIMx_CR1 register is low, an update event UEV is generated. Then all the preloaded registers (TIMx_ARR, TIMx_CCRx) are updated.

In the following example, the upcounter is cleared in response to a rising edge on tim_ti1 input:

The counter starts counting on the internal clock, then behaves normally until tim_ti1 rising edge. When tim_ti1 rises, the counter is cleared and restarts from 0. In the meantime, the trigger flag is set (TIF bit in the TIMx_SR register) and an interrupt request, or a DMA request can be sent if enabled (depending on the TIE and TDE bits in TIMx_DIER register).

The following figure shows this behavior when the autoreload register TIMx_ARR = 0x36. The delay between the rising edge on tim_ti1 and the actual reset of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on tim_ti1 input.

Figure 482. Control circuit in reset mode

Timing diagram showing tim_ti1, Counter reset and update, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF signals over time.

The figure is a timing diagram illustrating the control circuit in reset mode. It consists of five horizontal signal lines. The top line, 'tim_ti1', shows a signal that is initially high, then goes low, and then has a rising edge. The second line, 'Counter reset and update', shows a pulse that goes high at the rising edge of tim_ti1 and then goes low. The third line, 'tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck', shows a periodic square wave clock signal. The fourth line, 'Counter register', shows a sequence of values: 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 00, 01, 02, 03, 00, 01, 02, 03. The values 30 through 36 are shown in boxes, followed by 00 through 03 in boxes, then 00 through 03 again in boxes. The fifth line, 'TIF', shows a pulse that goes high at the rising edge of tim_ti1 and then goes low. Vertical dashed lines indicate the timing relationships between the signals. The text 'MSV62361V1' is in the bottom right corner.

Timing diagram showing tim_ti1, Counter reset and update, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF signals over time.

Slave mode: Gated mode

The counter can be enabled depending on the level of a selected input.

In the following example, the upcounter counts only when tim_ti1 input is low:

The counter starts counting on the internal clock as long as tim_ti1 is low and stops as soon as tim_ti1 becomes high. The TIF flag in the TIMx_SR register is set both when the counter starts or stops.

The delay between the rising edge on tim_ti1 and the actual stop of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on tim_ti1 input.

Figure 483. Control circuit in Gated mode

Timing diagram for Figure 483. Control circuit in Gated mode. The diagram shows five signals over time: tim_ti1, Counter enable, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF. The tim_ti1 signal is low initially, then goes high, then low again, then high again. The Counter enable signal is high only when tim_ti1 is low. The tim_cnt_ck and tim_psc_ck signals are periodic square waves that stop when Counter enable is low. The Counter register shows values 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38. The counter increments while Counter enable is high. The TIF signal is set when the counter starts or stops. Arrows from 'Write TIF = 0' point to the falling edges of the TIF signal.
Timing diagram for Figure 483. Control circuit in Gated mode. The diagram shows five signals over time: tim_ti1, Counter enable, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF. The tim_ti1 signal is low initially, then goes high, then low again, then high again. The Counter enable signal is high only when tim_ti1 is low. The tim_cnt_ck and tim_psc_ck signals are periodic square waves that stop when Counter enable is low. The Counter register shows values 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38. The counter increments while Counter enable is high. The TIF signal is set when the counter starts or stops. Arrows from 'Write TIF = 0' point to the falling edges of the TIF signal.

Slave mode: Trigger mode

The counter can start in response to an event on a selected input.

In the following example, the upcounter starts in response to a rising edge on tim_ti2 input:

When a rising edge occurs on tim_ti2 , the counter starts counting on the internal clock and the TIF flag is set.

The delay between the rising edge on tim_ti2 and the actual start of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on tim_ti2 input.

Figure 484. Control circuit in trigger mode

Timing diagram for Figure 484. Control circuit in trigger mode. The diagram shows five signals over time: tim_ti2, Counter enable, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF. A vertical dashed line marks the start of the counter. Before the dashed line, tim_ti2 is high, Counter enable is low, and Counter register is 34. At the dashed line, tim_ti2 goes low, Counter enable goes high, and Counter register increments to 35. tim_cnt_ck and tim_psc_ck are shown as a square wave starting at the dashed line. The Counter register continues to increment: 35, 36, 37, 38. TIF is shown as a low signal throughout.

Timing diagram showing the control circuit in trigger mode. The signals shown are:

MSv62363V1

Timing diagram for Figure 484. Control circuit in trigger mode. The diagram shows five signals over time: tim_ti2, Counter enable, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF. A vertical dashed line marks the start of the counter. Before the dashed line, tim_ti2 is high, Counter enable is low, and Counter register is 34. At the dashed line, tim_ti2 goes low, Counter enable goes high, and Counter register increments to 35. tim_cnt_ck and tim_psc_ck are shown as a square wave starting at the dashed line. The Counter register continues to increment: 35, 36, 37, 38. TIF is shown as a low signal throughout.

Slave mode: Combined reset + trigger mode

In this case, a rising edge of the selected trigger input (tim_trgi) reinitializes the counter, generates an update of the registers, and starts the counter.

This mode is used for One-pulse mode.

Slave mode: Combined gated + reset mode

The counter clock is enabled when the trigger input (tim_trgi) is high. The counter stops and is reset) as soon as the trigger becomes low. Both start and stop of the counter are controlled.

This mode is used to detect out-of-range PWM signal (duty cycle exceeding a maximum expected value).

Slave mode: external clock mode 2 + trigger mode

The external clock mode 2 can be used in addition to another slave mode (except external clock mode 1 and encoder mode). In this case, the tim_etr_in signal is used as external clock input, and another input can be selected as trigger input (in reset mode, gated mode or trigger mode). It is recommended not to select tim_etr_in as tim_trgi through the TS bits of TIMx_SMCR register.

In the following example, the upcounter is incremented at each rising edge of the tim_etr_in signal as soon as a rising edge of tim_ti1 occurs:

  1. 1. Configure the external trigger input circuit by programming the TIMx_SMCR register as follows:
    • ETF = 0000 : no filter
    • ETPS = 00 : prescaler disabled
    • ETP = 0 : detection of rising edges on tim_etr_in and ECE = 1 to enable the external clock mode 2.
  2. 2. Configure the channel 1 as follows, to detect rising edges on TI:
    • IC1F = 0000 : no filter.
    • – The capture prescaler is not used for triggering and does not need to be configured.
    • CC1S = 01 in TIMx_CCMR1 register to select only the input capture source
    • CC1P = 0 and CC1NP = 0 in TIMx_CCER register to validate the polarity (and detect rising edge only).
  3. 3. Configure the timer in trigger mode by writing SMS = 110 in TIMx_SMCR register. Select tim_ti1 as the input source by writing TS = 00101 in TIMx_SMCR register.

A rising edge on tim_ti1 enables the counter and sets the TIF flag. The counter then counts on tim_etr_in rising edges.

The delay between the rising edge of the tim_etr_in signal and the actual reset of the counter is due to the resynchronization circuit on tim_etrp input.

Figure 485. Control circuit in external clock mode 2 + trigger mode

Timing diagram showing the relationship between tim_ti1, Counter enable, ETR, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF signals. The diagram illustrates that the counter is enabled by a rising edge of tim_ti1 and then counts on rising edges of ETR. The counter register values 34, 35, and 36 are shown, with 35 and 36 appearing after the ETR rising edges. The TIF flag is set by the rising edge of tim_ti1.

The timing diagram shows the following signals over time:

Vertical dashed lines indicate key timing points: the rising edge of tim_ti1 (which enables the counter and sets TIF), and the subsequent rising edges of ETR (which increment the counter).

MSV62364V1

Timing diagram showing the relationship between tim_ti1, Counter enable, ETR, tim_cnt_ck, tim_psc_ck, Counter register, and TIF signals. The diagram illustrates that the counter is enabled by a rising edge of tim_ti1 and then counts on rising edges of ETR. The counter register values 34, 35, and 36 are shown, with 35 and 36 appearing after the ETR rising edges. The TIF flag is set by the rising edge of tim_ti1.

Note:

The clock of the slave peripherals (such as timer, ADC) receiving the tim_trgo or the tim_trgo2 signals must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and the clock frequency (prescaler) must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the master timer.

41.3.31 ADC triggers

The timer can generate an ADC triggering event with various internal signals, such as reset, enable or compare events. It is also possible to generate a pulse issued by internal edge detectors, such as:

The triggers are issued on the tim_trgo2 internal line which is redirected to the ADC. There is a total of 16 possible events, which can be selected using the MMS2[3:0] bits in the TIMx_CR2 register.

An example of an application for 3-phase motor drives is given in Figure 439 .

Note: The clock of the slave peripherals (timer, ADC, ...) receiving the tim_trgo or the tim_trgo2 signals must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and the clock frequency (prescaler) must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the master timer.

The clock of the ADC must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the timer.

41.3.32 DMA burst mode

The TIMx timers have the capability to generate multiple DMA requests upon a single event. The main purpose is to be able to reprogram part of the timer multiple times without software overhead, but it can also be used to read several registers in a row, at regular intervals.

The DMA controller destination is unique and must point to the virtual register TIMx_DMAR. On a given timer event, the timer launches a sequence of DMA requests (burst). Each write into the TIMx_DMAR register is actually redirected to one of the timer registers.

The DBL[4:0] bits in the TIMx_DCR register set the DMA burst length. The timer recognizes a burst transfer when a read or a write access is done to the TIMx_DMAR address), i.e. the number of transfers (either in half-words or in bytes).

The DBA[4:0] bits in the TIMx_DCR register define the DMA base address for DMA transfers (when read/write access are done through the TIMx_DMAR address). DBA is defined as an offset starting from the address of the TIMx_CR1 register:

Example:

00000: TIMx_CR1

00001: TIMx_CR2

00010: TIMx_SMCR

The DBSS[3:0] bits in the TIMx_DCR register defines the interrupt source that triggers the DMA burst transfers (see Section 41.6.29: TIM1 DMA control register (TIM1_DCR) for details).

As an example, the timer DMA burst feature is used to update the contents of the CCRx registers (x = 2, 3, 4) upon an update event, with the DMA transferring half words into the CCRx registers.

This is done in the following steps:

  1. 1. Configure the corresponding DMA channel as follows:
    • – DMA channel peripheral address is the DMAR register address.
    • – DMA channel memory address is the address of the buffer in the RAM containing the data to be transferred by DMA into CCRx registers.
    • – Number of data to transfer = 3 (see note below).
    • – Circular mode disabled.
  2. 2. Configure the DCR register by configuring the DBA and DBL bitfields as follows: DBL = 3 transfers, DBA = 0xE and DBSS = 1.
  3. 3. Enable the TIMx update DMA request (set the UDE bit in the DIER register).
  4. 4. Enable TIMx.
  5. 5. Enable the DMA channel.

This example is for the case where every CCRx register to be updated once. If every CCRx register is to be updated twice for example, the number of data to transfer must be 6. Let's take the example of a buffer in the RAM containing data1, data2, data3, data4, data5, and data6. The data is transferred to the CCRx registers as follows: on the first update DMA request, data1 is transferred to CCR2, data2 is transferred to CCR3, data3 is transferred to CCR4 and on the second update DMA request, data4 is transferred to CCR2, data5 is transferred to CCR3, and data6 is transferred to CCR4.

Note: A null value can be written to the reserved registers.

41.3.33 TIM1 DMA requests

The TIM1 can generate a DMA request, as shown in the table below.

Table 421. DMA request

DMA request signalDMA requestEnable control bit
tim_upd_dmaUpdateUDE
tim_cc1_dmaCapture/compare 1CC1DE
tim_cc2_dmaCapture/compare 2CC2DE
tim_cc3_dmaCapture/compare 3CC3DE
tim_cc4_dmaCapture/compare 4CC4DE
tim_com_dmaCommutation (COM)COMDE
tim_trgi_dmaTriggerTDE

41.3.34 Debug mode

When the microcontroller enters debug mode (Cortex®-M7 core halted), the TIMx counter can either continue to work normally or stop, depending on DBG_TIMx_STOP configuration bit in DBG module.

The behavior in debug mode can be programmed with a dedicated configuration bit per timer in the Debug support (DBG) module.

For safety purposes, when the counter is stopped, the outputs are disabled (as if the MOE bit was reset). The outputs can either be forced to an inactive state (OSSI bit = 1), or have their control taken over by the GPIO controller (OSSI bit = 0), typically to force a Hi-Z.

For more details, refer to section Debug support (DBG).

41.4 TIM1 low-power modes

Table 422. Effect of low-power modes on TIM1

ModeDescription
SleepNo effect, peripheral is active. The interrupts can cause the device to exit from Sleep mode.
StopThe timer operation is stopped and the register content is kept. No interrupt can be generated.
StandbyThe timer is powered-down and must be reinitialized after exiting the Standby mode.

41.5 TIM1 interrupts

The TIM1 can generate multiple interrupts, as shown in Table 423.

Table 423. Interrupt requests

Interrupt acronymInterrupt eventEvent flagEnable control bitInterrupt clear methodExit from Sleep modeExit from Stop and Standby mode
TIM_UPDUpdateUIFUIEwrite 0 in UIFYesNo
TIM_CCCapture/compare 1CC1IFCC1IEwrite 0 in CC1IFYesNo
Capture/compare 2CC2IFCC2IEwrite 0 in CC2IFYesNo
Capture/compare 3CC3IFCC3IEwrite 0 in CC3IFYesNo
Capture/compare 4CC4IFCC4IEwrite 0 in CC4IFYesNo
TIM_TRGI_COM_
DIR_IDX
TIM_COMCommutation (COM)COMIFCOMIEwrite 0 in COMIFYesNo
TIM_TRGITriggerTIFTIEwrite 0 in TIFYesNo
TIM_IDXIndexIDXFIDXIEwrite 0 in IDXFYesNo
TIM_DIRDirectionDIRFDIRIEwrite 0 in DIRFYesNo
TIM_BRK_TERR_
IERR
TIM_BRKBreakBIFBIEwrite 0 in BIFYesNo
Break2B2IFwrite 0 in B2IFYesNo
System BreakSBIFwrite 0 in SBIFYesNo
TIM_IERRIndex ErrorIERRFIERRIEwrite 0 in IERRFYesNo
TIM_TERRTransition ErrorTERRFTERRIEwrite 0 in TERRFYesNo

41.6 TIM1 registers

Refer to Section 1.2 for a list of abbreviations used in register descriptions.

The peripheral registers can be accessed by half-words (16-bit) or words (32-bit).

41.6.1 TIM1 control register 1 (TIM1_CR1)

Address offset: 0x000

Reset value: 0x0000

1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.Res.DITH
EN
UIFRE
MAP
Res.CKD[1:0]ARPECMS[1:0]DIROPMURSUDISCEN
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 15:13 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 12 DITHEN : Dithering enable

0: Dithering disabled

1: Dithering enabled

Note: The DITHEN bit can only be modified when CEN bit is reset.

Bit 11 UIFREMAP : UIF status bit remapping

0: No remapping. UIF status bit is not copied to TIMx_CNT register bit 31.

1: Remapping enabled. UIF status bit is copied to TIMx_CNT register bit 31.

Bit 10 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 9:8 CKD[1:0] : Clock division

This bitfield indicates the division ratio between the timer clock (tim_ker_ck) frequency and the dead-time and sampling clock ( \( t_{DTS} \) ) used by the dead-time generators and the digital filters (tim_etr_in, tim_tix),

00: \( t_{DTS} = t_{tim\_ker\_ck} \)

01: \( t_{DTS} = 2 * t_{tim\_ker\_ck} \)

10: \( t_{DTS} = 4 * t_{tim\_ker\_ck} \)

11: Reserved, do not program this value

Bit 7 ARPE : Autoreload preload enable

0: TIMx_ARR register is not buffered

1: TIMx_ARR register is buffered

Bits 6:5 CMS[1:0] : Center-aligned mode selection

00: Edge-aligned mode. The counter counts up or down depending on the direction bit (DIR).

01: Center-aligned mode 1. The counter counts up and down alternatively. Output compare interrupt flags of channels configured in output (CCxS = 00 in TIMx_CCMRx register) are set only when the counter is counting down.

10: Center-aligned mode 2. The counter counts up and down alternatively. Output compare interrupt flags of channels configured in output (CCxS = 00 in TIMx_CCMRx register) are set only when the counter is counting up.

11: Center-aligned mode 3. The counter counts up and down alternatively. Output compare interrupt flags of channels configured in output (CCxS = 00 in TIMx_CCMRx register) are set both when the counter is counting up or down.

Note: It is not allowed to switch from edge-aligned mode to center-aligned mode as long as the counter is enabled (CEN = 1)

Bit 4 DIR : Direction

Note: This bit is read only when the timer is configured in Center-aligned mode or Encoder mode.

Bit 3 OPM : One-pulse mode

Bit 2 URS : Update request source

This bit is set and cleared by software to select the UEV event sources.

0: Any of the following events generate an update interrupt or DMA request if enabled.

These events can be:

1: Only counter overflow/underflow generates an update interrupt or DMA request if enabled.

Bit 1 UDIS : Update disable

This bit is set and cleared by software to enable/disable UEV event generation.

0: UEV enabled. The Update (UEV) event is generated by one of the following events:

Buffered registers are then loaded with their preload values.

1: UEV disabled. The Update event is not generated, shadow registers keep their value (ARR, PSC, CCRx). However the counter and the prescaler are reinitialized if the UG bit is set or if a hardware reset is received from the slave mode controller.

Bit 0 CEN : Counter enable

Note: External clock, gated mode and encoder mode can work only if the CEN bit has been previously set by software. However trigger mode can set the CEN bit automatically by hardware.

41.6.2 TIM1 control register 2 (TIM1_CR2)

Address offset: 0x004

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.MMS[3]Res.MMS2[3:0]Res.OIS6Res.OIS5
rwrwrwrwrwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
OIS4NOIS4OIS3NOIS3OIS2NOIS2OIS1NOIS1TI1SMMS[2:0]CCDSCCUSRes.CCPC
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:26 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 23:20 MMS2[3:0] : Master mode selection 2

These bits allow the information to be sent to ADC for synchronization (tim_trgo2) to be selected. The combination is as follows:

0000: Reset - the UG bit from the TIMx_EGR register is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2). If the reset is generated by the trigger input (slave mode controller configured in reset mode), the signal on tim_trgo2 is delayed compared to the actual reset.

0001: Enable - the Counter Enable signal CNT_EN is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2). It is useful to start several timers at the same time or to control a window in which a slave timer is enabled. The Counter Enable signal is generated by a logic AND between the CEN control bit and the trigger input when configured in Gated mode. When the Counter Enable signal is controlled by the trigger input, there is a delay on tim_trgo2, except if the Master/Slave mode is selected (see the MSM bit description in TIMx_SMCR register).

0010: Update - the update event is selected as trigger output (tim_trgo2). For instance, a master timer can then be used as a prescaler for a slave timer.

0011: Compare pulse - the trigger output sends a positive pulse when the CC1IF flag is to be set (even if it was already high), as soon as a capture or compare match occurs (tim_trgo2).

0100: Compare - tim_oc1refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

0101: Compare - tim_oc2refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

0110: Compare - tim_oc3refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

0111: Compare - tim_oc4refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

1000: Compare - tim_oc5refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

1001: Compare - tim_oc6refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo2)

1010: Compare Pulse - tim_oc4refc rising or falling edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

1011: Compare pulse - tim_oc6refc rising or falling edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

1100: Compare pulse - tim_oc4refc or tim_oc6refc rising edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

1101: Compare pulse - tim_oc4refc rising or tim_oc6refc falling edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

1110: Compare pulse - tim_oc5refc or tim_oc6refc rising edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

1111: Compare pulse - tim_oc5refc rising or tim_oc6refc falling edges generate pulses on tim_trgo2

Note: The clock of the slave timer or ADC must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the master timer.

Bit 19 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 18 OIS6 : Output idle state 6 (tim_oc6 output)
Refer to OIS1 bit

Bit 17 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 16 OIS5 : Output idle state 5 (tim_oc5 output)
Refer to OIS1 bit

Bit 15 OIS4N : Output idle state 4 (tim_oc4n output)
Refer to OIS1N bit

Bit 14 OIS4 : Output idle state 4 (tim_oc4 output)
Refer to OIS1 bit

Bit 13 OIS3N : Output idle state 3 (tim_oc3n output)

Refer to OIS1N bit

Bit 12 OIS3 : Output idle state 3 (tim_oc3n output)

Refer to OIS1 bit

Bit 11 OIS2N : Output idle state 2 (tim_oc2n output)

Refer to OIS1N bit

Bit 10 OIS2 : Output idle state 2 (tim_oc2 output)

Refer to OIS1 bit

Bit 9 OIS1N : Output idle state 1 (tim_oc1n output)

0: tim_oc1n = 0 after a dead-time when MOE = 0

1: tim_oc1n = 1 after a dead-time when MOE = 0

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 8 OIS1 : Output idle state 1 (tim_oc1 output)

0: tim_oc1 = 0 (after a dead-time) when MOE = 0

1: tim_oc1 = 1 (after a dead-time) when MOE = 0

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 7 TI1S : tim_ti1 selection

0: The tim_ti1_in[15:0] multiplexer output is connected to tim_ti1 input

1: tim_ti1_in[15:0], tim_ti2_in[15:0] and tim_ti3_in[15:0] multiplexers outputs are XORed and connected to the tim_ti1 input

Bits 25, 6:4 MMS[3:0] : Master mode selection

These bits select the information to be sent in master mode to slave timers for synchronization (tim_trgo). The combination is as follows:

0000: Reset - the UG bit from the TIMx_EGR register is used as trigger output (tim_trgo). If the reset is generated by the trigger input (slave mode controller configured in reset mode) then the signal on tim_trgo is delayed compared to the actual reset.

0001: Enable - the Counter Enable signal CNT_EN is used as trigger output (tim_trgo). It is useful to start several timers at the same time or to control a window in which a slave timer is enable. The Counter Enable signal is generated by a logic AND between CEN control bit and the trigger input when configured in gated mode. When the Counter Enable signal is controlled by the trigger input, there is a delay on tim_trgo, except if the master/slave mode is selected (see the MSM bit description in TIMx_SMCR register).

0010: Update - The update event is selected as trigger output (tim_trgo). For instance a master timer can then be used as a prescaler for a slave timer.

0011: Compare Pulse - The trigger output send a positive pulse when the CC1IF flag is to be set (even if it was already high), as soon as a capture or a compare match occurred. (tim_trgo).

0100: Compare - tim_oc1refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo)

0101: Compare - tim_oc2refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo)

0110: Compare - tim_oc3refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo)

0111: Compare - tim_oc4refc signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo)

1000: Encoder Clock output - The encoder clock signal is used as trigger output (tim_trgo). This code is valid for the following SMS[3:0] values: 0001, 0010, 0011, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111. Any other SMS[3:0] code is not allowed and may lead to unexpected behavior.

Other codes reserved

Note: The clock of the slave timer or ADC must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the master timer.

Bit 3 CCDS : Capture/compare DMA selection

0: CCx DMA request sent when CCx event occurs

1: CCx DMA requests sent when update event occurs

Bit 2 CCUS : Capture/compare control update selection

0: When capture/compare control bits are preloaded (CCPC = 1), they are updated by setting the COMG bit only

1: When capture/compare control bits are preloaded (CCPC = 1), they are updated by setting the COMG bit or when an rising edge occurs on tim_trgi

Note: This bit acts only on channels that have a complementary output.

Bit 1 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 0 CCPC : Capture/compare preloaded control

0: CCxE, CCxNE and OCxM bits are not preloaded

1: CCxE, CCxNE and OCxM bits are preloaded, after having been written, they are updated only when a commutation event (COM) occurs (COMG bit set or rising edge detected on tim_trgi, depending on the CCUS bit).

Note: This bit acts only on channels that have a complementary output.

41.6.3 TIM1 slave mode control register (TIM1_SMCR)

Address offset: 0x008

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.SMSPSSMSPERes.Res.TS[4:3]Res.Res.Res.Res.SMS[3]
rwrwrwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
ETPECEETPS[1:0]ETF[3:0]MSMTS[2:0]Res.SMS[2:0]
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:26 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 25 SMSPS : SMS preload source

This bit selects whether the events that triggers the SMS[3:0] bitfield transfer from preload to active

0: The transfer is triggered by the Timer's Update event

1: The transfer is triggered by the Index event

Bit 24 SMSPE : SMS preload enable

This bit selects whether the SMS[3:0] bitfield is preloaded

0: SMS[3:0] bitfield is not preloaded

1: SMS[3:0] preload is enabled

Bits 23:22 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 21:20 TS[4:3] : Trigger selection - bit 4:3

Refer to TS[2:0] description - bits 6:4

Bits 19:17 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 15 ETP : External trigger polarity

This bit selects whether tim_etr_in or tim_etr_in is used for trigger operations

0: tim_etr_in is non-inverted, active at high level or rising edge.

1: tim_etr_in is inverted, active at low level or falling edge.

Bit 14 ECE : External clock enable

This bit enables External clock mode 2.

0: External clock mode 2 disabled

1: External clock mode 2 enabled. The counter is clocked by any active edge on the tim_etrf signal.

Note: Setting the ECE bit has the same effect as selecting external clock mode 1 with tim_trgi connected to tim_etrfr (SMS = 111 and TS = 00111).

It is possible to simultaneously use external clock mode 2 with the following slave modes: reset mode, gated mode and trigger mode. Nevertheless, tim_trgi must not be connected to tim_etrfr in this case (TS bits must not be 00111).

If external clock mode 1 and external clock mode 2 are enabled at the same time, the external clock input is tim_etrfr.

Bits 13:12 ETPS[1:0] : External trigger prescaler

External trigger signal tim_etrp frequency must be at most 1/4 of TIMxCLK frequency. A prescaler can be enabled to reduce tim_etrp frequency. It is useful when inputting fast external clocks on tim_etr_in.

00: Prescaler OFF

01: tim_etr_in frequency divided by 2

10: tim_etr_in frequency divided by 4

11: tim_etr_in frequency divided by 8

Bits 11:8 ETF[3:0] : External trigger filter

This bitfield then defines the frequency used to sample tim_etrp signal and the length of the digital filter applied to tim_etrp. The digital filter is made of an event counter in which N consecutive events are needed to validate a transition on the output:

0000: No filter, sampling is done at \( f_{DTS} \)

0001: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 2

0010: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 4

0011: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 8

0100: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/2 \) , N = 6

0101: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/2 \) , N = 8

0110: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/4 \) , N = 6

0111: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/4 \) , N = 8

1000: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/8 \) , N = 6

1001: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/8 \) , N = 8

1010: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 5

1011: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 6

1100: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 8

1101: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 5

1110: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 6

1111: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 8

Bit 7 MSM : Master/slave mode

0: No action

1: The effect of an event on the trigger input (tim_trgi) is delayed to allow a perfect synchronization between the current timer and its slaves (through tim_trgo). It is useful if we want to synchronize several timers on a single external event.

Bits 6:4 TS[2:0] : Trigger selection

This bitfield is combined with TS[4:3] bits.

This bitfield selects the trigger input to be used to synchronize the counter.

00000: Internal Trigger 0 (tim_itr0)

00001: Internal Trigger 1 (tim_itr1)

00010: Internal Trigger 2 (tim_itr2)

00011: Internal Trigger 3 (tim_itr3)

00100: tim_ti1 Edge Detector (tim_ti1f_ed)

00101: Filtered Timer Input 1 (tim_ti1fp1)

00110: Filtered Timer Input 2 (tim_ti2fp2)

00111: External Trigger input (tim_etrf)

01000: Internal Trigger 4 (tim_itr4)

01001: Internal Trigger 5 (tim_itr5)

01010: Internal Trigger 6 (tim_itr6)

01011: Internal Trigger 7 (tim_itr7)

01100: Internal Trigger 8 (tim_itr8)

01101: Internal Trigger 9 (tim_itr9)

01110: Internal Trigger 10 (tim_itr10)

01111: Internal trigger 11 (tim_itr11)

10000: Internal trigger 12 (tim_itr12)

10001: Internal trigger 13 (tim_itr13)

10010: Internal trigger 14 (tim_itr14)

10011: Internal trigger 15 (tim_itr15)

Others: Reserved

See Table 410: Internal trigger connection for more details on tim_itrx meaning for each Timer.

Note: These bits must be changed only when they are not used (for example when SMS = 000) to avoid wrong edge detections at the transition.

Bit 3 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 16, 2:0 SMS[3:0] : Slave mode selection

When external signals are selected the active edge of the trigger signal (tim_trgi) is linked to the polarity selected on the external input (refer to ETP bit in TIMx_SMCR for tim_etr_in and CCxP/CCxNP bits in TIMx_CCER register for tim_ti1fp1 and tim_ti2fp2).

0000: Slave mode disabled - if CEN = 1 then the prescaler is clocked directly by the internal clock.

0001: Quadrature encoder mode 1, x2 mode- Counter counts up/down on tim_ti1fp1 edge depending on tim_ti2fp2 level.

0010: Quadrature encoder mode 2, x2 mode - Counter counts up/down on tim_ti2fp2 edge depending on tim_ti1fp1 level.

0011: Quadrature encoder mode 3, x4 mode - Counter counts up/down on both tim_ti1fp1 and tim_ti2fp2 edges depending on the level of the other input.

0100: Reset mode - Rising edge of the selected trigger input (tim_trgi) reinitializes the counter and generates an update of the registers.

0101: Gated mode - The counter clock is enabled when the trigger input (tim_trgi) is high. The counter stops (but is not reset) as soon as the trigger becomes low. Both start and stop of the counter are controlled.

0110: Trigger mode - The counter starts at a rising edge of the trigger tim_trgi (but it is not reset). Only the start of the counter is controlled.

0111: External Clock mode 1 - Rising edges of the selected trigger (tim_trgi) clock the counter.

1000: Combined reset + trigger mode - Rising edge of the selected trigger input (tim_trgi) reinitializes the counter, generates an update of the registers and starts the counter.

1001: Combined gated + reset mode - The counter clock is enabled when the trigger input (tim_trgi) is high. The counter stops (and is reset) as soon as the trigger becomes low. Both start and stop of the counter are controlled.

1010: Encoder mode: Clock plus direction, x2 mode.

1011: Encoder mode: Clock plus direction, x1 mode, tim_ti2fp2 edge sensitivity is set by CC2P

1100: Encoder mode: Directional Clock, x2 mode.

1101: Encoder mode: Directional Clock, x1 mode, tim_ti1fp1 and tim_ti2fp2 edge sensitivity is set by CC1P and CC2P.

1110: Quadrature encoder mode: x1 mode, counting on tim_ti1fp1 edges only, edge sensitivity is set by CC1P.

1111: Quadrature encoder mode: x1 mode, counting on tim_ti2fp2 edges only, edge sensitivity is set by CC2P.

Note: The gated mode must not be used if tim_ti1f_ed is selected as the trigger input (TS = 00100). Indeed, tim_ti1f_ed outputs 1 pulse for each transition on TI1F, whereas the gated mode checks the level of the trigger signal.

Note: The clock of the slave peripherals (timer, ADC, ...) receiving the tim_trgo or the tim_trgo2 signals must be enabled prior to receive events from the master timer, and the clock frequency (prescaler) must not be changed on-the-fly while triggers are received from the master timer.

41.6.4 TIM1 DMA/interrupt enable register (TIM1_DIER)

Address offset: 0x00C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TERRIEIERRIEDIRIEIDXIERes.Res.Res.Res.
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Res.TDECOMDECC4DECC3DECC2DECC1DEUDEBIETIECOMIECC4IECC3IECC2IECC1IEUIE
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Bits 31:24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 23 TERRIE : Transition error interrupt enable

Bit 22 IERRIE : Index error interrupt enable

Bit 21 DIRIE : Direction change interrupt enable

Bit 20 IDXIE : Index interrupt enable

Bits 19:15 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 14 TDE : Trigger DMA request enable

Bit 13 COMDE : COM DMA request enable

Bit 12 CC4DE : Capture/compare 4 DMA request enable

Bit 11 CC3DE : Capture/compare 3 DMA request enable

Bit 10 CC2DE : Capture/compare 2 DMA request enable

Bit 9 CC1DE : Capture/compare 1 DMA request enable

41.6.5 TIM1 status register (TIM1_SR)

Address offset: 0x010

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TERRFIERRFDIRFIDXFRes.Res.CC6IFCC5IF
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Res.Res.SBIFCC4OFCC3OFCC2OFCC1OFB2IFBIFTIFCOMIFCC4IFCC3IFCC2IFCC1IFUIF
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Bits 31:24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 23 TERRF : Transition error interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware when a transition error is detected in encoder mode. It is cleared by software by writing it to 0.

0: No encoder transition error has been detected.

1: An encoder transition error has been detected

Bit 22 IERRF : Index error interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware when an index error is detected. It is cleared by software by writing it to 0.

0: No index error has been detected.

1: An index error has been detected

Bit 21 DIRF : Direction change interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware when the direction changes in encoder mode (DIR bit value in TIMx_CR is changing). It is cleared by software by writing it to 0.

0: No direction change

1: Direction change

Bit 20 IDXF : Index interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware when an index event is detected. It is cleared by software by writing it to 0.

0: No index event occurred.

1: An index event has occurred

Bits 19:18 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 17 CC6IF : Compare 6 interrupt flag

Refer to CC1IF description

Note: Channel 6 can only be configured as output.

Bit 16 CC5IF : Compare 5 interrupt flag

Refer to CC1IF description

Note: Channel 5 can only be configured as output.

Bits 15:14 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 13 SBIF : System break interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware as soon as the system break input goes active. It can be cleared by software if the system break input is not active.

This flag must be reset to re-start PWM operation.

0: No break event occurred.

1: An active level has been detected on the system break input. An interrupt is generated if BIE = 1 in the TIMx_DIER register.

Bit 12 CC4OF : Capture/compare 4 overcapture flag

Refer to CC1OF description

Bit 11 CC3OF : Capture/compare 3 overcapture flag

Refer to CC1OF description

Bit 10 CC2OF : Capture/compare 2 overcapture flag

Refer to CC1OF description

Bit 9 CC1OF: Capture/compare 1 overcapture flag

This flag is set by hardware only when the corresponding channel is configured in input capture mode. It is cleared by software by writing it to 0.

0: No overcapture has been detected.

1: The counter value has been captured in TIMx_CCR1 register while CC1IF flag was already set

Bit 8 B2IF: Break 2 interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware as soon as the break 2 input goes active. It can be cleared by software if the break 2 input is not active.

0: No break event occurred.

1: An active level has been detected on the break 2 input. An interrupt is generated if BIE = 1 in the TIMx_DIER register.

Bit 7 BIF: Break interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware as soon as the break input goes active. It can be cleared by software if the break input is not active.

0: No break event occurred.

1: An active level has been detected on the break input. An interrupt is generated if BIE = 1 in the TIMx_DIER register.

Bit 6 TIF: Trigger interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware on the TRG trigger event (active edge detected on tim_trgi input when the slave mode controller is enabled in all modes but gated mode. It is set when the counter starts or stops when gated mode is selected. It is cleared by software.

0: No trigger event occurred.

1: Trigger interrupt pending.

Bit 5 COMIF: COM interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware on COM event (when capture/compare Control bits - CCxE, CCxNE, OCxM - have been updated). It is cleared by software.

0: No COM event occurred.

1: COM interrupt pending.

Bit 4 CC4IF: Capture/compare 4 interrupt flag

Refer to CC1IF description

Bit 3 CC3IF: Capture/compare 3 interrupt flag

Refer to CC1IF description

Bit 2 CC2IF : Capture/compare 2 interrupt flag

Refer to CC1IF description

Bit 1 CC1IF : Capture/compare 1 interrupt flag

This flag is set by hardware. It is cleared by software (input capture or output compare mode) or by reading the TIMx_CCR1 register (input capture mode only).

0: No compare match / No input capture occurred

1: A compare match or an input capture occurred

If channel CC1 is configured as output: this flag is set when the content of the counter TIMx_CNT matches the content of the TIMx_CCR1 register. When the content of TIMx_CCR1 is greater than the content of TIMx_ARR, the CC1IF bit goes high on the counter overflow (in up-counting and up/down-counting modes) or underflow (in downcounting mode). There are 3 possible options for flag setting in center-aligned mode, refer to the CMS bits in the TIMx_CR1 register for the full description.

If channel CC1 is configured as input: this bit is set when counter value has been captured in TIMx_CCR1 register (an edge has been detected on IC1, as per the edge sensitivity defined with the CC1P and CC1NP bits setting, in TIMx_CCER).

Bit 0 UIF : Update interrupt flag

This bit is set by hardware on an update event. It is cleared by software.

0: No update occurred.

1: Update interrupt pending. This bit is set by hardware when the registers are updated:

–At overflow or underflow regarding the repetition counter value (update if repetition counter = 0) and if the UDIS = 0 in the TIMx_CR1 register.

–When CNT is reinitialized by software using the UG bit in TIMx_EGR register, if URS = 0 and UDIS = 0 in the TIMx_CR1 register.

–When CNT is reinitialized by a trigger event (refer to Section 41.6.3: TIM1 slave mode control register (TIM1_SMCR) ), if URS = 0 and UDIS = 0 in the TIMx_CR1 register.

41.6.6 TIM1 event generation register (TIM1_EGR)

Address offset: 0x014

Reset value: 0x0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.B2GBGTGCOMGCC4GCC3GCC2GCC1GUG
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Bits 15:9 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 8 B2G : Break 2 generation

This bit is set by software in order to generate an event, it is automatically cleared by hardware.

0: No action

1: A break 2 event is generated. MOE bit is cleared and B2IF flag is set. Related interrupt can occur if enabled.

Bit 7 BG : Break generation

This bit is set by software in order to generate an event, it is automatically cleared by hardware.

0: No action

1: A break event is generated. MOE bit is cleared and BIF flag is set. Related interrupt or DMA transfer can occur if enabled.

Bit 6 TG : Trigger generation

This bit is set by software in order to generate an event, it is automatically cleared by hardware.

0: No action

1: The TIF flag is set in TIMx_SR register. Related interrupt or DMA transfer can occur if enabled.

Bit 5 COMG : Capture/compare control update generation

This bit can be set by software, it is automatically cleared by hardware

0: No action

1: CCxE, CCxNE and OCxM bits update (providing CCPC bit is set)

Note: This bit acts only on channels having a complementary output.

Bit 4 CC4G : Capture/compare 4 generation

Refer to CC1G description

Bit 3 CC3G : Capture/compare 3 generation

Refer to CC1G description

Bit 2 CC2G : Capture/compare 2 generation

Refer to CC1G description

Bit 1 CC1G : Capture/compare 1 generation

This bit is set by software in order to generate an event, it is automatically cleared by hardware.

0: No action

1: A capture/compare event is generated on channel 1:

If channel CC1 is configured as output:

CC1IF flag is set, Corresponding interrupt or DMA request is sent if enabled.

If channel CC1 is configured as input:

The current value of the counter is captured in TIMx_CCR1 register. The CC1IF flag is set, the corresponding interrupt or DMA request is sent if enabled. The CC1OF flag is set if the CC1IF flag was already high.

Bit 0 UG : Update generation

This bit can be set by software, it is automatically cleared by hardware.

0: No action

1: Reinitialize the counter and generates an update of the registers. Note that the prescaler counter is cleared too (anyway the prescaler ratio is not affected). The counter is cleared if the center-aligned mode is selected or if DIR = 0 (upcounting), else it takes the autoreload value (TIMx_ARR) if DIR = 1 (downcounting).

41.6.7 TIM1 capture/compare mode register 1 (TIM1_CCMR1)

Address offset: 0x018

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

The same register can be used for input capture mode (this section) or for output compare mode (next section). The direction of a channel is defined by configuring the corresponding CCxS bits. All the other bits of this register have a different function for input capture and for output compare modes. It is possible to combine both modes independently (for example channel 1 in input capture mode and channel 2 in output compare mode).

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IC2F[3:0]IC2PSC[1:0]CC2S[1:0]IC1F[3:0]IC1PSC[1:0]CC1S[1:0]
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Input capture mode:

Bits 31:16 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 15:12 IC2F[3:0] : Input capture 2 filter

Bits 11:10 IC2PSC[1:0] : Input capture 2 prescaler

Bits 9:8 CC2S[1:0] : Capture/compare 2 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC2 channel is configured as output

01: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_ti2

10: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_ti1

11: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC2S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC2E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

Bits 7:4 IC1F[3:0] : Input capture 1 filter

This bitfield defines the frequency used to sample tim_ti1 input and the length of the digital filter applied to tim_ti1. The digital filter is made of an event counter in which N consecutive events are needed to validate a transition on the output:

0000: No filter, sampling is done at \( f_{DTS} \)

0001: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 2

0010: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 4

0011: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{tim\_ker\_ck} \) , N = 8

0100: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/2 \) , N = 6

0101: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/2 \) , N = 8

0110: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/4 \) , N = 6

0111: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/4 \) , N = 8

1000: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/8 \) , N = 6

1001: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/8 \) , N = 8

1010: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 5

1011: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 6

1100: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/16 \) , N = 8

1101: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 5

1110: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 6

1111: \( f_{SAMPLING} = f_{DTS}/32 \) , N = 8

Bits 3:2 IC1PSC[1:0] : Input capture 1 prescaler

This bitfield defines the ratio of the prescaler acting on CC1 input (tim_ic1). The prescaler is reset as soon as CC1E = 0 (TIMx_CCER register).

00: no prescaler, capture is done each time an edge is detected on the capture input

01: capture is done once every 2 events

10: capture is done once every 4 events

11: capture is done once every 8 events

Bits 1:0 CC1S[1:0] : Capture/compare 1 Selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC1 channel is configured as output

01: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_ti1

10: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_ti2

11: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC1S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC1E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

41.6.8 TIM1 capture/compare mode register 1 [alternate] (TIM1_CCMR1)

Address offset: 0x018

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

The same register can be used for output compare mode (this section) or for input capture mode (previous section). The direction of a channel is defined by configuring the corresponding CCxS bits. All the other bits of this register have a different function for input capture and for output compare modes. It is possible to combine both modes independently (for example channel 1 in input capture mode and channel 2 in output compare mode).

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC2M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC1M[3]
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OC2 CEOC2M[2:0]OC2 PEOC2 FECC2S[1:0]OC1 CEOC1M[2:0]OC1 PEOC1 FECC1S[1:0]
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Output compare mode:

Bits 31:25 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 23:17 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 15 OC2CE : Output compare 2 clear enable

Bits 24, 14:12 OC2M[3:0] : Output compare 2 mode

Bit 11 OC2PE : Output compare 2 preload enable

Bit 10 OC2FE : Output compare 2 fast enable

Bits 9:8 CC2S[1:0] : Capture/compare 2 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC2 channel is configured as output

01: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_ti2

10: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_ti1

11: CC2 channel is configured as input, tim_ic2 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through the TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC2S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC2E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

Bit 7 OC1CE : Output compare 1 clear enable

0: tim_oc1ref is not affected by the tim_ocref_clr_int signal

1: tim_oc1ref is cleared as soon as a High level is detected on tim_ocref_clr_int signal
(tim_ocref_clr input or tim_etrf input)

Bits 16, 6:4 OC1M[3:0] : Output compare 1 mode

These bits define the behavior of the output reference signal tim_oc1ref from which tim_oc1 and tim_oc1n are derived. tim_oc1ref is active high whereas tim_oc1 and tim_oc1n active level depends on CC1P and CC1NP bits.

0000: Frozen - The comparison between the output compare register TIMx_CCR1 and the counter TIMx_CNT has no effect on the outputs. This mode can be used when the timer serves as a software timebase. When the frozen mode is enabled during timer operation, the output keeps the state (active or inactive) it had before entering the frozen state.

0001: Set channel 1 to active level on match. tim_oc1ref signal is forced high when the counter TIMx_CNT matches the capture/compare register 1 (TIMx_CCR1).

0010: Set channel 1 to inactive level on match. tim_oc1ref signal is forced low when the counter TIMx_CNT matches the capture/compare register 1 (TIMx_CCR1).

0011: Toggle - tim_oc1ref toggles when TIMx_CNT = TIMx_CCR1.

0100: Force inactive level - tim_oc1ref is forced low.

0101: Force active level - tim_oc1ref is forced high.

0110: PWM mode 1 - In upcounting, channel 1 is active as long as TIMx_CNT < TIMx_CCR1 else inactive. In downcounting, channel 1 is inactive (tim_oc1ref = 0) as long as TIMx_CNT > TIMx_CCR1 else active (tim_oc1ref = 1).

0111: PWM mode 2 - In upcounting, channel 1 is inactive as long as TIMx_CNT < TIMx_CCR1 else active. In downcounting, channel 1 is active as long as TIMx_CNT > TIMx_CCR1 else inactive.

1000: Retriggerable OPM mode 1 - In up-counting mode, the channel is active until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channel becomes active again at the next update. In down-counting mode, the channel is inactive until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channel becomes inactive again at the next update.

1001: Retriggerable OPM mode 2 - In up-counting mode, the channel is inactive until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 2 and the channel becomes inactive again at the next update. In down-counting mode, the channel is active until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channel becomes active again at the next update.

1010: Reserved,

1011: Reserved,

1100: Combined PWM mode 1 - tim_oc1ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 1. tim_oc1refc is the logical OR between tim_oc1ref and tim_oc2ref.

1101: Combined PWM mode 2 - tim_oc1ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 2. tim_oc1refc is the logical AND between tim_oc1ref and tim_oc2ref.

1110: Asymmetric PWM mode 1 - tim_oc1ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 1. tim_oc1refc outputs tim_oc1ref when the counter is counting up, tim_oc2ref when it is counting down.

1111: Asymmetric PWM mode 2 - tim_oc1ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 2. tim_oc1refc outputs tim_oc1ref when the counter is counting up, tim_oc2ref when it is counting down.

Note: These bits can not be modified as long as LOCK level 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register) and CC1S = 00 (the channel is configured in output).

Note: In PWM mode, the OCREF level changes when the result of the comparison changes, when the output compare mode switches from "frozen" mode to "PWM" mode and when the output compare mode switches from "force active/inactive" mode to "PWM" mode.

Note: On channels having a complementary output, this bitfield is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the OC1M active bits take the new value from the preloaded bits only when a COM event is generated.

Bit 3 OC1PE : Output compare 1 preload enable

0: Preload register on TIMx_CCR1 disabled. TIMx_CCR1 can be written at anytime, the new value is taken in account immediately.

1: Preload register on TIMx_CCR1 enabled. Read/Write operations access the preload register. TIMx_CCR1 preload value is loaded in the active register at each update event.

Note: These bits can not be modified as long as LOCK level 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register) and CC1S = 00 (the channel is configured in output).

Bit 2 OC1FE : Output compare 1 fast enable

This bit decreases the latency between a trigger event and a transition on the timer output. It must be used in one-pulse mode (OPM bit set in TIMx_CR1 register), to have the output pulse starting as soon as possible after the starting trigger.

0: CC1 behaves normally depending on counter and CCR1 values even when the trigger is ON. The minimum delay to activate CC1 output when an edge occurs on the trigger input is 5 clock cycles.

1: An active edge on the trigger input acts like a compare match on CC1 output. Then, OC is set to the compare level independently from the result of the comparison. Delay to sample the trigger input and to activate CC1 output is reduced to 3 clock cycles. OCFE acts only if the channel is configured in PWM1 or PWM2 mode.

Bits 1:0 CC1S[1:0] : Capture/compare 1 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC1 channel is configured as output

01: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_ti1

10: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_ti2

11: CC1 channel is configured as input, tim_ic1 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC1S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC1E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

41.6.9 TIM1 capture/compare mode register 2 (TIM1_CCMR2)

Address offset: 0x01C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

The same register can be used for input capture mode (this section) or for output compare mode (next section). The direction of a channel is defined by configuring the corresponding CCxS bits. All the other bits of this register have a different function for input capture and for output compare modes. It is possible to combine both modes independently (for example channel 3 in input capture mode and channel 4 in output compare mode).

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.
1514131211109876543210
IC4F[3:0]IC4PSC[1:0]CC4S[1:0]IC3F[3:0]IC3PSC[1:0]CC3S[1:0]
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Input capture mode

Bits 31:16 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 15:12 IC4F[3:0] : Input capture 4 filter

Bits 11:10 IC4PSC[1:0] : Input capture 4 prescaler

Bits 9:8 CC4S[1:0] : Capture/compare 4 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC4 channel is configured as output

01: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_ti4

10: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_ti3

11: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC4S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC4E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

Bits 7:4 IC3F[3:0] : Input capture 3 filter

Bits 3:2 IC3PSC[1:0] : Input capture 3 prescaler

Bits 1:0 CC3S[1:0] : Capture/compare 3 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC3 channel is configured as output

01: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_ti3

10: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_ti4

11: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC3S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC3E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

41.6.10 TIM1 capture/compare mode register 2 [alternate] (TIM1_CCMR2)

Address offset: 0x01C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

The same register can be used for output compare mode (this section) or for input capture mode (previous section). The direction of a channel is defined by configuring the corresponding CCxS bits. All the other bits of this register have a different function for input capture and for output compare modes. It is possible to combine both modes independently (for example channel 3 in input capture mode and channel 4 in output compare mode).

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC4M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC3M[3]
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1514131211109876543210
OC4CEOC4M[2:0]OC4PEOC4FECC4S[1:0]OC3CEOC3M[2:0]OC3PEOC3FECC3S[1:0]
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Output compare mode

Bits 31:25 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 23:17 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 15 OC4CE : Output compare 4 clear enable

Bits 24, 14:12 OC4M[3:0] : Output compare 4 mode

Refer to OC3M[3:0] bit description

Bit 11 OC4PE : Output compare 4 preload enable

Bit 10 OC4FE : Output compare 4 fast enable

Bits 9:8 CC4S[1:0] : Capture/compare 4 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC4 channel is configured as output

01: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_ti4

10: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_ti3

11: CC4 channel is configured as input, tim_ic4 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC4S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC4E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

Bit 7 OC3CE : Output compare 3 clear enable

Bits 16, 6:4 OC3M[3:0] : Output compare 3 mode

These bits define the behavior of the output reference signal tim_oc3ref from which tim_oc3 and tim_oc3n are derived. tim_oc3ref is active high whereas tim_oc3 and tim_oc3n active level depends on CC3P and CC3NP bits.

0000: Frozen - The comparison between the output compare register TIMx_CCR3 and the counter TIMx_CNT has no effect on the outputs.(this mode is used to generate a timing base).

0001: Set channel 3 to active level on match. tim_oc3ref signal is forced high when the counter TIMx_CNT matches the capture/compare register 3 (TIMx_CCR3).

0010: Set channel 3 to inactive level on match. tim_oc3ref signal is forced low when the counter TIMx_CNT matches the capture/compare register 3 (TIMx_CCR3).

0011: Toggle - tim_oc3ref toggles when TIMx_CNT = TIMx_CCR3.

0100: Force inactive level - tim_oc3ref is forced low.

0101: Force active level - tim_oc3ref is forced high.

0110: PWM mode 1 - In upcounting, channel 3 is active as long as TIMx_CNT < TIMx_CCR3 else inactive. In downcounting, channel 3 is inactive (tim_oc3ref = 0) as long as TIMx_CNT > TIMx_CCR3 else active (tim_oc3ref = 1).

0111: PWM mode 2 - In upcounting, channel 3 is inactive as long as TIMx_CNT < TIMx_CCR3 else active. In downcounting, channel 3 is active as long as TIMx_CNT > TIMx_CCR3 else inactive.

1000: Retriggerable OPM mode 1 - In up-counting mode, the channel is active until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channels becomes active again at the next update. In down-counting mode, the channel is inactive until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channels becomes inactive again at the next update.

1001: Retriggerable OPM mode 2 - In up-counting mode, the channel is inactive until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 2 and the channels becomes inactive again at the next update. In down-counting mode, the channel is active until a trigger event is detected (on tim_trgi signal). Then, a comparison is performed as in PWM mode 1 and the channels becomes active again at the next update.

1010: Pulse on compare: a pulse is generated on tim_oc3ref upon CCR3 match event, as per PWPRSC[2:0] and PW[7:0] bitfields programming in TIMxECR.

1011: Direction output. The tim_oc3ref signal is overridden by a copy of the DIR bit.

1100: Combined PWM mode 1 - tim_oc3ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 1. tim_oc3refc is the logical OR between tim_oc3ref and tim_oc4ref.

1101: Combined PWM mode 2 - tim_oc3ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 2. tim_oc3refc is the logical AND between tim_oc3ref and tim_oc4ref.

1110: Asymmetric PWM mode 1 - tim_oc3ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 1. tim_oc3refc outputs tim_oc3ref when the counter is counting up, tim_oc4ref when it is counting down.

1111: Asymmetric PWM mode 2 - tim_oc3ref has the same behavior as in PWM mode 2. tim_oc3refc outputs tim_oc3ref when the counter is counting up, tim_oc4ref when it is counting down.

Note: These bits can not be modified as long as LOCK level 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register) and CC1S = 00 (the channel is configured in output).

Note: In PWM mode, the OCREF level changes only when the result of the comparison changes or when the output compare mode switches from “frozen” mode to “PWM” mode.

On channels having a complementary output, this bitfield is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the OC3M active bits take the new value from the preloaded bits only when a COM event is generated.

Bit 3 OC3PE : Output compare 3 preload enable

Bit 2 OC3FE : Output compare 3 fast enable

Bits 1:0 CC3S[1:0] : Capture/compare 3 selection

This bitfield defines the direction of the channel (input/output) as well as the used input.

00: CC3 channel is configured as output

01: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_ti3

10: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_ti4

11: CC3 channel is configured as input, tim_ic3 is mapped on tim_trc. This mode is working only if an internal trigger input is selected through TS bit (TIMx_SMCR register)

Note: CC3S bits are writable only when the channel is OFF (CC3E = 0 in TIMx_CCER).

41.6.11 TIM1 capture/compare enable register (TIM1_CCER)

Address offset: 0x020

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CC6PCC6ERes.Res.CC5PCC5E
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1514131211109876543210
CC4NPCC4NECC4PCC4ECC3NPCC3NECC3PCC3ECC2NPCC2NECC2PCC2ECC1NPCC1NECC1PCC1E
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Bits 31:22 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 21 CC6P : Capture/compare 6 output polarity

Refer to CC1P description

Bit 20 CC6E : Capture/compare 6 output enable

Refer to CC1E description

Bits 19:18 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 17 CC5P : Capture/compare 5 output polarity

Refer to CC1P description

Bit 16 CC5E : Capture/compare 5 output enable

Refer to CC1E description

Bit 15 CC4NP : Capture/compare 4 complementary output polarity

Refer to CC1NP description

Bit 14 CC4NE : Capture/compare 4 complementary output enable

Refer to CC1NE description

Bit 13 CC4P : Capture/compare 4 output polarity

Refer to CC1P description

Bit 12 CC4E : Capture/compare 4 output enable

Refer to CC1E description

Bit 11 CC3NP : Capture/compare 3 complementary output polarity

Refer to CC1NP description

Bit 10 CC3NE : Capture/compare 3 complementary output enable

Refer to CC1NE description

Bit 9 CC3P : Capture/compare 3 output polarity

Refer to CC1P description

Bit 8 CC3E : Capture/compare 3 output enable

Refer to CC1E description

Bit 7 CC2NP : Capture/compare 2 complementary output polarity

Refer to CC1NP description

Bit 6 CC2NE : Capture/compare 2 complementary output enable

Refer to CC1NE description

Bit 5 CC2P : Capture/compare 2 output polarity

Refer to CC1P description

Bit 4 CC2E : Capture/compare 2 output enable

Refer to CC1E description

Bit 3 CC1NP : Capture/compare 1 complementary output polarity

CC1 channel configured as output:

0: tim_oc1n active high.

1: tim_oc1n active low.

CC1 channel configured as input:

This bit is used in conjunction with CC1P to define the polarity of tim_ti1fp1 and tim_ti2fp1.

Refer to CC1P description.

Note: This bit is not writable as soon as LOCK level 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register) and CC1S = 00 (channel configured as output).

Note: On channels having a complementary output, this bit is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the CC1NP active bit takes the new value from the preloaded bit only when a Commutation event is generated.

Bit 2 CC1NE : Capture/compare 1 complementary output enable

0: Off - tim_oc1n is not active. tim_oc1n level is then function of MOE, OSSI, OSSR, OIS1, OIS1N and CC1E bits.

1: On - tim_oc1n signal is output on the corresponding output pin depending on MOE, OSSI, OSSR, OIS1, OIS1N and CC1E bits.

Note: On channels having a complementary output, this bit is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the CC1NE active bit takes the new value from the preloaded bit only when a Commutation event is generated.

Bit 1 CC1P : Capture/compare 1 output polarity

0: OC1 active high (output mode) / Edge sensitivity selection (input mode, see below)

1: OC1 active low (output mode) / Edge sensitivity selection (input mode, see below)

When CC1 channel is configured as input, both CC1NP/CC1P bits select the active polarity of TI1FP1 and TI2FP1 for trigger or capture operations.

CC1NP = 0, CC1P = 0: non-inverted/rising edge. The circuit is sensitive to TIxFP1 rising edge (capture or trigger operations in reset, external clock or trigger mode), TIxFP1 is not inverted (trigger operation in gated mode or encoder mode).

CC1NP = 0, CC1P = 1: inverted/falling edge. The circuit is sensitive to TIxFP1 falling edge (capture or trigger operations in reset, external clock or trigger mode), TIxFP1 is inverted (trigger operation in gated mode or encoder mode).

CC1NP = 1, CC1P = 1: non-inverted/both edges/ The circuit is sensitive to both TIxFP1 rising and falling edges (capture or trigger operations in reset, external clock or trigger mode), TIxFP1 is not inverted (trigger operation in gated mode). This configuration must not be used in encoder mode.

CC1NP = 1, CC1P = 0: the configuration is reserved, it must not be used.

Note: This bit is not writable as soon as LOCK level 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: On channels having a complementary output, this bit is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the CC1P active bit takes the new value from the preloaded bit only when a Commutation event is generated.

Bit 0 CC1E : Capture/compare 1 output enable

0: Capture mode disabled / OC1 is not active (see below)

1: Capture mode enabled / OC1 signal is output on the corresponding output pin

When CC1 channel is configured as output , the OC1 level depends on MOE, OSSI, OSSR, OIS1, OIS1N and CC1NE bits, regardless of the CC1E bits state. Refer to Table 424 for details.

Note: On channels having a complementary output, this bit is preloaded. If the CCPC bit is set in the TIMx_CR2 register then the CC1E active bit takes the new value from the preloaded bit only when a Commutation event is generated.

Table 424. Output control bits for complementary tim_ocx and tim_ocxn channels with break feature

Control bitsOutput states (1)
MOE bitOSSI bitOSSR bitCCxE bitCCxNE bittim_ocx output statetim_ocxn output state
1XX00Output disabled (not driven by the timer: Hi-Z)
tim_ocx = 0, tim_ocxn = 0
001Output disabled (not driven by the timer: Hi-Z)
tim_ocx = 0
tim_ocxref + Polarity tim_ocxn
= tim_ocxref xor CCxNP
010tim_ocxref + Polarity
tim_ocx = tim_ocxref xor CCxP
Output Disabled (not driven by the timer: Hi-Z)
tim_ocxn = 0
X11OCREF + Polarity + dead-timeComplementary to OCREF (not OCREF) + Polarity + dead-time
101Off-State (output enabled with inactive state)
tim_ocx = CCxP
tim_ocxref + Polarity
tim_ocxn = tim_ocxref x or CCxNP
110tim_ocxref + Polarity
tim_ocx = tim_ocxref xor CCxP
Off-State (output enabled with inactive state)
tim_ocxn = CCxNP
00XXXOutput disabled (not driven by the timer: Hi-Z).
100
01Off-State (output enabled with inactive state)
Asynchronously: tim_ocx = CCxP, tim_ocxn = CCxNP (if tim_brk or tim_brk2 is triggered).

Then (this is valid only if tim_brk is triggered), if the clock is present: tim_ocx = OISx and tim_ocxn = OISxN after a dead-time, assuming that OISx and OISxN do not correspond to OCX and tim_ocxn both in active state (may cause a short circuit when driving switches in half-bridge configuration).
Note: tim_brk2 can only be used if OSSI = OSSR = 1.
10
11
  1. 1. When both outputs of a channel are not used (control taken over by GPIO), the OISx, OISxN, CCxP and CCxNP bits must be kept cleared.

Note: The state of the external I/O pins connected to the complementary tim_ocx and tim_ocxn channels depends on the tim_ocx and tim_ocxn channel state and the GPIO registers.

41.6.12 TIM1 counter (TIM1_CNT)

Address offset: 0x024

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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UIF
CPY
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.
r
1514131211109876543210
CNT[15:0]
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Bit 31 UIFCPY : UIF copy

This bit is a read-only copy of the UIF bit of the TIMx_ISR register. If the UIFREMAP bit in the TIMxCR1 is reset, bit 31 is reserved and read at 0.

Bits 30:16 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 15:0 CNT[15:0] : Counter value

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the counter value.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register only holds the non-dithered part in CNT[15:0]. The fractional part is not available.

41.6.13 TIM1 prescaler (TIM1_PSC)

Address offset: 0x028

Reset value: 0x0000

1514131211109876543210
PSC[15:0]
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Bits 15:0 PSC[15:0] : Prescaler value

The counter clock frequency ( \( f_{tim\_cnt\_ck} \) ) is equal to \( f_{tim\_psc\_ck} / (PSC[15:0] + 1) \) .

PSC contains the value to be loaded in the active prescaler register at each update event (including when the counter is cleared through UG bit of TIMx_EGR register or through trigger controller when configured in “reset mode”).

41.6.14 TIM1 autoreload register (TIM1_ARR)

Address offset: 0x02C

Reset value: 0x0000 FFFF

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.ARR[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
ARR[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 ARR[19:0] : Autoreload value

ARR is the value to be loaded in the actual autoreload register.

Refer to the Section 41.3.3: Time-base unit for more details about ARR update and behavior.

The counter is blocked while the autoreload value is null.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the autoreload value.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in ARR[19:4]. The ARR[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

41.6.15 TIM1 repetition counter register (TIM1_RCR)

Address offset: 0x030

Reset value: 0x0000

1514131211109876543210
REP[15:0]
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Bits 15:0 REP[15:0] : Repetition counter reload value

This bitfield defines the update rate of the compare registers (i.e. periodic transfers from preload to active registers) when preload registers are enable. It also defines the update interrupt generation rate, if this interrupt is enable.

When the repetition down-counter reaches zero, an update event is generated and it restarts counting from REP value. As the repetition counter is reloaded with REP value only at the repetition update event UEV, any write to the TIMx_RCR register is not taken in account until the next repetition update event.

It means in PWM mode (REP+1) corresponds to:

41.6.16 TIM1 capture/compare register 1 (TIM1_CCR1)

Address offset: 0x034

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR1[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR1[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR1[19:0] : Capture/compare 1 value

If channel CC1 is configured as output: CCR1 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 1 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR1 register (bit OC1PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 1 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signaled on tim_oc1 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR1[15:0]. The CCR1[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR1[19:4]. The CCR1[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

If channel CC1 is configured as input: CR1 is the counter value transferred by the last input capture 1 event (tim_ic1). The TIMx_CCR1 register is read-only and cannot be programmed.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the capture value in CCR1[15:0]. The CCR1[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the capture in CCR1[19:4]. The CCR1[3:0] bits are reset.

41.6.17 TIM1 capture/compare register 2 (TIM1_CCR2)

Address offset: 0x038

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR2[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR2[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR2[19:0] : Capture/compare 2 value

If channel CC2 is configured as output: CCR2 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 2 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR1 register (bit OC2PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 2 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signaled on tim_oc2 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR2[15:0]. The CCR2[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR2[19:4]. The CCR2[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

If channel CC2 is configured as input: CCR2 is the counter value transferred by the last input capture 2 event (tim_ic2). The TIMx_CCR2 register is read-only and cannot be programmed.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the capture value in CCR2[15:0]. The CCR2[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the capture in CCR2[19:4]. The CCR2[3:0] bits are reset.

41.6.18 TIM1 capture/compare register 3 (TIM1_CCR3)

Address offset: 0x03C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR3[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR3[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR3[19:0] : Capture/compare value

If channel CC3 is configured as output: CCR3 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 3 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR2 register (bit OC3PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 3 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signaled on tim_oc3 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR3[15:0]. The CCR3[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR3[19:4]. The CCR3[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

If channel CC3 is configured as input: CCR3 is the counter value transferred by the last input capture 3 event (tim_ic3). The TIMx_CCR3 register is read-only and cannot be programmed.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the capture value in CCR3[15:0]. The CCR3[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the capture in CCR3[19:4]. The CCR3[3:0] bits are reset.

41.6.19 TIM1 capture/compare register 4 (TIM1_CCR4)

Address offset: 0x040

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR4[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR4[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR4[19:0] : Capture/compare value

If channel CC4 is configured as output: CCR4 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 4 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR2 register (bit OC4PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 4 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signalled on tim_oc4 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR4[15:0]. The CCR4[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR4[19:4]. The CCR4[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

If channel CC4 is configured as input: CCR4 is the counter value transferred by the last input capture 4 event (tim_ic4). The TIMx_CCR4 register is read-only and cannot be programmed.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the capture value in CCR4[15:0]. The CCR4[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the capture in CCR4[19:4]. The CCR4[3:0] bits are reset.

41.6.20 TIM1 break and dead-time register (TIM1_BDTR)

Address offset: 0x044

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

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Res.Res.BK2BIDBKBIDBK2
DSRM
BK
DSRM
BK2PBK2EBK2F[3:0]BKF[3:0]
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1514131211109876543210
MOEAOEBKPBKEOSSROSSILOCK[1:0]DTG[7:0]
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Note: As the bits BKBID/BK2BID/BK2P, BK2E, BK2F[3:0], BKF[3:0], AOE, BKP, BKE, OSSI, OSSR, and DTG[7:0] can be write-locked depending on the LOCK configuration, it can be necessary to configure all of them during the first write access to the TIMx_BDTR register.

Bits 31:30 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 29 BK2BID : Break2 bidirectional

Refer to BKBID description

Bit 28 BKBID : Break bidirectional

0: Break input tim_brk in input mode

1: Break input tim_brk in bidirectional mode

In the bidirectional mode (BKBID bit set to 1), the break input is configured both in input mode and in open drain output mode. Any active break event asserts a low logic level on the Break input to indicate an internal break event to external devices.

Note: This bit cannot be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bit 27 BK2DSRM : Break2 disarm

Refer to BKDSRM description

Bit 26 BKDSRM : Break disarm

0: Break input tim_brk is armed

1: Break input tim_brk is disarmed

This bit is cleared by hardware when no break source is active.

The BKDSRM bit must be set by software to release the bidirectional output control (open-drain output in Hi-Z state) and then be polled it until it is reset by hardware, indicating that the fault condition has disappeared.

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bit 25 BK2P : Break 2 polarity

0: Break input tim_brk2 is active low

1: Break input tim_brk2 is active high

Note: This bit cannot be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bit 24 BK2E : Break 2 enable

This bit enables the complete break 2 protection, see Figure 444: Break and Break2 circuitry overview .

0: Break2 function disabled

1: Break2 function enabled

Note: The BRKIN2 must only be used with OSSR = OSSI = 1.

Note: This bit cannot be modified when LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bits 23:20 BK2F[3:0] : Break 2 filter

This bitfield defines the frequency used to sample tim_brk2 input and the length of the digital filter applied to tim_brk2. The digital filter is made of an event counter in which N consecutive events are needed to validate a transition on the output:

Note: This bit cannot be modified when LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bits 19:16 BKF[3:0] : Break filter

This bitfield defines the frequency used to sample tim_brk input and the length of the digital filter applied to tim_brk. The digital filter is made of an event counter in which N consecutive events are needed to validate a transition on the output:

Note: This bit cannot be modified when LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 15 MOE: Main output enable

This bit is cleared asynchronously by hardware as soon as one of the break inputs is active (tim_brk or tim_brk2). It is set by software or automatically depending on the AOE bit. It is acting only on the channels which are configured in output.

0: In response to a break 2 event. OC and OCN outputs are disabled

In response to a break event or if MOE is written to 0: OC and OCN outputs are disabled or forced to idle state depending on the OSSI bit.

1: OC and OCN outputs are enabled if their respective enable bits are set (CCxE, CCxNE in TIMx_CCER register).

See OC/OCN enable description for more details ( Section 41.6.11: TIM1 capture/compare enable register (TIM1_CCER) ).

Bit 14 AOE: Automatic output enable

0: MOE can be set only by software

1: MOE can be set by software or automatically at the next update event (if none of the break inputs tim_brk and tim_brk2 is active)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 13 BKP: Break polarity

0: Break input tim_brk is active low

1: Break input tim_brk is active high

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bit 12 BKE: Break enable

This bit enables the complete break protection (including all sources connected to tim_sys_brk and BKIN sources, as per Figure 444: Break and Break2 circuitry overview ).

0: Break function disabled

1: Break function enabled

Note: This bit cannot be modified when LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Any write operation to this bit takes a delay of 1 APB clock cycle to become effective.

Bit 11 OSSR: Off-state selection for Run mode

This bit is used when MOE = 1 on channels having a complementary output which are configured as outputs. OSSR is not implemented if no complementary output is implemented in the timer.

See OC/OCN enable description for more details ( Section 41.6.11: TIM1 capture/compare enable register (TIM1_CCER) ).

0: When inactive, OC/OCN outputs are disabled (the timer releases the output control which is taken over by the GPIO logic, which forces a Hi-Z state).

1: When inactive, OC/OCN outputs are enabled with their inactive level as soon as CCxE = 1 or CCxNE = 1 (the output is still controlled by the timer).

Note: This bit can not be modified as soon as the LOCK level 2 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 10 OSSI : Off-state selection for idle mode

This bit is used when MOE = 0 due to a break event or by a software write, on channels configured as outputs.
See OC/OCN enable description for more details ( Section 41.6.11: TIM1 capture/compare enable register (TIM1_CCER) ).

0: When inactive, OC/OCN outputs are disabled (the timer releases the output control which is taken over by the GPIO logic and which imposes a Hi-Z state).
1: When inactive, OC/OCN outputs are first forced with their inactive level then forced to their idle level after the deadtime. The timer maintains its control over the output.

Note: This bit can not be modified as soon as the LOCK level 2 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bits 9:8 LOCK[1:0] : Lock configuration

These bits offer a write protection against software errors.
00: LOCK OFF - No bit is write protected.
01: LOCK Level 1 = DTG bits in TIMx_BDTR register, OISx and OISxN bits in TIMx_CR2 register and BKBID/BK2BID/BKE/BKP/AOE bits in TIMx_BDTR register can no longer be written.
10: LOCK Level 2 = LOCK Level 1 + CC Polarity bits (CCxP/CCxNP bits in TIMx_CCER register, as long as the related channel is configured in output through the CCxS bits) as well as OSSR and OSSI bits can no longer be written.
11: LOCK Level 3 = LOCK Level 2 + CC Control bits (OCxM and OCxPE bits in TIMx_CCMRx registers, as long as the related channel is configured in output through the CCxS bits) can no longer be written.

Note: The LOCK bits can be written only once after the reset. Once the TIMx_BDTR register has been written, their content is frozen until the next reset.

Bits 7:0 DTG[7:0] : Dead-time generator setup

This bitfield defines the duration of the dead-time inserted between the complementary outputs. DT correspond to this duration.
DTG[7:5] = 0xx => DT = DTG[7:0]x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( t_{dtg} = t_{DTS} \) .
DTG[7:5] = 10x => DT = (64+DTG[5:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 2xt_{DTS} \) .
DTG[7:5] = 110 => DT = (32+DTG[4:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 8xt_{DTS} \) .
DTG[7:5] = 111 => DT = (32+DTG[4:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 16xt_{DTS} \) .
Example if \( T_{DTS} = 125 \) ns (8 MHz), dead-time possible values are:
0 to 15875 ns by 125 ns steps,
16 µs to 31750 ns by 250 ns steps,
32 µs to 63 µs by 1 µs steps,
64 µs to 126 µs by 2 µs steps

Note: This bitfield can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

41.6.21 TIM1 capture/compare register 5 (TIM1_CCR5)

Address offset: 0x048

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
GC5C3GC5C2GC5C1Res.Res.Res.CCR5[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR5[15:0]
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Bit 31 GC5C3 : Group channel 5 and channel 3

Distortion on channel 3 output:

0: No effect of tim_oc5ref on tim_oc3refc

1: tim_oc3refc is the logical AND of tim_oc3ref and tim_oc5ref

This bit can either have immediate effect or be preloaded and taken into account after an update event (if preload feature is selected in TIMxCCMR2).

Note: it is also possible to apply this distortion on combined PWM signals.

Bit 30 GC5C2 : Group channel 5 and channel 2

Distortion on channel 2 output:

0: No effect of tim_oc5ref on tim_oc2refc

1: tim_oc2refc is the logical AND of tim_oc2ref and tim_oc5ref

This bit can either have immediate effect or be preloaded and taken into account after an update event (if preload feature is selected in TIMxCCMR1).

Note: it is also possible to apply this distortion on combined PWM signals.

Bit 29 GC5C1 : Group channel 5 and channel 1

Distortion on channel 1 output:

0: No effect of oc5ref on oc1refc

1: oc1refc is the logical AND of oc1ref and oc5ref

This bit can either have immediate effect or be preloaded and taken into account after an update event (if preload feature is selected in TIMxCCMR1).

Note: it is also possible to apply this distortion on combined PWM signals.

Bits 28:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR5[19:0] : Capture/compare 5 value

CCR5 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 5 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR3 register (bit OC5PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 5 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signaled on tim_oc5 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR5[15:0]. The CCR5[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR5[19:4]. The CCR5[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

41.6.22 TIM1 capture/compare register 6 (TIM1_CCR6)

Address offset: 0x04C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR6[19:16]
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1514131211109876543210
CCR6[15:0]
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Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:0 CCR6[19:0] : Capture/compare 6 value

CCR6 is the value to be loaded in the actual capture/compare 6 register (preload value).

It is loaded permanently if the preload feature is not selected in the TIMx_CCMR3 register (bit OC6PE). Else the preload value is copied in the active capture/compare 6 register when an update event occurs.

The active capture/compare register contains the value to be compared to the counter TIMx_CNT and signaled on tim_oc6 output.

Non-dithering mode (DITHEN = 0)

The register holds the compare value in CCR6[15:0]. The CCR6[19:16] bits are reset.

Dithering mode (DITHEN = 1)

The register holds the integer part in CCR6[19:4]. The CCR6[3:0] bitfield contains the dithered part.

41.6.23 TIM1 capture/compare mode register 3 (TIM1_CCMR3)

Address offset: 0x050

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

Refer to the above CCMR1 register description. Channels 5 and 6 can only be configured in output.

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC6M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC5M[3]
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1514131211109876543210
OC6CEOC6M[2:0]OC6PEOC6FERes.Res.OC5CEOC5M[2:0]OC5PEOC5FERes.Res.
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Bits 31:25 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 23:17 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 15 OC6CE : Output compare 6 clear enable

Bits 24, 14:12 OC6M[3:0] : Output compare 6 mode

Bit 11 OC6PE : Output compare 6 preload enable

Bit 10 OC6FE : Output compare 6 fast enable

Bits 9:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 7 OC5CE : Output compare 5 clear enable

Bits 16, 6:4 OC5M[3:0] : Output compare 5 mode

Bit 3 OC5PE : Output compare 5 preload enable

Bit 2 OC5FE : Output compare 5 fast enable

Bits 1:0 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

41.6.24 TIM1 timer deadtime register 2 (TIM1_DTR2)

Address offset: 0x054

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DTPEDTAE
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1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DTGF[7:0]
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Bits 31:18 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 17 DTPE : Deadtime preload enableNote: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register). Bit 16 DTAE : Deadtime asymmetric enableNote: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bits 15:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 7:0 DTGF[7:0] : Dead-time falling edge generator setup

This bitfield defines the duration of the dead-time inserted between the complementary outputs, on the falling edge.

DTGF[7:5] = 0xx => DTF = DTGF[7:0]x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( t_{dtg} = t_{DTS} \) .
DTGF[7:5] = 10x => DTF = (64+DTGF[5:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 2 \times t_{DTS} \) .
DTGF[7:5] = 110 => DTF = (32+DTGF[4:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 8 \times t_{DTS} \) .
DTGF[7:5] = 111 => DTF = (32+DTGF[4:0])x \( t_{dtg} \) with \( T_{dtg} = 16 \times t_{DTS} \) .
Example if \( T_{DTS} = 125 \) ns (8 MHz), dead-time possible values are:
0 to 15875 ns by 125 ns steps,
16 \( \mu \) s to 31750 ns by 250 ns steps,
32 \( \mu \) s to 63 \( \mu \) s by 1 \( \mu \) s steps,
64 \( \mu \) s to 126 \( \mu \) s by 2 \( \mu \) s steps
Note: This bitfield can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1, 2 or 3 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

41.6.25 TIM1 timer encoder control register (TIM1_ECR)

Address offset: 0x058

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.PWPRSC[2:0]PW[7:0]
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.IPOS[1:0]FIDXIBLK[1:0]IDIR[1:0]IE
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Bits 31:27 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 26:24 PWPRSC[2:0] : Pulse width prescaler

This bitfield sets the clock prescaler for the pulse generator, as following:

\[ t_{PWG} = (2^{(PWPRSC[2:0])}) \times t_{tim\_ker\_ck} \]

Bits 23:16 PW[7:0] : Pulse width

This bitfield defines the pulse duration, as following:

\[ t_{PW} = PW[7:0] \times t_{PWG} \]

Bits 15:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 7:6 IPOS[1:0] : Index positioning

In quadrature encoder mode (SMS[3:0] = 0001, 0010, 0011, 1110, 1111), this bit indicates in which AB input configuration the Index event resets the counter.

00: Index resets the counter when AB = 00

01: Index resets the counter when AB = 01

10: Index resets the counter when AB = 10

11: Index resets the counter when AB = 11

In directional clock mode or clock plus direction mode (SMS[3:0] = 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101), these bits indicates on which level the Index event resets the counter. In bidirectional clock mode, this applies for both clock inputs.

x0: Index resets the counter when clock is 0

x1: Index resets the counter when clock is 1

Note: IPOS[1] bit is not significant

Bit 5 FIDX : First index

This bit indicates if the first index only is taken into account

0: Index is always active

1: the first Index only resets the counter

Bits 4:3 IBLK[1:0] : Index blanking

This bit indicates if the Index event is conditioned by the tim_ti3 or tim_ti4 input

Bits 2:1 IDIR[1:0] : Index direction

This bit indicates in which direction the Index event resets the counter.

Bit 0 IE : Index enable

This bit indicates if the Index event resets the counter.

41.6.26 TIM1 timer input selection register (TIM1_TISEL)

Address offset: 0x05C

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.TI4SEL[3:0]Res.Res.Res.Res.TI3SEL[3:0]
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1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.Res.Res.TI2SEL[3:0]Res.Res.Res.Res.TI1SEL[3:0]
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Bits 31:28 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 27:24 TI4SEL[3:0] : Selects tim_ti4[15:0] input

...

1111: tim_ti4_in15

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for interconnects list.

Bits 23:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:16 TI3SEL[3:0] : Selects tim_ti3[15:0] input

...

1111: tim_ti3_in15

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for interconnects list.

Bits 15:12 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 11:8 TI2SEL[3:0] : Selects tim_ti2[15:0] input

0000: tim_ti2_in0: TIMx_CH2

0001: tim_ti2_in1

...

1111: tim_ti2_in15

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for interconnects list.

Bits 7:4 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 3:0 TI1SEL[3:0] : Selects tim_ti1[15:0] input

0000: tim_ti1_in0: TIMx_CH1

0001: tim_ti1_in1

...

1111: tim_ti1_in15

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for interconnects list.

41.6.27 TIM1 alternate function option register 1 (TIM1_AF1)

Address offset: 0x060

Reset value: 0x0000 0001

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.ETRSEL[3:2]
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1514131211109876543210
ETRSEL[1:0]BK
CMP4P
BK
CMP3P
BK
CMP2P
BK
CMP1P
BKINPBK
CMP8E
BK
CMP7E
BK
CMP6E
BK
CMP5E
BK
CMP4E
BK
CMP3E
BK
CMP2E
BK
CMP1E
BKINE
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:18 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 17:14 ETRSEL[3:0] : etr_in source selection

These bits select the etr_in input source.

0000: tim_etr0: TIMx_ETR input

0001: tim_etr1

...

1111: tim_etr15

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for product specific implementation.

Note: These bits can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 13 BKCM4P : tim_brk_cmp4 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk_cmp4 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BKP polarity bit.

0: tim_brk_cmp4 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BKP = 0, active high if BKP = 1)

1: tim_brk_cmp4 input polarity is inverted (active high if BKP = 0, active low if BKP = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 12 BKCMP3P : tim_brk_cmp3 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk_cmp3 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BKP polarity bit.

0: tim_brk_cmp3 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BKP = 0, active high if BKP = 1)

1: tim_brk_cmp3 input polarity is inverted (active high if BKP = 0, active low if BKP = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 11 BKCMP2P : tim_brk_cmp2 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk_cmp2 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BKP polarity bit.

0: tim_brk_cmp2 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BKP = 0, active high if BKP = 1)

1: tim_brk_cmp2 input polarity is inverted (active high if BKP = 0, active low if BKP = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 10 BKCMP1P : tim_brk_cmp1 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk_cmp1 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BKP polarity bit.

0: tim_brk_cmp1 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BKP = 0, active high if BKP = 1)

1: tim_brk_cmp1 input polarity is inverted (active high if BKP = 0, active low if BKP = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 9 BKINP : TIMx_BKIN input polarity

This bit selects the TIMx_BKIN alternate function input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BKP polarity bit.

0: TIMx_BKIN input polarity is not inverted (active low if BKP = 0, active high if BKP = 1)

1: TIMx_BKIN input polarity is inverted (active high if BKP = 0, active low if BKP = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 8 BKCMP8E : tim_brk_cmp8 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp8 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp8 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp8 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp8 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 7 BKCMP7E : tim_brk_cmp7 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp7 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp7 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp7 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp7 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 6 BKCMP6E : tim_brk_cmp6 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp6 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp6 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp6 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp6 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 5 BKCMP5E : tim_brk_cmp5 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp5 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp5 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp5 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp5 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 4 BKCMP4E : tim_brk_cmp4 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp4 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp4 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp4 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp4 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 3 BKCMP3E : tim_brk_cmp3 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp3 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp3 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp3 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp3 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 2 BKCMP2E : tim_brk_cmp2 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp2 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp2 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp2 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp2 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 1 BKCMP1E : tim_brk_cmp1 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk_cmp1 for the timer's tim_brk input. tim_brk_cmp1 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: tim_brk_cmp1 input disabled

1: tim_brk_cmp1 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 0 BKINE : TIMx_BKIN input enable

This bit enables the TIMx_BKIN alternate function input for the timer's tim_brk input. TIMx_BKIN input is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk sources.

0: TIMx_BKIN input disabled

1: TIMx_BKIN input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for product specific implementation.

41.6.28 TIM1 alternate function register 2 (TIM1_AF2)

Address offset: 0x064

Reset value: 0x0000 0001

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OCRSEL[2:0]
rwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.BK2C
MP4P
BK2C
MP3P
BK2C
MP2P
BK2C
MP1P
BK2IN
P
BK2CM
P8E
BK2C
MP7E
BK2C
MP6E
BK2C
MP5E
BK2C
MP4E
BK2CMP
3E
BK2CMP
2E
BK2CM
P1E
BK2INE
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:19 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 18:16 OCRSEL[2:0] : ocref_clr source selection

These bits select the ocref_clr input source.

000: tim_ocref_clr0

001: tim_ocref_clr1

...

111: tim_ocref_clr7

Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for product specific information. Note: These bits can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bits 15:14 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bit 13 BK2CMP4P : tim_brk2_cmp4 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk2_cmp4 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BK2P polarity bit.

0: tim_brk2_cmp4 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BK2P = 0, active high if BK2P = 1)

1: tim_brk2_cmp4 input polarity is inverted (active high if BK2P = 0, active low if BK2P = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register). Bit 12 BK2CMP3P : tim_brk2_cmp3 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk2_cmp3 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BK2P polarity bit.

0: tim_brk2_cmp3 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BK2P = 0, active high if BK2P = 1)

1: tim_brk2_cmp3 input polarity is inverted (active high if BK2P = 0, active low if BK2P = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register). Bit 11 BK2CMP2P : tim_brk2_cmp2 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk2_cmp2 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BK2P polarity bit.

0: tim_brk2_cmp2 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BK2P = 0, active high if BK2P = 1)

1: tim_brk2_cmp2 input polarity is inverted (active high if BK2P = 0, active low if BK2P = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register). Bit 10 BK2CMP1P : tim_brk2_cmp1 input polarity

This bit selects the tim_brk2_cmp1 input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BK2P polarity bit.

0: tim_brk2_cmp1 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BK2P = 0, active high if BK2P = 1)

1: tim_brk2_cmp1 input polarity is inverted (active high if BK2P = 0, active low if BK2P = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 9 BK2INP : TIMx_BKIN2 input polarity

This bit selects the TIMx_BKIN2 alternate function input sensitivity. It must be programmed together with the BK2P polarity bit.

0: TIMx_BKIN2 input polarity is not inverted (active low if BK2P = 0, active high if BK2P = 1)

1: TIMx_BKIN2 input polarity is inverted (active high if BK2P = 0, active low if BK2P = 1)

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 8 BK2CMP8E : tim_brk2_cmp8 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp8 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp8 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp8 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp8 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 7 BK2CMP7E : tim_brk2_cmp7 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp7 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp7 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp7 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp7 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 6 BK2CMP6E : tim_brk2_cmp6 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp6 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp6 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp6 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp6 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 5 BK2CMP5E : tim_brk2_cmp5 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp5 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp5 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp5 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp5 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 4 BK2CMP4E : tim_brk2_cmp4 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp4 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp4 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp4 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp4 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 3 BK2CMP3E : tim_brk2_cmp3 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp3 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp3 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp3 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp3 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 2 BK2CMP2E : tim_brk2_cmp2 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp2 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp2 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp2 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp2 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 1 BK2CMP1E : tim_brk2_cmp1 enable

This bit enables the tim_brk2_cmp1 for the timer's tim_brk2 input. tim_brk2_cmp1 output is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: tim_brk2_cmp1 input disabled

1: tim_brk2_cmp1 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Bit 0 BK2INE : TIMx_BKIN2 input enable

This bit enables the TIMx_BKIN2 alternate function input for the timer's tim_brk2 input.

TIMx_BKIN2 input is 'ORed' with the other tim_brk2 sources.

0: TIMx_BKIN2 input disabled

1: TIMx_BKIN2 input enabled

Note: This bit can not be modified as long as LOCK level 1 has been programmed (LOCK bits in TIMx_BDTR register).

Note: Refer to Section 41.3.2: TIM1 pins and internal signals for product specific implementation.

41.6.29 TIM1 DMA control register (TIM1_DCR)

Address offset: 0x3DC

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DBSS[3:0]
rwrwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
Res.Res.Res.DBL[4:0]Res.Res.Res.DBA[4:0]
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:20 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 19:16 DBSS[3:0] : DMA burst source selection

This bitfield defines the interrupt source that triggers the DMA burst transfers (the timer recognizes a burst transfer when a read or a write access is done to the TIMx_DMAR address).

0000: Reserved

0001: Update

0010: CC1

0011: CC2

0100: CC3

0101: CC4

0110: COM

0111: Trigger

Others: reserved

Bits 15:13 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 12:8 DBL[4:0] : DMA burst length

This 5-bit vector defines the length of DMA transfers (the timer recognizes a burst transfer when a read or a write access is done to the TIMx_DMAR address), i.e. the number of transfers. Transfers can be in half-words or in bytes (see example below).

00000: 1 transfer

00001: 2 transfers

00010: 3 transfers

...

11010: 26 transfers

Example: Let us consider the following transfer: DBL = 7 bytes & DBA = TIM2_CR1.

–If DBL = 7 bytes and DBA = TIM2_CR1 represents the address of the byte to be transferred, the address of the transfer is given by the following equation:

(TIMx_CR1 address) + DBA + (DMA index), where DMA index = DBL

In this example, 7 bytes are added to (TIMx_CR1 address) + DBA, which gives us the address from/to which the data are copied. In this case, the transfer is done to 7 registers starting from the following address: (TIMx_CR1 address) + DBA

According to the configuration of the DMA Data Size, several cases may occur:

–If the DMA Data Size is configured in half-words, 16-bit data are transferred to each of the 7 registers.

–If the DMA Data Size is configured in bytes, the data are also transferred to 7 registers: the first register contains the first MSB byte, the second register, the first LSB byte and so on.

So with the transfer Timer, one also has to specify the size of data transferred by DMA.

Bits 7:5 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.

Bits 4:0 DBA[4:0] : DMA base address

This 5-bits vector defines the base-address for DMA transfers (when read/write access are done through the TIMx_DMAR address). DBA is defined as an offset starting from the address of the TIMx_CR1 register.

Example:

00000: TIMx_CR1

00001: TIMx_CR2

00010: TIMx_SMCR

...

41.6.30 TIM1 DMA address for full transfer (TIM1_DMAR)

Address offset: 0x3E0

Reset value: 0x0000 0000

31302928272625242322212019181716
DMAB[31:16]
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw
1514131211109876543210
DMAB[15:0]
rwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrwrw

Bits 31:0 DMAB[31:0] : DMA register for burst accesses

A read or write operation to the DMAR register accesses the register located at the address \( (\text{TIMx\_CR1 address}) + (\text{DBA} + \text{DMA index}) \times 4 \)

where TIMx_CR1 address is the address of the control register 1, DBA is the DMA base address configured in TIMx_DCR register, DMA index is automatically controlled by the DMA transfer, and ranges from 0 to DBL (DBL configured in TIMx_DCR).

41.6.31 TIM1 register map

TIM1 registers are mapped as 16-bit addressable registers as described in the table below:

Table 425. TIM1 register map and reset values

OffsetRegister name313029282726252423222120191817161514131211109876543210
0x000TIMx_CR1Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DITHENUIFREMARes.CKD [1:0]ARPECMS [1:0]DIROPMURSUDISCEN
000000000000
0x004TIMx_CR2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.MMS[3]Res.MMS2[3:0]Res.OIS6Res.OIS5OIS4NOIS4OIS3NOIS3OIS2NOIS2OIS1NOIS1TI1SMMS [2:0]CCDSCCUSRes.CCPC
0000000000000000000000
0x008TIMx_SMCRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.SMSPSSMSPERes.Res.TS [4:3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.SMS[3]ETPECEETP S [1:0]ETF[3:0]MSMTS[2:0]Res.SMS[2:0]
00000000000000000000
0x00CTIMx_DIERRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TERRIEIERRIEDIRIEIDXIERes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TDECOMDECC4DECC3DECC2DECC1DEUDEBIETIECOMIECC4IECC3IECC2IECC1IEUIE
0000000000000000000
0x010TIMx_SRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TERRFIERRFDIRFIDXFRes.Res.CC6IFCC5IFRes.Res.SBIFCC4OFCC3OFCC2OFCC1OFB2IFBIFTIFCOMIFCC4IFCC3IFCC2IFCC1IFUIF
000000000000000000000
0x014TIMx_EGRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.B2GBGTGCOMGCC4GCC3GCC2GCC1GUG
000000000
Table 425. TIM1 register map and reset values (continued)
OffsetRegister name313029282726252423222120191817161514131211109876543210
0x018TIMx_CCMR1
Input Capture mode
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.IC2F[3:0]IC2
PSC
[1:0]
CC2
S
[1:0]
IC1F[3:0]IC1
PSC
[1:0]
CC1
S
[1:0]
Reset value0000000000000000
TIMx_CCMR1
Output Compare mode
Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC2M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC1M[3]OC2CEOC2M
[2:0]
OC2PEOC2FECC2
S
[1:0]
OC1CEOC1M
[2:0]
OC1PEOC1FECC1
S
[1:0]
Reset value000000000000000000
0x01CTIMx_CCMR2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC4M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC3M[3]OC4CEOC4M
[2:0]
OC4PEOC4FECC4
S
[1:0]
OC3CEOC3M
[2:0]
OC3PEOC3FECC3
S
[1:0]
Reset value000000000000000000
TIMx_CCMR2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.IC4F[3:0]IC4
PSC
[1:0]
CC4
S
[1:0]
IC3F[3:0]IC3
PSC
[1:0]
CC3
S
[1:0]
Reset value0000000000000000
0x020TIMx_CCERRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CC6PCC6ERes.Res.CC5PCC5ECC4NPCC4NECC4PCC4ECC3NPCC3NECC3PCC3ECC2NPCC2NECC2PCC2ECC1NPCC1NECC1PCC1E
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x024TIMx_CNTUIFCPYRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CNT[15:0]
Reset value00000000000000000
0x028TIMx_PSCRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.PSC[15:0]
Reset value0000000000000000
0x02CTIMx_ARRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.ARR[19:0]
Reset value00001111111111111111
0x030TIMx_RCRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.REP[15:0]
Reset value0000000000000000
0x034TIMx_CCR1Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR1[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x038TIMx_CCR2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR2[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x03CTIMx_CCR3Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR3[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x040TIMx_CCR4Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR4[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x044TIMx_BDTRRes.Res.BK2BIDBKBIDBK2DSRMBKDSRMBK2PBK2EBK2F[3:0]BKF[3:0]MOEAOEBKPBKEOSSROSSILOCK
[1:0]
DT[7:0]
Reset value000000000000000000000000000000

Table 425. TIM1 register map and reset values (continued)

OffsetRegister name313029282726252423222120191817161514131211109876543210
0x048TIMx_CCR5GC5C3GC5C2GC5C1Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR5[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000000
0x04CTIMx_CCR6Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.CCR6[19:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000
0x050TIMx_CCMR3Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC6M[3]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OC5M[3]OC6CEOC6M [2:0]OC6PEOC6FERes.Res.OC5CEOC5M [2:0]OC5PEOC5FERes.Res.Res.Res.
Reset value0000000000000
0x054TIMx_DTR2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DTPEDTAERes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DTGF[7:0]
Reset value00000000000
0x058TIMx_ECRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.PWPRSC[2:0]PW[7:0]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.IPOS [1:0]FIDXIBLK [1:0]IDIR [1:0]IE
Reset value000000000000000000
0x05CTIMx_TISELRes.Res.Res.Res.TI4SEL[3:0]Res.Res.Res.Res.TI3SEL[3:0]Res.Res.Res.TI2SEL[3:0]Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.TI1SEL[3:0]
Reset value0000000000000000
0x060TIMx_AF1Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res ETRSEL [3:0]BK2CMP4PBK2CMP3PBK2CMP2PBK2CMP1PBK2INPBK2CMP8EBK2CMP7EBK2CMP6EBK2CMP5EBK2CMP4EBK2CMP3EBK2CMP2EBK2CMP1EBK2INE
Reset value00000000000000001
0x064TIMx_AF2Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.OCRSEL [2:0]Res.BK2CMP4PBK2CMP3PBK2CMP2PBK2CMP1PBK2INPBK2CMP8EBK2CMP7EBK2CMP6EBK2CMP5EBK2CMP4EBK2CMP3EBK2CMP2EBK2CMP1EBK2INE
Reset value00000000000000001
0x068..0x3D8ReservedRes.
0x3DCTIMx_DCRRes.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.Res.DBSS[3:0]Res.Res.DBL[4:0]Res.Res.Res.DBA[4:0]
Reset value000000000000000
0x3E0TIMx_DMARDMAB[31:0]
Reset value00000000000000000000000000000000

Refer to Section 2.3: Memory organization for the register boundary addresses.