Fix STM32L-Discovery clock setup - The X3 crystal is not fitted on the board

This commit is contained in:
Gregory Nutt 2013-05-20 12:17:34 -06:00
parent 55b2ed4485
commit bcf9bc0f41
2 changed files with 42 additions and 8 deletions

View File

@ -90,6 +90,12 @@
/* Bits 19-23: Reserved */
#define RCC_CR_PLLON (1 << 24) /* Bit 24: PLL enable */
#define RCC_CR_PLLRDY (1 << 25) /* Bit 25: PLL clock ready flag */
/* Bits 26-27: Reserved */
#define RCC_CR_CSSON (1 << 28) /* Bit 16: Clock security system enable */
#define RCC_CR_RTCPRE_SHIFT (29) /* Bits 29-30: RTC/LCD prescaler */
#define RCC_CR_RTCPRE_MASK (3 << RCC_CR_RTCPRE_SHIFT)
/* Bit 31: Reserved */
#define RCC_CR_RSTVAL 0x00000300
/* Internal clock sources calibration register */

View File

@ -67,6 +67,7 @@
static inline void rcc_reset(void)
{
#if 0 /* None of this is necessary if only called from power up */
uint32_t regval;
/* Make sure that all devices are out of reset */
@ -82,9 +83,14 @@ static inline void rcc_reset(void)
putreg32(0, STM32_RCC_APB1ENR); /* Disable APB1 Peripheral Clock */
/* Set the Internal clock sources calibration register to its reset value.
* MSI to the default frequency (nomially 2.097MHz), MSITRIM=0, HSITRIM=0x10 */
* MSI to the default frequency (nominally 2.097MHz), MSITRIM=0, HSITRIM=0x10.
* Preserve the factory HSICAL and MSICAL settings.
*/
putreg32(RCC_ICSR_RSTVAL, STM32_RCC_ICSCR);
regval = getreg32(STM32_RCC_ICSCR);
regval &= (RCC_ICSCR_HSICAL_MASK | RCC_ICSCR_MSICAL_MASK);
regval |= (RCC_ICSR_RSTVAL & ~(RCC_ICSCR_HSICAL_MASK | RCC_ICSCR_MSICAL_MASK));
putreg32(regval, STM32_RCC_ICSCR);
/* Enable the internal MSI */
@ -106,12 +112,12 @@ static inline void rcc_reset(void)
while ((getreg32(STM32_RCC_CFGR) & RCC_CFGR_SWS_MASK) != RCC_CFGR_SWS_MSI);
/* Now we can disable the alternative clock sources: HSE, HSI, and PLL. Also,
* reset the HSE bypass.
/* Now we can disable the alternative clock sources: HSE, HSI, PLL, CSS and RTCPRE. Also,
* reset the HSE bypass. This restores the RCC CR to its reset state.
*/
regval = getreg32(STM32_RCC_CR); /* Disable the HSE and the PLL */
regval &= ~(RCC_CR_HSION | RCC_CR_HSEON | RCC_CR_PLLON);
regval &= ~(RCC_CR_HSION | RCC_CR_HSEON | RCC_CR_PLLON | RCC_CR_CSSON | RCC_CR_RTCPRE_MASK);
putreg32(regval, STM32_RCC_CR);
regval = getreg32(STM32_RCC_CR); /* Reset HSEBYP bit */
@ -146,6 +152,7 @@ static inline void rcc_reset(void)
putreg32(regval, STM32_FLASH_ACR);
/* Check that 32-bit access is taken into account by reading FLASH_ACR */
#endif
}
/****************************************************************************
@ -483,19 +490,40 @@ static void stm32_stdclockconfig(void)
{
uint32_t regval;
/* If the PLL is using the HSE, or the HSE is the system clock */
/* First, enable the source clock only the PLL (via HSE or HSI), HSE, and HSI
* are supported in this implementation.
*/
#if (STM32_CFGR_PLLSRC == RCC_CFGR_PLLSRC) || (STM32_SYSCLK_SW == RCC_CFGR_SW_HSE)
/* Enable HSE clocking */
/* The PLL is using the HSE, or the HSE is the system clock. In either
* case, we need to enable HSE clocking.
*/
if (!stm32_rcc_enablehse())
{
/* In the case of a timeout starting the HSE, we really don't have a
* strategy. This is almost always a hardware failure or misconfiguration.
* strategy. This is almost always a hardware failure or
* misconfiguration (for example, if no crystal is fitted on the board.
*/
return;
}
#elif (STM32_CFGR_PLLSRC == 0) || (STM32_SYSCLK_SW == RCC_CFGR_SW_HSI)
/* The PLL is using the HSI, or the HSI is the system clock. In either
* case, we need to enable HSI clocking.
*/
regval = getreg32(STM32_RCC_CR); /* Enable the HSI */
regval |= RCC_CR_HSION;
putreg32(regval, STM32_RCC_CR);
/* Wait until the HSI clock is ready. Since this is an internal clock, no
* timeout is expected
*/
while ((getreg32(STM32_RCC_CR) & RCC_CR_HSIRDY) == 0);
#endif
/* Increasing the CPU frequency (in the same voltage range):