VREFBUF internal peripheral
目录
Article purpose
The purpose of this article is to
- briefly introduce the VREFBUF peripheral and its main features
- indicate the level of security supported by this hardware block
- explain how each instance can be allocated to the three runtime contexts and linked to the corresponding software components
- explain, when needed, how to configure the VREFBUF peripheral.
Peripheral overview
The VREFBUF peripheral is an internal voltage regulator.
Features
The VREFBUF is supplied via the VDDA pin. When enabled, it can provide a reference voltage in the range of: 1,5V, 1,8V, 2,048V or 2,5V.
The VREFBUF can be used to provide an analog voltage reference for:
- ADC internal peripheral[1]
- DAC internal peripheral[2]
- External components through the dedicated VREF+ pin.
The VREFBUF can be left unused. In this case, an external voltage regulator can provide reference voltage to VREF+ pin.
Refer to the STM32MP15 reference manuals for the complete list of features, and to the software components, introduced below, to know which features are really implemented.
Security support
The VREFBUF is a non-secure peripheral.
Peripheral usage and associated software
Boot time
The VREFBUF is usually not used at boot time. But it may be needed by the SSBL (see Boot chain overview), to supply the internal ADC[1] for example.
Runtime
Overview
The VREFBUF can be allocated to the Arm® Cortex®-A7 non-secure to be used under Linux® with regulator framework[3].
The VREFBUF is a system resource[4] which needs to be also controlled by the resource manager[4] in case its consumers (e.g. ADC[1], DAC[2] or an external device connected to VREF+ pin) are spread across:
For this reason, the direct control of VREFBUF from the Arm® Cortex®-M4 is not recommended in STM32Cube[5] by default. |
The Peripheral assignment chapter describes which peripheral instance can be assigned to which context.
Software frameworks
Domain | Peripheral | Software frameworks | Comment | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cortex-A7 secure (OP-TEE) |
Cortex-A7 non-secure (Linux) |
Cortex-M4 (STM32Cube) |
|||
Analog | VREFBUF | Linux regulator framework |
Peripheral configuration
The configuration is applied by the firmware running in the context to which the peripheral is assigned. The configuration by itself can be performed via the STM32CubeMX tool for all internal peripherals. It can then be manually completed (especially for external peripherals) according to the information given in the corresponding software framework article.
- For the Linux kernel configuration, please refer to device internal regulator. An example can be found also in ADC DT configuration example
- In case the control of VREFBUF consumers are spread across the various cores, see also Resource manager for coprocessing
Peripheral assignment
Internal peripherals assignment table template
| rowspan="1" | Analog | rowspan="1" | VREFBUF | VREFBUF | | ☐ | | Assignment (single choice) |-
|}
References
- ↑ 1.01.11.2 ADC internal peripheral
- ↑ 2.02.1 DAC internal peripheral
- ↑ Regulator overview, Linux® regulator framework overview
- ↑ 4.04.1 Resource manager for coprocessing, focus on system resources
- ↑ STM32CubeMP1 architecture