Texas Instruments MSP430x1xx User Manual
Page 61
RAM and Peripheral Organization
4-9
Memory
Table 4–1. Peripheral File Address Map—Word Modules
Address
Description
1F0h – 1FFh
Reserved
1E0h – 1EFh
Reserved
1D0h – 1DFH
Reserved
1C0h – 1CFH
Reserved
1B0h – 1BFH
Reserved
1A0h – 1AFH
ADC12 control and interrupt
190h – 19FH
Timer_B
180h – 18FH
Timer_B
170h – 17FH
Timer_A
160h – 16FH
Timer_A
150h – 15FH
ADC12 conversion
140h – 14FH
ADC12 conversion
130h – 13FH
Multiplier
120h – 12FH
Watchdog Timer, Flash control
110h – 11FH
Reserved
100h – 10FH
Reserved
4.4.2.2
Byte Modules
Byte modules are peripherals that are connected to the reduced (eight LSB)
MDB. Access to byte modules is always by byte instructions. The hardware
in the peripheral byte modules takes the low byte (the LSBs) during a write
operation.
Byte instructions operate on byte modules without any restrictions. Read
access to peripheral byte modules using word instructions results in
unpredictable data in the high byte. Word data is written into a byte module by
writing the low byte to the appropriate peripheral register and ignoring the high
byte.
The peripheral file address space is organized into sixteen frames as
described in Table 4–2.