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Exception entry occurs when there is a pending exception with sufficient priority and either the processor is in thread mode or the new exception has a higher priority than the exception being handled, in which case the new exception preempts the original exception. When one exception preempts another, the exceptions are nested.
Sufficient priority means the exception has more priority than any limits set by the mask registers (see the PRIMASK, FAULTMASK, and BASEPRI registers). An exception with less priority than this is pending but is not handled by the processor. When the processor takes an exception, unless the exception is a tail-chained or a late-arriving exception, the processor pushes information onto the current stack. This operation is referred to as stacking, and the structure of eight data words is referred to as stack frame.
Figure 2-6 shows the Cortex®-M4 stack frame layout, which is similar to that of Armv7-M implementations without an FPU.
Figure 2-6 Exception Stack FrameImmediately after stacking, the stack pointer indicates the lowest address in the stack frame.
The stack frame includes the return address, which is the address of the next instruction in the interrupted program. This value is restored to the PC at exception return so that the interrupted program resumes.
In parallel with the stacking operation, the processor performs a vector fetch that reads the exception handler start address from the vector table. When stacking is complete, the processor starts executing the exception handler. At the same time, the processor writes an EXC_RETURN value to the LR, indicating which stack pointer corresponds to the stack frame and which operation mode the processor was in before the entry occurred.
If no higher-priority exception occurs during exception entry, the processor starts executing the exception handler and automatically changes the status of the corresponding pending interrupt to active.
If another higher-priority exception occurs during exception entry, known as late arrival, the processor starts executing the exception handler for this exception and does not change the pending status of the earlier exception