SDAA194 November   2025 AM2431 , AM2432 , AM2434 , AM62P , AM6412 , AM6421 , AM6422 , AM6441 , AM6442

 

  1.   1
  2.   Abstract
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Introduction
    1. 1.1 SysConfig CodeGen Tool
  5. 2Getting Started Guide
    1. 2.1 How to Launch SysConfig (GUI and Command-Line)
    2. 2.2 Integration with CCS and Makefile builds
    3. 2.3 Location of SysConfig file in MCU SDK
      1. 2.3.1 Using Existing SysConfig File
      2. 2.3.2 Creating New SysConfig File
  6. 3Example Sysconfig in CCS
    1. 3.1 Example I2C Read
  7. 4Common Application Configuration
    1. 4.1 RAT Configuration
    2. 4.2 MPU Configuration
    3. 4.3 MMU Configuration
    4. 4.4 System Initialization
      1. 4.4.1 DPL Initialization
      2. 4.4.2 Clock Initialization
      3. 4.4.3 PinMux Configuration
      4. 4.4.4 Driver Initialization
      5. 4.4.5 Board Peripheral Initialization
  8. 5Output File
    1. 5.1 Files Generated by CodeGen Tool
      1. 5.1.1 Debugging and Troubleshooting
    2. 5.2 Version Mismatch
    3. 5.3 Resource Conflict
      1. 5.3.1 Pin Conflict
      2. 5.3.2 Module Instance Conflict
      3. 5.3.3 Multicore Resource Conflict
    4. 5.4 Unsupported Drivers
    5. 5.5 Use of Reserve Peripheral
  9. 6Disclaimers and Intended Use
  10. 7Summary
  11. 8References

Abstract

This application note explains the role of the SysConfig tool integration with MCU+SDK for AM243x, AM275x and AM6x devices. SysConfig simplifies bring-up by auto-generating source files for pin multiplexing, clock configuration, power domain configuration, driver configuration, board peripheral configuration, Region Address Translation (RAT), Memory Management Unit (MMU) and Memory Protection Unit (MPU) configuration.

The Application note also provides step-by-step guidance & example use cases and troubleshooting tips to help developers use SysConfig effectively with TI SOCs.