SPRADN4B October 2024 – September 2025 AM62P , AM62P-Q1
Availability of features listed in the comparison table are a function of shared IO pins, where IO signals associated with a number of the features are multiplexed to a limited number of pins. The recommendation is to use SysConfig-PinMux tool to assign signal functions to pins. The SysConfig-PinMux tool provides a better understanding of limitations associated with pin multiplexing.
Processor peripherals are timing closed using the IOs grouped as IOSETs. IOSETs are grouping of signals specific to an interface that are timing closed as a set. Any interface that has IOSETs is recommended to select all interface signals from the same IOSET. Some interface signals can be shared over multiple IOSETs. The valid combinations of pins for an IOSET supporting a specific peripheral are detailed in the SysConfig-PinMux tool.
Voltage Conflict:
Signals are grouped by functional IO domain, not by power domain. There is a possibility to encounter voltage conflict warnings with some peripheral IO configuration. The warning is to highlight difference between the preferred voltage and the configured voltage for IOs so custom board designer can take necessary action in case there is a real voltage conflict. The warning is most useful when grouping GPIO signals from different voltage domains since the current tool configuration only allows one preferred voltage per peripheral. Any peripheral that includes IOs (pins) with different voltages levels, a warning is shown. The warning is shown because the preferred voltage is a different level than the IO (pin) voltage (Example: Preferred voltage is 3.3V while the pin voltage is 1.8V). The warning can be suppressed as long as 1.8V is the intended voltage for selected IOs (pins). The indication of conflict is not a hardware issue or a tool bug, but a notification that the preferred voltage is different than IO (pin) voltage configured. The warning are there simply to highlight the conflict between preferred operating voltage and selected (configured) operating voltage. A long as you understand the reason for the conflict, the warnings can be suppressed.
For information on voltage conflict and IOSET, see the following FAQ: