SPRZ544C March   2023  – October 2025 AM62A1-Q1 , AM62A3 , AM62A3-Q1 , AM62A7 , AM62A7-Q1

 

  1.   1
  2. 1Usage Notes and Advisories Matrices
    1. 1.1 Devices Supported
  3. 2Silicon Usage Notes and Advisories
    1. 2.1 Silicon Usage Notes
      1.      i2351
      2.      i2330
      3.      i2372
      4.      i2424
    2. 2.2 Silicon Advisories
      1.      i2049
      2.      i2062
      3.      i2087
      4.      i2097
      5.      i2134
      6.      i2189
      7.      i2196
      8.      i2199
      9.      i2208
      10.      i2249
      11.      i2278
      12.      i2279
      13.      i2310
      14.      i2311
      15.      i2312
      16.      i2366
      17.      i2371
      18.      i2120
      19.      i2137
      20.      i2190
      21.      i2253
      22.      i2373
      23.      i2383
      24.      i2401
      25.      i2407
      26.      i2409
      27.      i2410
      28.      i2376
      29.      i2399
      30.      i2413
      31.      i2414
      32.      i2419
      33.      i2420
      34.      i2421
      35.      i2422
      36.      i2423
      37.      i2431
      38.      i2435
      39.      i2160
      40.      i2436
      41.      i2482
      42.      i2464
      43.      i2487
      44.      i2493
  4.   Trademarks
  5.   Revision History

i2399

C7x: CPU NLC Module Not Clearing State on Interrupt

Details:

Data corruption will occur when:

  1. An application is running that involves task switching. In this case there are at least 2 tasks that may use NLC.
  2. There is a NLCINIT issued that would be followed by a TICK when an interrupt comes in for Task A. This action ends up setting some internal state in the NLC module that says we need to reload the ILCNT_INIT value to ILCNT on the next TICK since the forwarded case it computed was flushed. This state is not being properly cleared when the interrupt is taken.
  3. The ISR performs a task switch to Task B, which is also running NLC code. The NLC code being returned to needs to be in-progress and have a different ILCNT_INIT value than the NLC loop in the original task.
  4. After returning from the ISR, the next TICK will end up setting ILCNT to the wrong value (ILCNT_INIT - 2) due to the corrupted state.

At this point the ILCNT is corrupted and the NLC loop will execute the wrong number of iterations, leading to data corruption.

Workaround(s):

Issue a NLCINIT (parameters don't matter and there's no need for TICK's/BNL afterwards) in ISR's as part of the context saving. There is no performance impact due to the work-around.