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allenhuffman
Joined: 17 Jun 2019 Posts: 552 Location: Des Moines, Iowa, USA
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24EP256GP202 1ms timer1 running very slow |
Posted: Wed Jul 15, 2020 1:52 pm |
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I noticed an odd thing with our system today where a communication timeout was not shutting things down like it should.The code uses timer2 configured for 1ms (1000/s, ms timer) to increment a counter. On every comm activity, the timer is reset. If the timer reaches a timeout value, we shut things down.
But it wasn't happening.
After some investigation, I discovered out timer was going very, VERY slowly. Maybe 100th the speed. (ie counting to 10 took a second, rather than counting to 1000).
Using the PIC timer spreadsheet I made, I verified the values.
I compared with a web calculator for PIC24 I found.
I found a downloadable .exe PIC timer calculator and it also agreed.
But reality disagrees, and that's all that matters. If I've grabbed the right output, we have:
140MHz clock speed
Code: |
#define TIME_1_MS 0x222D // A one millisecond timer period at / 8
setup_timer2 (TMR_INTERNAL | TMR_DIV_BY_8, TIME_1_MS);
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Using:
freq = ((clock / 2) / prescale) / period
...to...
period = ((clock /2) / prescale) / frequency
period = ((140000000 / 2) / 8) / 1000
period = 8750
This is what the CCS PIC24 wizard gives me with the 140MHz value. This is what the website gave me. And this is what the .exe from MikroElectronika Timer Calculator gave me.
But in operation, if I just print out the values when they change, I see it count to 10 each second (approximately; I did not do any fine timing).
Does anyone know what I might want to check on my hardware that could impact how timers behave?
TIMER3 and TIMER4 seem to be operating as expected.
Thanks, much. (And I know the value we use is off by one, but that's what was in the code before I inherited so I expect it's close enough.) _________________ Allen C. Huffman, Sub-Etha Software (est. 1990) http://www.subethasoftware.com
Embedded C, Arduino, MSP430, ESP8266/32, BASIC Stamp and PIC24 programmer.
http://www.whywouldyouwanttodothat.com ? |
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newguy
Joined: 24 Jun 2004 Posts: 1908
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Posted: Wed Jul 15, 2020 6:31 pm |
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a) Does that timer have a postscaler?
and b) Dump the list file to see if timer 2 is being set correctly (i.e. timer's register values match what they should be given your settings). |
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Ttelmah
Joined: 11 Mar 2010 Posts: 19535
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Posted: Thu Jul 16, 2020 1:37 am |
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Old classic question. _WHAT COMPILER VERSION_....
Two possibilities basically exist:
1) Your code is changing something or doing something that results in this.
2) You have an old compiler version that sets something up wrong.
So, have just tried a really basic test with the ICD, and this:
Code: |
#include <mainclock.h>
#define TIME_1_MS 0x222D // A one millisecond timer period at / 8
unsigned int16 tickctr=0;
#INT_TIMER2
void tick(void)
{
tickctr++;
}
void main(void)
{
setup_timer2 (TMR_INTERNAL | TMR_DIV_BY_8, TIME_1_MS);
clear_interrupt(INT_TIMER2);
enable_interrupts(INT_TIMER2);
enable_interrupts(GLOBAL);
while(TRUE)
{
delay_cycles(1); //breakpoint here
delay_ms(10);
}
}
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Using the current compiler, merrily has 0, 10, 20.. in tickctr each time the
breakpoint is reached. So the interrupt timing is 'spot on'. |
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