26.1 Description
The Real-Time Clock (RTC) peripheral is designed for very low power consumption. For optimal functionality, the RTC requires an accurate external 32.768 kHz clock, which can be provided by a crystal oscillator.
It combines a complete time-of-day clock with alarm and a Gregorian calendar, complemented by a programmable periodic interrupt. The alarm and calendar registers are accessed by a 32-bit data bus.
The RTC can also be configured for the UTC time format.
The time and calendar values are coded in binary-coded decimal (BCD) format. The time format can be 24-hour mode or 12-hour mode with an AM/PM indicator.
Updating time and calendar fields and configuring the alarm fields are performed by a parallel capture on the 32-bit data bus. An entry control is performed to avoid loading registers with incompatible BCD format data or with an incompatible date according to the current month/year/century.
A clock divider calibration circuitry can be used to compensate for crystal oscillator frequency variations.
An RTC output can be programmed to generate several waveforms, including a prescaled clock derived from 32.768 kHz.
Timestamping capability reports the first and last occurrences of tamper events.