Hi,
In my first tests it appeared to be behaving strangely but in the end it appears to work well, this is what I think happens:
1) Each time the unit is powered up from a state of being totally without power that seems to trigger a complete RTC reset: the seconds and microseconds counters start from 0. Nothing wrong with that and it would be entirely logical but I would like to be sure that is the case.
2) I have also found that , while keeping the ESP32-WROVER module under permanent power, if I flash new software which ends with the "Hard resetting via RTS pin..." the RTC counters appear to be reset as well. There is nothing wrong with that but I have been unable to find any documentation that states it does so. Hence the question: is the observed behaviour exactly as it should behave?
3) Other than that I am wondering if there any other reasons that may trigger an RTC reset, assuming the module remains permanently battery powered, as it will be in our application. I assume there are not but again I would like to be sure.
Any help/info much appreciated.
What exactly will trigger an RTC reset ?
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Re: What exactly will trigger an RTC reset ?
Correction: further tests show that a hard reset sets the clock to value 0xFC3D9900 and not to 0 as I assumed.
That causes my software to detect the clock's EPOCH value is higher than 0x80000000 so it sets the EPOCH value to 01/01/2018 at 00:00:00.
The value of 0xFC3D9900 does not appear to be a random value as I can reproduce it each and every time.
Edit:
Yep, it is not a random value it is -63072000 which is used in my software to represent a reference EPOCH time of 1/1/2000 at 00:00:00 as if it were a Unix/Linux based epoch time of 01/01/1972 at 00:00:00 so the internal RTC counters are effectively reset to 0 whenever there is a reset.
In the mean time I have found all of the relevant information in section 3 of the "esp32_technical_reference_manuel_en.pdf file" which describes the complete unit's reset behaviour in great detail.
That causes my software to detect the clock's EPOCH value is higher than 0x80000000 so it sets the EPOCH value to 01/01/2018 at 00:00:00.
The value of 0xFC3D9900 does not appear to be a random value as I can reproduce it each and every time.
Edit:
Yep, it is not a random value it is -63072000 which is used in my software to represent a reference EPOCH time of 1/1/2000 at 00:00:00 as if it were a Unix/Linux based epoch time of 01/01/1972 at 00:00:00 so the internal RTC counters are effectively reset to 0 whenever there is a reset.
In the mean time I have found all of the relevant information in section 3 of the "esp32_technical_reference_manuel_en.pdf file" which describes the complete unit's reset behaviour in great detail.
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