Hi,
I have an application where I am recording from stereo PDM microphones for a short duration (~10sec) then storing this on an SD card, along with values from some environmental sensors.
Everything is working nicely, but I'd like to improve the power performance for instances where the device is running on battery power.
Most of the time in the app is spent waiting on the blocking i2s_channel_read function to return when the data is available in the DMA buffer. I'd love to use light sleep if it's an option.
I've read through the datasheets, but for the life of me can't tell whether both the I2S and DMA peripherals will remain active during light sleep, and if so, how to properly configure them so that they aren't clock gated.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
-Tim
ESP32-S3 - I2S during Light Sleep
Re: ESP32-S3 - I2S during Light Sleep
you can buffer incoming data in RAM before entering sleep mode and then process it after waking up.
Re: ESP32-S3 - I2S during Light Sleep
Unfortunately, that won't save any power, as what I'm wanting is to sleep during the 9sec PDM recording to DMA, when the processor is doing nothing.
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Re: ESP32-S3 - I2S during Light Sleep
There may be some combination of clock gating/'force PU' settings which could work, stopping only the CPU but nothing else. Light sleep however, among other things, clock-gates and powers down the internal RAM ("retention mode"), so DMA cannot work.
Probably the best you can do is to switch the CPU clock down to 80MHz while waiting for the I2S transfer.
I imagine that the CPU core alone, just waiting for an interrupt, doesn't contribute too much to the power consumption while RAM and much of the high-speed clocks (APB,...) are running anyway. (Anecdotally, on other µC's I found that the PLL would contribute significantly to the idle power (like, 100MHz/2 needing more power than 50MHz/1), which seems plausible for the S3 too when the PLL is ticking along at 480MHz with not much else going on.) With CPU_CLK at 80MHz, the PLL can run at 'only' 320MHz; better yet would be to run without the PLL, i.e. CPU_CLK = XTAL_CLK = 40MHz, which you could also try.
Probably the best you can do is to switch the CPU clock down to 80MHz while waiting for the I2S transfer.
I imagine that the CPU core alone, just waiting for an interrupt, doesn't contribute too much to the power consumption while RAM and much of the high-speed clocks (APB,...) are running anyway. (Anecdotally, on other µC's I found that the PLL would contribute significantly to the idle power (like, 100MHz/2 needing more power than 50MHz/1), which seems plausible for the S3 too when the PLL is ticking along at 480MHz with not much else going on.) With CPU_CLK at 80MHz, the PLL can run at 'only' 320MHz; better yet would be to run without the PLL, i.e. CPU_CLK = XTAL_CLK = 40MHz, which you could also try.
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