Integration notes
This page describes how to integrate the Multiprotocol Service Layer (MPSL) into an application. The descriptions are valid for both RTOS and RTOS-free environments.
For the nRF53 Series, the requirements described are only relevant for applications running alongside the MPSL on the network processor. For the nRF54H Series, some peripherals in the global domain are reserved so the requirements described here are relevant for all processors.
Several peripherals are owned by MPSL and must not be accessed directly by the application. They are listed below, separated into instances that MPSL enables interrupts for, and ones it does not. See the Interrupt configuration section for more information on interrupts.
- For the nRF52 Series:
Interrupts:
RTC0
TIMER0
ECB
No interrupts:
RADIO
CLOCK
TEMP
PPI channels:
19
,30
,31
- For the nRF53 Series:
Interrupts:
RTC0
TIMER0
TIMER1
ECB
No interrupts:
RADIO
CLOCK
TEMP
DPPI channels:
0
,1
,2
- For the nRF54H Series:
Interrupts:
GRTC
channels8
to12
, interruptGRTC_2_IRQn
TIMER020
TIMER021
ECB030
No interrupts:
RADIO
DPPIC020
channel0
DPPIC130
channel0
DPPIC132
channel0
IPCT130
channel0
- For the nRF54L Series:
Interrupts:
GRTC
channels7
to11
, interruptGRTC_3_IRQn
TIMER10
TIMER20
ECB00
No interrupts:
RADIO
CLOCK
TEMP
DPPIC10
channel0
PPIB21
channel0
PPIB11
channel0
Note
These peripherals can be used freely when MPSL is not initialized. Additional peripheral requirements may be set by the protocol stacks in use.
The mentioned resources related to RADIO
and TIMER
can be accessed directly using the Timeslot feature.
Limited access to some of these peripherals is provided through the following APIs:
ECB
throughmpsl_ecb.h
CLOCK
throughmpsl_clock.h
TEMP
throughmpsl_temp.h
Thread and interrupt safety
The MPSL library is not reentrant. For thread-safe operation, see the Interrupt configuration and Scheduling sections.
Interrupt configuration
MPSL enables interrupts for the reserved instances, as well as for POWER_CLOCK
and low_prio_irq
.
The application must enable and configure all the other interrupts.
If the Timeslot API is used for RADIO
access, the application is responsible for enabling and disabling the interrupt for RADIO
.
The application must configure interrupts for priority level 0
( MPSL_HIGH_IRQ_PRIORITY
) for RADIO
and the reserved instances that have interrupts.
The following interrupts do not have real-time requirements:
POWER_CLOCK
It is up to the application to forward any clock-related events toMPSL_IRQ_CLOCK_Handler()
in lower priority. Irrelevant events are ignored, so the application is free to forward all events for thePOWER_CLOCK
interrupt.
low_prio_irq
Low-priority work is signaled by MPSL by adding the IRQ specified in thelow_prio_irq
argument tompsl_init()
. When this interrupt is triggered,mpsl_low_priority_process()
should be called as soon as possible (at least within a couple of ms). The application should configure this interrupt priority lower thanMPSL_HIGH_IRQ_PRIORITY
level (namely, a higher numerical value). The interrupt is enabled withmpsl_init()
and disabled withmpsl_uninit()
by MPSL. The interrupt is selected using theCONFIG_MPSL_LOW_PRIO_IRQN
Kconfig option. This Kconfig option can be used to resolve conflicts with other software modules and should be left to the default value if possible.
Scheduling
The interaction of the MPSL library with protocol stacks is designed to run at two interrupt priority levels: one for the high-priority handlers, and one for the low-priority handler. The interaction of the MPSL library with the application happens in the thread context and in the low-priority handler.
High priority
The high-priority handlers are mostly used for timing-critical operations related to radio or scheduling. Interrupting or delaying these handlers leads to undefined behavior.
Low priority
Low priority is used for background tasks that are not directly tied to the radio or scheduling. These tasks are designed in such a way that they can be interrupted by high-priority code. The tasks are however not designed to be interrupted by other low-priority tasks. Therefore, make sure that only one MPSL API function is called from the application at any time.
All protocol stacks using MPSL must be synchronized (namely, not called concurrently) to avoid concurrent calls to MPSL functions.
Application must only call MPSL APIs from non-preemptible threads, or with interrupts disabled (namely, during initialization).
The
mpsl_low_priority_process()
function should only be called from thread context, namely, not directly from the software interrupt handler.Alternatively, you can use synchronization primitives to ensure that no MPSL functions are called at the same time.
Other priorities
MPSL initialization functions, like mpsl_init()
and mpsl_uninit()
, are not thread-safe.
Do not call them while, for example, a protocol timeslot is in progress.
This must be enforced by application and protocol stacks.
MPSL should be initialized before any protocol stack is enabled, and uninitialized after all protocol stacks have been disabled.
Architecture diagrams
The following image shows how the MPSL integrates into an RTOS-free environment.
The following image shows how the MPSL integrates into an RTOS.