You can easily identify routed pins/peripherals in the package using
highlighting. By default, the current selection (pin/peripheral) is highlighted in the
Package view.
The pin/peripheral is highlighted by yellow border around it in the
Package view. If the highlighted pin/peripheral is selected, then it has a blue
border around it.
Red indicates that the pin has an error.
Green indicates that the pin is muxed or used.
Light gray indicates that the pin is available for mux, but is not muxed or
used.
Dark gray indicates that the pin/peripheral is dedicated. It is routed by
default and has no impact on generated code.
Figure 1. Highlighting and color coding
Figure 2. Pins conflicts
Package view
Click the peripheral or use the pop-up menu to highlight peripherals:
and all allocated pins (to selected peripheral).
or all available pins if nothing is allocated yet.
Click the pin or use the pop-up menu to highlight the pin and the
peripherals.
Click outside the package to cancel the highlight.
Peripherals / Pins view
The peripheral and pin behaves as described above.