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EVAL-ADM1275EBZ Datasheet, PDF (29/48 Pages) Analog Devices – Hot-Swap Controller and Digital Power
Data Sheet
ADM1275
S
SLAVE ADDRESS
W A COMMAND CODE
A Sr SLAVE ADDRESS
RA
BYTE COUNT = N A
DATA BYTE 1
A
DATA BYTE 2
A
DATA BYTE N
AP
S
SLAVE ADDRESS
W A COMMAND CODE
A Sr SLAVE ADDRESS
RA
BYTE COUNT = N A
DATA BYTE 1
A
DATA BYTE 2
A
DATA BYTE N
A
PEC
MASTER TO SLAVE
SLAVE TO MASTER
Figure 64. Block Read and Block Read with PEC
AP
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
S DEVICE 1 ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE 1 A
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
A
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
Sr DEVICE 2 ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE 2 A
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
A
Sr DEVICE N ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE N A
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
AP
MASTER TO SLAVE
SLAVE TO MASTER
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
S DEVICE 1 ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE 1 A
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
A
PEC 1
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
Sr DEVICE 2 ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE 2 A
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
A
PEC 2
ONE OR MORE DATA BYTES
Sr DEVICE N ADDRESS W A COMMAND CODE N A
LOW DATA BYTE
A
HIGH DATA BYTE
A
PEC N
MASTER TO SLAVE
SLAVE TO MASTER
Figure 65. Group Command and Group Command with PEC
A
A
AP
GROUP COMMANDS
The PMBus standard defines what are known as group
commands. Group commands are single bus transactions that
send commands or data to more than one device at the same
time. Each device is addressed separately, using its own address;
there is no special group command address. A group command
transaction can contain only write commands that send data to
a device. It is not possible to use a group command to read data
from devices.
From an I2C protocol point of view, a normal write command
consists of the following:
• I2C start condition
• Slave address bits and a write bit (followed by ACK from
the slave device)
• One or more data bytes (each of which is followed by ACK
from the slave device)
• I2C stop condition to end the transaction
A group command differs from a nongroup command in that
after the data is written to one slave device, a repeated start
condition is put on the bus followed by the address of the next
slave device and data. This continues until all the devices have
been written to, at which point the stop condition is put on the
bus by the master device.
The format of a group command and a group command with
PEC is shown in Figure 65.
Each device that is written to as part of the group command
does not immediately execute the command written. The device
must wait until the stop condition appears on the bus. At that
point, all devices execute their commands at the same time.
Using a group command, it is possible, for example, to turn
multiple PMBus devices on or off at the same time. In the case
of the ADM1275, it is also possible to issue a power monitor
command that initiates a conversion, causing multiple ADM1275
devices to sample together at the same time. This is analogous
to connecting the GPO1/ALERT1/CONV pins together and
configuring the pin in the convert (CONV) mode to drive the
power monitor sampling.
Rev. D | Page 29 of 48