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ATMEGA164P-B_14 Datasheet, PDF (178/344 Pages) ATMEL Corporation – 8-bit Atmel Microcontroller with 16/32/64Kbytes In-system Programmable Flash
21.3.3 Address Packet Format
All address packets transmitted on the TWI bus are 9 bits long, consisting of 7 address bits, one READ/WRITE control bit
and an acknowledge bit. If the READ/WRITE bit is set, a read operation is to be performed, otherwise a write operation
should be performed. When a slave recognizes that it is being addressed, it should acknowledge by pulling SDA low in the
ninth SCL (ACK) cycle. If the addressed Slave is busy, or for some other reason can not service the master’s request, the
SDA line should be left high in the ACK clock cycle. The master can then transmit a STOP condition, or a REPEATED
START condition to initiate a new transmission. An address packet consisting of a slave address and a READ or a WRITE
bit is called SLA+R or SLA+W, respectively.
The MSB of the address byte is transmitted first. Slave addresses can freely be allocated by the designer, but the address
0000 000 is reserved for a general call.
When a general call is issued, all slaves should respond by pulling the SDA line low in the ACK cycle. A general call is used
when a master wishes to transmit the same message to several slaves in the system. When the general call address
followed by a Write bit is transmitted on the bus, all slaves set up to acknowledge the general call will pull the SDA line low in
the ack cycle. The following data packets will then be received by all the slaves that acknowledged the general call. Note that
transmitting the general call address followed by a read bit is meaningless, as this would cause contention if several slaves
started transmitting different data.
All addresses of the format 1111 xxx should be reserved for future purposes.
Figure 21-4. Address Packet Format
Addr MSB
Addr LSB
R/W
ACK
SDA
SCL
START
1
2
7
8
9
21.3.4 Data Packet Format
All data packets transmitted on the TWI bus are nine bits long, consisting of one data byte and an acknowledge bit. During a
data transfer, the master generates the clock and the START and STOP conditions, while the receiver is responsible for
acknowledging the reception. An acknowledge (ACK) is signalled by the receiver pulling the SDA line low during the ninth
SCL cycle. If the receiver leaves the SDA line high, a NACK is signalled. When the receiver has received the last byte, or for
some reason cannot receive any more bytes, it should inform the transmitter by sending a NACK after the final byte. The
MSB of the data byte is transmitted first.
178 ATmega164P-B/ATmega324P-B/ATmega644P-B [DATASHEET]
9255E–AVR–08/14