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AM1705_1007 Datasheet, PDF (93/156 Pages) Texas Instruments – AM1705 ARM Microprocessor
AM1705
www.ti.com
SPRS657A – FEBRUARY 2010 – REVISED APRIL 2010
6.18 Serial Peripheral Interface Ports (SPI0, SPI1)
Figure 6-29 is a block diagram of the SPI module, which is a simple shift register and buffer plus control
logic. Data is written to the shift register before transmission occurs and is read from the buffer at the end
of transmission. The SPI can operate either as a master, in which case, it initiates a transfer and drives
the SPIx_CLK pin, or as a slave. Four clock phase and polarity options are supported as well as many
data formatting options.
Interrupt and
DMA Requests
Peripheral
Configuration Bus
SPIx_SIMO
SPIx_SOMI
16-Bit Shift Register
16-Bit Buffer
GPIO
Control
(all pins)
State
Machine
Clock
Control
SPIx_ENA
SPIx_SCS
SPIx_CLK
Figure 6-29. Block Diagram of SPI Module
The SPI supports 3-, 4-, and 5-pin operation with three basic pins (SPIx_CLK, SPIx_SIMO, and
SPIx_SOMI) and two optional pins (SPIx_SCS, SPIx_ENA).
The optional SPIx_SCS (Slave Chip Select) pin is most useful to enable in slave mode when there are
other slave devices on the same SPI port. The device will only shift data and drive the SPIx_SOMI pin
when SPIx_SCS is held low.
In slave mode, SPIx_ENA is an optional output and can be driven in either a push-pull or open-drain
manner. The SPIx_ENA output provides the status of the internal transmit buffer (SPIDAT0/1 registers). In
four-pin mode with the enable option, SPIx_ENA is asserted only when the transmit buffer is full, indicating
that the slave is ready to begin another transfer. In five-pin mode, the SPIx_ENA is additionally qualified
by SPIx_SCS being asserted. This allows a single handshake line to be shared by multiple slaves on the
same SPI bus.
In master mode, the SPIx_ENA pin is an optional input and the master can be configured to delay the start
of the next transfer until the slave asserts SPIx_ENA. The addition of this handshake signal simplifies SPI
communications and, on average, increases SPI bus throughput since the master does not need to delay
each transfer long enough to allow for the worst-case latency of the slave device. Instead, each transfer
can begin as soon as both the master and slave have actually serviced the previous SPI transfer.
Although the SPI module supports two interrupt outputs, SPIx_INT1 is the only interrupt connected on this
device.
Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Peripheral Information and Electrical Specifications
93
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