| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596 |
- SPI Slave driver
- =================
- Overview
- --------
- The ESP32 has four SPI peripheral devices, called SPI0, SPI1, HSPI and VSPI. SPI0 is entirely dedicated to
- the flash cache the ESP32 uses to map the SPI flash device it is connected to into memory. SPI1 is
- connected to the same hardware lines as SPI0 and is used to write to the flash chip. HSPI and VSPI
- are free to use, and with the spi_slave driver, these can be used as a SPI slave, driven from a
- connected SPI master.
- The spi_slave driver
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The spi_slave driver allows using the HSPI and/or VSPI peripheral as a full-duplex SPI slave. It can make
- use of DMA to send/receive transactions of arbitrary length.
- Terminology
- ^^^^^^^^^^^
- The spi_slave driver uses the following terms:
- * Host: The SPI peripheral inside the ESP32 initiating the SPI transmissions. One of HSPI or VSPI.
- * Bus: The SPI bus, common to all SPI devices connected to a master. In general the bus consists of the
- miso, mosi, sclk and optionally quadwp and quadhd signals. The SPI slaves are connected to these
- signals in parallel. Each SPI slave is also connected to one CS signal.
- - miso - Also known as q, this is the output of the serial stream from the ESP32 to the SPI master
- - mosi - Also known as d, this is the output of the serial stream from the SPI master to the ESP32
- - sclk - Clock signal. Each data bit is clocked out or in on the positive or negative edge of this signal
- - cs - Chip Select. An active Chip Select delineates a single transaction to/from a slave.
- * Transaction: One instance of CS going active, data transfer from and to a master happening, and
- CS going inactive again. Transactions are atomic, as in they will never be interrupted by another
- transaction.
- SPI transactions
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- A full-duplex SPI transaction starts with the master pulling CS low. After this happens, the master
- starts sending out clock pulses on the CLK line: every clock pulse causes a data bit to be shifted from
- the master to the slave on the MOSI line and vice versa on the MISO line. At the end of the transaction,
- the master makes CS high again.
- Using the spi_slave driver
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- - Initialize a SPI peripheral as a slave by calling ``spi_slave_initialize``. Make sure to set the
- correct IO pins in the ``bus_config`` struct. Take care to set signals that are not needed to -1.
- A DMA channel (either 1 or 2) must be given if transactions will be larger than 32 bytes, if not
- the dma_chan parameter may be 0.
- - To set up a transaction, fill one or more spi_transaction_t structure with any transaction
- parameters you need. Either queue all transactions by calling ``spi_slave_queue_trans``, later
- quering the result using ``spi_slave_get_trans_result``, or handle all requests synchroneously
- by feeding them into ``spi_slave_transmit``. The latter two functions will block until the
- master has initiated and finished a transaction, causing the queued data to be sent and received.
- - Optional: to unload the SPI slave driver, call ``spi_slave_free``.
- Transaction data and master/slave length mismatches
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- Normally, data to be transferred to or from a device will be read from or written to a chunk of memory
- indicated by the ``rx_buffer`` and ``tx_buffer`` members of the transaction structure. The SPI driver
- may decide to use DMA for transfers, so these buffers should be allocated in DMA-capable memory using
- ``pvPortMallocCaps(size, MALLOC_CAP_DMA)``.
- The amount of data written to the buffers is limited by the ``length`` member of the transaction structure:
- the driver will never read/write more data than indicated there. The ``length`` cannot define the actual
- length of the SPI transaction; this is determined by the master as it drives the clock and CS lines. In
- case the length of the transmission is larger than the buffer length, only the start of the transmission
- will be sent and received. In case the transmission length is shorter than the buffer length, only data up
- to the length of the buffer will be exchanged.
- Warning: Due to a design peculiarity in the ESP32, if the amount of bytes sent by the master or the length
- of the transmission queues in the slave driver, in bytes, is not both larger than eight and dividable by
- four, the SPI hardware can fail to write the last one to seven bytes to the receive buffer.
- Application Example
- -------------------
- Slave/master communication: :example:`peripherals/spi_slave`.
- API Reference
- -------------
- .. include:: /_build/inc/spi_slave.inc
|