SPI Slave Half Duplex
Introduction
The Half Duplex (HD) Mode is a special mode provided by ESP SPI Slave peripheral. Under this mode, the hardware provides more services than the Full Duplex (FD) Mode (the mode for general-purpose SPI transactions, see SPI Slave Driver). These services reduce the CPU load and the response time of SPI Slave. However, it is important to note that the communication format is determined by the hardware and is always in a half-duplex configuration, allowing only one-way data transfer at any given time. Hence, the mode is named Half Duplex Mode due to this characteristic.
When conducting an SPI transaction, transactions can be classified into several types based on the command phase of the transaction. Each transaction may consist of the following phases: command, address, dummy, and data. The command phase is mandatory, while the other phases may be determined by the command field. During the command, address, and dummy phases, the bus is always controlled by the master (usually the host), while the direction of the data phase depends on the command. The data phase can be either an input phase, where the master writes data to the slave (e.g., the host sends data to the slave), or an output phase, where the master reads data from the slave (e.g., the host receives data from the slave).
Protocol
About the details of how master should communicate with the SPI Slave, see ESP SPI Slave HD (Half Duplex) Mode Protocol.
Through these different transactions, the slave provides these services to the master:
A DMA channel for the master to write a great amount of data to the slave.
A DMA channel for the master to read a great amount of data from the slave.
Several general purpose registers, shared between the master and the slave.
Several general purpose interrupts, for the master to interrupt the SW of the slave.
Terminology
Transaction
Channel
Sending
Receiving
Data Descriptor
Driver Feature
Transaction read/write by master in segments
Queues for data to send and received
Driver Usage
Slave Initialization
Call spi_slave_hd_init()
to initialize the SPI bus as well as the peripheral and the driver. The SPI Slave exclusively uses the SPI peripheral, pins of the bus before it is deinitialized, which means other devices are unable to use the above resources during initialization. Thus, to ensure SPI resources are correctly occupied and the connections work properly, most configurations of the slave should be done as soon as the slave is initialized.
The spi_bus_config_t
specifies how the bus should be initialized, while spi_slave_hd_slot_config_t
specifies how the SPI Slave driver should work.
Deinitialization (Optional)
Call spi_slave_hd_deinit()
to uninstall the driver. The resources, including the pins, SPI peripheral, internal memory used by the driver, and interrupt sources, are released by the deinit()
function.
Send/Receive Data by DMA Channels
To send data to the master through the sending DMA channel, the application should properly wrap the data in an spi_slave_hd_data_t
descriptor structure before calling spi_slave_hd_queue_trans()
with the data descriptor and the channel argument of SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX
. The pointers to descriptors are stored in the queue, and the data is sent to the master in the same order they are enqueued using spi_slave_hd_queue_trans()
, upon receiving the master's Rd_DMA
command.
The application should check the result of data sending by calling spi_slave_hd_get_trans_res()
with the channel set as SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX
. This function blocks until the transaction with the command Rd_DMA
from the master successfully completes (or timeout). The out_trans
argument of the function outputs the pointer of the data descriptor which is just finished, providing information about the sending.
Receiving data from the master through the receiving DMA channel is quite similar. The application calls spi_slave_hd_queue_trans()
with proper data descriptor and the channel argument of SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_RX
. And the application calls the spi_slave_hd_get_trans_res()
later to get the descriptor to the receiving buffer before it handles the data in the receiving buffer.
Note
This driver itself does not have an internal buffer for the data to send or just received. The application should provide data buffer for driver via data descriptors to send to the master, or to receive data from the master.
The application has to properly keep the data descriptor as well as the buffer it points, after the descriptor is successfully sent into the driver internal queue by spi_slave_hd_queue_trans()
, and before returned by spi_slave_hd_get_trans_res()
. During this period, the hardware as well as the driver may read or write to the buffer and the descriptor when required at any time.
Please note that, when using this driver for data transfer, the buffer does not have to be fully sent or filled before it is terminated. For example, in the segment transaction mode, the master has to send CMD7
to terminate a Wr_DMA
transaction or send CMD8
to terminate an Rd_DMA
transaction (in segments), no matter whether the send (receive) buffer is used up (full) or not.
Using Data Descriptor with Customized User Arguments
Sometimes you may have initiator (sending data descriptor) and closure (handling returned descriptors) functions in different places. When you get the returned data descriptor in the closure, you may need some extra information when handling the finished data descriptor. For example, you may want to know which round it is for the returned descriptor when you send the same piece of data several times.
Set the arg
member in the data descriptor to a variable indicating the transaction by force casting, or point it to a structure that wraps all the information you may need when handling the sending/receiving data. Then you can get what you need in your closure.
Using Callbacks
Note
These callbacks are called in the ISR, so the required operations need to be processed quickly and returned as soon as possible to ensure that the system is functioning properly. You may need to be very careful to write the code in the ISR.
Since the interrupt handling is executed concurrently with the application, long delays or blocking may cause the system to respond slower or lead to unpredictable behavior. Therefore, when writing callback functions, avoid using operations that may cause delays or blocking, e.g., waiting, sleeping, resource locking, etc.
The spi_slave_hd_callback_config_t
member in the spi_slave_hd_slot_config_t
configuration structure passed when initializing the SPI Slave HD driver, allows you to have callbacks for each event you may concern.
The corresponding interrupt for each callback that is not NULL is enabled, so that the callbacks can be called immediately when the events happen. You do not need to provide callbacks for the unconcerned events.
The arg
member in the configuration structure can help you pass some context to the callback or indicate the specific SPI Slave instance when using the same callbacks for multiple SPI Slave peripherals. You can set the arg member to a variable that indicates the SPI Slave instance by performing a forced type casting or point it to a context structure. All the callbacks are called with this arg
argument you set when the callbacks are initialized.
There are two other arguments: the event
and the awoken
.
The
event
passes the information of the current event to the callback. Thespi_slave_hd_event_t
type contains the information of the event, for example, event type, the data descriptor just finished (The data argument is very useful in this case!).The
awoken
argument serves as an output parameter. It informs the ISR that tasks have been awakened after the callback function, and the ISR should call portYIELD_FROM_ISR() to schedule these tasks. Simply pass theawoken
argument to all FreeRTOS APIs that may unblock tasks, and the value ofawoken
will be returned to the ISR.
Receiving General Purpose Interrupts from the Master
When the master sends CMD8
, CMD9
or CMDA
, the slave corresponding is triggered. Currently the CMD8
is permanently used to indicate the termination of Rd_DMA
segments. To receive general-purpose interrupts, register callbacks for CMD9
and CMDA
when the slave is initialized, see Using Callbacks.
Application Examples
The code example for Device/Host communication can be found in the peripherals/spi_slave_hd directory of ESP-IDF examples.
- example
peripherals/spi_slave_hd/append_mode demonstrates how to use the SPI Slave HD driver and ESSL driver to communicate (ESSL driver is an encapsulated layer based on SPI Master driver to communicate with halfduplex mode SPI Slave).
- example
peripherals/spi_slave_hd/segment_mode demonstrate two ways to use the SPI Slave Halfduplex Segment Mode: Using the SPI Slave Halfduplex driver with two tasks repeating transactions with the SPI Master, and using the ESP Serial Slave Link APIs for multiple exchanges with the slave.
API Reference
Header File
This header file can be included with:
#include "driver/spi_slave_hd.h"
This header file is a part of the API provided by the
esp_driver_spi
component. To declare that your component depends onesp_driver_spi
, add the following to your CMakeLists.txt:REQUIRES esp_driver_spi
or
PRIV_REQUIRES esp_driver_spi
Functions
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_init(spi_host_device_t host_id, const spi_bus_config_t *bus_config, const spi_slave_hd_slot_config_t *config)
Initialize the SPI Slave HD driver.
- Parameters
host_id -- The host to use
bus_config -- Bus configuration for the bus used
config -- Configuration for the SPI Slave HD driver
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: invalid argument given
ESP_ERR_INVALID_STATE: function called in invalid state, may be some resources are already in use
ESP_ERR_NOT_FOUND if there is no available DMA channel
ESP_ERR_NO_MEM: memory allocation failed
or other return value from
esp_intr_alloc
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_deinit(spi_host_device_t host_id)
Deinitialize the SPI Slave HD driver.
- Parameters
host_id -- The host to deinitialize the driver
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: if the host_id is not correct
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_queue_trans(spi_host_device_t host_id, spi_slave_chan_t chan, spi_slave_hd_data_t *trans, TickType_t timeout)
Queue transactions (segment mode)
- Parameters
host_id -- Host to queue the transaction
chan -- SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX or SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_RX
trans -- Transaction descriptors
timeout -- Timeout before the data is queued
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: The input argument is invalid. Can be the following reason:
The buffer given is not DMA capable
The length of data is invalid (not larger than 0, or exceed the max transfer length)
The transaction direction is invalid
ESP_ERR_TIMEOUT: Cannot queue the data before timeout. Master is still processing previous transaction.
ESP_ERR_INVALID_STATE: Function called in invalid state. This API should be called under segment mode.
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_get_trans_res(spi_host_device_t host_id, spi_slave_chan_t chan, spi_slave_hd_data_t **out_trans, TickType_t timeout)
Get the result of a data transaction (segment mode)
Note
This API should be called successfully the same times as the
spi_slave_hd_queue_trans
.- Parameters
host_id -- Host to queue the transaction
chan -- Channel to get the result, SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX or SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_RX
out_trans -- [out] Pointer to the transaction descriptor (
spi_slave_hd_data_t
) passed to the driver before. Hardware has finished this transaction. Membertrans_len
indicates the actual number of bytes of received data, it's meaningless for TX.timeout -- Timeout before the result is got
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: Function is not valid
ESP_ERR_TIMEOUT: There's no transaction done before timeout
ESP_ERR_INVALID_STATE: Function called in invalid state. This API should be called under segment mode.
-
void spi_slave_hd_read_buffer(spi_host_device_t host_id, int addr, uint8_t *out_data, size_t len)
Read the shared registers.
- Parameters
host_id -- Host to read the shared registers
addr -- Address of register to read, 0 to
SOC_SPI_MAXIMUM_BUFFER_SIZE-1
out_data -- [out] Output buffer to store the read data
len -- Length to read, not larger than
SOC_SPI_MAXIMUM_BUFFER_SIZE-addr
-
void spi_slave_hd_write_buffer(spi_host_device_t host_id, int addr, uint8_t *data, size_t len)
Write the shared registers.
- Parameters
host_id -- Host to write the shared registers
addr -- Address of register to write, 0 to
SOC_SPI_MAXIMUM_BUFFER_SIZE-1
data -- Buffer holding the data to write
len -- Length to write,
SOC_SPI_MAXIMUM_BUFFER_SIZE-addr
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_append_trans(spi_host_device_t host_id, spi_slave_chan_t chan, spi_slave_hd_data_t *trans, TickType_t timeout)
Load transactions (append mode)
Note
In this mode, user transaction descriptors will be appended to the DMA and the DMA will keep processing the data without stopping
- Parameters
host_id -- Host to load transactions
chan -- SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX or SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_RX
trans -- Transaction descriptor
timeout -- Timeout before the transaction is loaded
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: The input argument is invalid. Can be the following reason:
The buffer given is not DMA capable
The length of data is invalid (not larger than 0, or exceed the max transfer length)
The transaction direction is invalid
ESP_ERR_TIMEOUT: Master is still processing previous transaction. There is no available transaction for slave to load
ESP_ERR_INVALID_STATE: Function called in invalid state. This API should be called under append mode.
-
esp_err_t spi_slave_hd_get_append_trans_res(spi_host_device_t host_id, spi_slave_chan_t chan, spi_slave_hd_data_t **out_trans, TickType_t timeout)
Get the result of a data transaction (append mode)
Note
This API should be called the same times as the
spi_slave_hd_append_trans
- Parameters
host_id -- Host to load the transaction
chan -- SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_TX or SPI_SLAVE_CHAN_RX
out_trans -- [out] Pointer to the transaction descriptor (
spi_slave_hd_data_t
) passed to the driver before. Hardware has finished this transaction. Membertrans_len
indicates the actual number of bytes of received data, it's meaningless for TX.timeout -- Timeout before the result is got
- Returns
ESP_OK: on success
ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG: Function is not valid
ESP_ERR_TIMEOUT: There's no transaction done before timeout
ESP_ERR_INVALID_STATE: Function called in invalid state. This API should be called under append mode.
Structures
-
struct spi_slave_hd_data_t
Descriptor of data to send/receive.
Public Members
-
uint8_t *data
Buffer to send, must be DMA capable.
-
size_t len
Len of data to send/receive. For receiving the buffer length should be multiples of 4 bytes, otherwise the extra part will be truncated.
-
size_t trans_len
For RX direction, it indicates the data actually received. For TX direction, it is meaningless.
-
uint32_t flags
Bitwise OR of SPI_SLAVE_HD_TRANS_* flags.
-
void *arg
Extra argument indicating this data.
-
uint8_t *data
-
struct spi_slave_hd_event_t
Information of SPI Slave HD event.
Public Members
-
spi_event_t event
Event type.
-
spi_slave_hd_data_t *trans
Corresponding transaction for SPI_EV_SEND and SPI_EV_RECV events.
-
spi_event_t event
-
struct spi_slave_hd_callback_config_t
Callback configuration structure for SPI Slave HD.
Public Members
-
slave_cb_t cb_buffer_tx
Callback when master reads from shared buffer.
-
slave_cb_t cb_buffer_rx
Callback when master writes to shared buffer.
-
slave_cb_t cb_send_dma_ready
Callback when TX data buffer is loaded to the hardware (DMA)
-
slave_cb_t cb_sent
Callback when data are sent.
-
slave_cb_t cb_recv_dma_ready
Callback when RX data buffer is loaded to the hardware (DMA)
-
slave_cb_t cb_recv
Callback when data are received.
-
slave_cb_t cb_cmd9
Callback when CMD9 received.
-
slave_cb_t cb_cmdA
Callback when CMDA received.
-
void *arg
Argument indicating this SPI Slave HD peripheral instance.
-
slave_cb_t cb_buffer_tx
-
struct spi_slave_hd_slot_config_t
Configuration structure for the SPI Slave HD driver.
Public Members
-
uint8_t mode
SPI mode, representing a pair of (CPOL, CPHA) configuration:
0: (0, 0)
1: (0, 1)
2: (1, 0)
3: (1, 1)
-
uint32_t spics_io_num
CS GPIO pin for this device.
-
uint32_t flags
Bitwise OR of SPI_SLAVE_HD_* flags.
-
uint32_t command_bits
command field bits, multiples of 8 and at least 8.
-
uint32_t address_bits
address field bits, multiples of 8 and at least 8.
-
uint32_t dummy_bits
dummy field bits, multiples of 8 and at least 8.
-
uint32_t queue_size
Transaction queue size. This sets how many transactions can be 'in the air' (queued using spi_slave_hd_queue_trans but not yet finished using spi_slave_hd_get_trans_result) at the same time.
-
spi_dma_chan_t dma_chan
DMA channel to used.
-
spi_slave_hd_callback_config_t cb_config
Callback configuration.
-
uint8_t mode
Macros
-
SPI_SLAVE_HD_TRANS_DMA_BUFFER_ALIGN_AUTO
Automatically re-malloc dma buffer if user buffer doesn't meet hardware alignment or dma_capable, this process may lose some memory and performance.
-
SPI_SLAVE_HD_TXBIT_LSBFIRST
Transmit command/address/data LSB first instead of the default MSB first.
-
SPI_SLAVE_HD_RXBIT_LSBFIRST
Receive data LSB first instead of the default MSB first.
-
SPI_SLAVE_HD_BIT_LSBFIRST
Transmit and receive LSB first.
-
SPI_SLAVE_HD_APPEND_MODE
Adopt DMA append mode for transactions. In this mode, users can load(append) DMA descriptors without stopping the DMA.
Type Definitions
-
typedef bool (*slave_cb_t)(void *arg, spi_slave_hd_event_t *event, BaseType_t *awoken)
Callback for SPI Slave HD.