summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/docs/spi_driver.md
blob: 1d432432ad1a58a9f20251c9650c91777fc00552 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
# SPI Master Driver

The SPI Master drivers used in QMK have a set of common functions to allow portability between MCUs.

## AVR Configuration

No special setup is required - just connect the `SS`, `SCK`, `MOSI` and `MISO` pins of your SPI devices to the matching pins on the MCU:

|MCU            |`SS`|`SCK`|`MOSI`|`MISO`|
|---------------|----|-----|------|------|
|ATMega16/32U2/4|`B0`|`B1` |`B2`  |`B3`  |
|AT90USB64/128  |`B0`|`B1` |`B2`  |`B3`  |
|ATmega32A      |`B4`|`B7` |`B5`  |`B6`  |
|ATmega328/P    |`B2`|`B5` |`B3`  |`B4`  |

You may use more than one slave select pin, not just the `SS` pin. This is useful when you have multiple devices connected and need to communicate with them individually.
`SPI_SS_PIN` can be passed to `spi_start()` to refer to `SS`.

## ChibiOS/ARM Configuration

You'll need to determine which pins can be used for SPI -- as an example, STM32 parts generally have multiple SPI peripherals, labeled SPI1, SPI2, SPI3 etc.

To enable SPI, modify your board's `halconf.h` to enable SPI - both `HAL_USE_SPI` and `SPI_USE_WAIT` should be `TRUE`, and `SPI_SELECT_MODE` should be `SPI_SELECT_MODE_PAD`.
Then, modify your board's `mcuconf.h` to enable the SPI peripheral you've chosen -- in the case of using SPI2, modify `STM32_SPI_USE_SPI2` to be `TRUE`.

As per the AVR configuration, you may select any other standard GPIO as a slave select pin, and can be supplied to `spi_start()`.

Configuration-wise, you'll need to set up the peripheral as per your MCU's datasheet -- the defaults match the pins for a Proton-C, i.e. STM32F303.

`config.h` override         | Description                                                   | Default Value
----------------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------|--------------
`#define SPI_DRIVER`        | SPI peripheral to use - SPI1 => `SPID1`, SPI2 => `SPID2` etc. | `SPID2`
`#define SPI_SCK_PIN`       | The pin to use for the SCK                                    | `B13`
`#define SPI_SCK_PAL_MODE`  | The alternate function mode for the SCK pin                   | `5`
`#define SPI_MOSI_PIN`      | The pin to use for the MOSI                                   | `B15`
`#define SPI_MOSI_PAL_MODE` | The alternate function mode for the MOSI pin                  | `5`
`#define SPI_MISO_PIN`      | The pin to use for the MISO                                   | `B14`
`#define SPI_MISO_PAL_MODE` | The alternate function mode for the MISO pin                  | `5`

## Functions

### `void spi_init(void)`

Initialize the SPI driver. This function must be called only once, before any of the below functions can be called.

---

### `bool spi_start(pin_t slavePin, bool lsbFirst, uint8_t mode, uint16_t divisor)`

Start an SPI transaction.

#### Arguments

 - `pin_t slavePin`  
   The QMK pin to assert as the slave select pin, eg. `B4`.
 - `bool lsbFirst`  
   Determines the endianness of the transmission. If `true`, the least significant bit of each byte is sent first.
 - `uint8_t mode`  
   The SPI mode to use:

   |Mode|Clock Polarity      |Clock Phase            |
   |----|--------------------|-----------------------|
   |`0` |Leading edge rising |Sample on leading edge |
   |`1` |Leading edge rising |Sample on trailing edge|
   |`2` |Leading edge falling|Sample on leading edge |
   |`3` |Leading edge falling|Sample on trailing edge|

 - `uint16_t divisor`  
   The SPI clock divisor, will be rounded up to the nearest power of two. This number can be calculated by dividing the MCU's clock speed by the desired SPI clock speed. For example, an MCU running at 8 MHz wanting to talk to an SPI device at 4 MHz would set the divisor to `2`.

#### Return Value

`false` if the supplied parameters are invalid or the SPI peripheral is already in use, or `true`.

---

### `spi_status_t spi_write(uint8_t data)`

Write a byte to the selected SPI device.

#### Arguments

 - `uint8_t data`  
   The byte to write.

#### Return Value

`SPI_STATUS_TIMEOUT` if the timeout period elapses, or `SPI_STATUS_SUCCESS`.

---

### `spi_status_t spi_read(void)`

Read a byte from the selected SPI device.

#### Return Value

`SPI_STATUS_TIMEOUT` if the timeout period elapses, or the byte read from the device.

---

### `spi_status_t spi_transmit(const uint8_t *data, uint16_t length)`

Send multiple bytes to the selected SPI device.

#### Arguments

 - `const uint8_t *data`  
   A pointer to the data to write from.
 - `uint16_t length`  
   The number of bytes to write. Take care not to overrun the length of `data`.

#### Return Value

`SPI_STATUS_TIMEOUT` if the timeout period elapses, `SPI_STATUS_SUCCESS` on success, or `SPI_STATUS_ERROR` otherwise.

---

### `spi_status_t spi_receive(uint8_t *data, uint16_t length)`

Receive multiple bytes from the selected SPI device.

#### Arguments

 - `uint8_t *data`  
   A pointer to the buffer to read into.
 - `uint16_t length`  
   The number of bytes to read. Take care not to overrun the length of `data`.

#### Return Value

`SPI_STATUS_TIMEOUT` if the internal transmission timeout period elapses, `SPI_STATUS_SUCCESS` on success, or `SPI_STATUS_ERROR` otherwise.

---

### `void spi_stop(void)`

End the current SPI transaction. This will deassert the slave select pin and reset the endianness, mode and divisor configured by `spi_start()`.