ST72325R6-AUTO STMicroelectronics, ST72325R6-AUTO Datasheet - Page 130

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ST72325R6-AUTO

Manufacturer Part Number
ST72325R6-AUTO
Description
8-bit Mcu For Automotive With 16 To 60 Kbyte Flash, Adc, Css, 5 Timers, Spi, Sci, I2c Interface
Manufacturer
STMicroelectronics
Datasheet
Serial peripheral interface (SPI)
14
14.1
14.2
Note:
14.3
130/250
Serial peripheral interface (SPI)
Introduction
The Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) allows full-duplex, synchronous, serial communication
with external devices. An SPI system may consist of a master and one or more slaves
however the SPI interface cannot be a master in a multimaster system.
Main features
In slave mode, continuous transmission is not possible at maximum frequency due to the
software overhead for clearing status flags and to initiate the next transmission sequence.
General description
Figure 57
registers:
The SPI is connected to external devices through four pins:
Full duplex synchronous transfers (on 3 lines)
Simplex synchronous transfers (on 2 lines)
Master or slave operation
6 master mode frequencies (f
f
SS Management by software or hardware
Programmable clock polarity and phase
End of transfer interrupt flag
Write collision, Master Mode Fault and Overrun flags
SPI Control Register (SPICR)
SPI Control/Status Register (SPICSR)
SPI Data Register (SPIDR)
MISO (Master In / Slave Out data)
MOSI (Master Out / Slave In data)
SCK (Serial Clock out by SPI masters and input by SPI slaves)
SS (Slave select): This input signal acts as a ‘chip select’ to let the SPI master
communicate with slaves individually and to avoid contention on the data lines. Slave
SS inputs can be driven by standard I/O ports on the master MCU.
CPU
/2 max. slave mode frequency (see note)
shows the serial peripheral interface (SPI) block diagram. There are three
CPU
/4 max.)
ST72325xxx-Auto

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