Difference between revisions of "SPI versus I2C protocols"

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= Physical Differences =
= Physical Differences =
The first difference between I2C and SPI is that I2C is two-wire, while SPI is four-wire.
The only physical difference between I2C and SPI is that I2C is two-wire, while SPI is four-wire.


= Technical Differences =
= Technical Differences =
== Full-duplex/Half-duplex
The I2C protocol is inherently half-duplex. The SPI protocol is inherently full-duplex. So with SPI, every read is also a write. This could in theory double the speed of the bus, however, when implementing the SPI protocol we noticed that most of the time we didn't have data to send one direction. When you want to read from the device, you have to send "dummy bytes" to the device to trigger the clock signal that allows the slave to send data. Similarly, most of time the slave does not have anything to report back when you are actually sending data to the slave.
The I2C protocol is inherently half-duplex. The SPI protocol is inherently full-duplex. So with SPI, every read is also a write. This could in theory double the speed of the bus, however, when implementing the SPI protocol we noticed that most of the time we didn't have data to send one direction. When you want to read from the device, you have to send "dummy bytes" to the device to trigger the clock signal that allows the slave to send data. Similarly, most of time the slave does not have anything to report back when you are actually sending data to the slave.
With these dummy packets, both protocols are now half-duplex.
With dummy packets, both protocols are essentially half-duplex.

The addresses on the bus are 7 bits wide. The lower bit specifies if the transaction is to be a read or a write. Write transactions have the lower bit cleared (0), read transactions have the lower bit set (1).


== I2C Clock stretching ==
I2C has a feature called 'clock stretching'. If the slave device cannot send the data fast enough, it can hold down the clock so data will be transfered slower. This way, the bitrate is decreased, but the slave can keep up with the processing of the data. This feature can be very useful, since the clock rate can be high, and the slave will delay only when it needs to. The only problem is that the SoC on the Raspberry Pi has a bug in this feature. This bug makes clock stretching unusable on the RPi. All BitWizard I2C boards work around this issue by carefully timing all I2C messages. The performance penalty is small, but as a result, all BitWizard I2C boards only work at a bus speed of 100kHz.
I2C has a feature called 'clock stretching'. If the slave device cannot send the data fast enough, it can hold down the clock so data will be transfered slower. This way, the bitrate is decreased, but the slave can keep up with the processing of the data. This feature can be very useful, since the clock rate can be high, and the slave will delay only when it needs to. The only problem is that the SoC on the Raspberry Pi has a bug in this feature. This bug makes clock stretching unusable on the RPi. All BitWizard I2C boards work around this issue by carefully timing all I2C messages. The performance penalty is small, but as a result, all BitWizard I2C boards only work at a bus speed of 100kHz.

== Implentation ==
The addresses on the bus are 7 bits wide. The lower bit specifies if the transaction is to be a read or a write. Write transactions have the lower bit cleared (0), read transactions have the lower bit set (1).


Each transaction on the bus starts with the address of the board. All BitWizard boards will ignore any transactions on the bus that do not start with their own address. The protocols allow for changing the address in case you need more modules of the same type on one bus.
Each transaction on the bus starts with the address of the board. All BitWizard boards will ignore any transactions on the bus that do not start with their own address. The protocols allow for changing the address in case you need more modules of the same type on one bus.

Revision as of 13:41, 18 July 2014

When buying a BitWizard expansion board, either I2C or SPI can be selected as the interface. This page will help you choose.

Physical Differences

The only physical difference between I2C and SPI is that I2C is two-wire, while SPI is four-wire.

Technical Differences

== Full-duplex/Half-duplex The I2C protocol is inherently half-duplex. The SPI protocol is inherently full-duplex. So with SPI, every read is also a write. This could in theory double the speed of the bus, however, when implementing the SPI protocol we noticed that most of the time we didn't have data to send one direction. When you want to read from the device, you have to send "dummy bytes" to the device to trigger the clock signal that allows the slave to send data. Similarly, most of time the slave does not have anything to report back when you are actually sending data to the slave. With dummy packets, both protocols are essentially half-duplex.

I2C Clock stretching

I2C has a feature called 'clock stretching'. If the slave device cannot send the data fast enough, it can hold down the clock so data will be transfered slower. This way, the bitrate is decreased, but the slave can keep up with the processing of the data. This feature can be very useful, since the clock rate can be high, and the slave will delay only when it needs to. The only problem is that the SoC on the Raspberry Pi has a bug in this feature. This bug makes clock stretching unusable on the RPi. All BitWizard I2C boards work around this issue by carefully timing all I2C messages. The performance penalty is small, but as a result, all BitWizard I2C boards only work at a bus speed of 100kHz.

Implentation

The addresses on the bus are 7 bits wide. The lower bit specifies if the transaction is to be a read or a write. Write transactions have the lower bit cleared (0), read transactions have the lower bit set (1).

Each transaction on the bus starts with the address of the board. All BitWizard boards will ignore any transactions on the bus that do not start with their own address. The protocols allow for changing the address in case you need more modules of the same type on one bus.

After the address a single byte indicates the "port" on the board that the data is written to. The software can thus define 256 ports on each board.

To write data using SPI or I2C send a number of bytes (usually 3 or 4).

<address> <register>   ....

On SPI you activate (make it low!) the slave select line before the transaction. On I2C you cause a start condition before the transaction. After the transaction, you deactivate the slave select line (make it high) on SPI and cause a STOP condition on I2C.

To read data from the slaves, on I2C you first make a write transaction of just two bytes, the address and the register number. Next you read the data. On SPI this must be done in one transaction: write the address and register number, then write dummy bytes while reading the data.

To read on I2C:

<start> <address + WRITE> <register> <stop>
<start> <address + READ> <byte 1> <byte 2> 

To read on SPI:

MOSI <address> <register> <dummy byte> <dummy byte> 
MISO    xxx       xxx     <byte 1>     <byte 2>