docs: Update I2C and SPI docs to add reference to SoftI2C and SoftSPI.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
pull/6450/head
Damien George 2020-09-29 16:50:23 +10:00
rodzic 71f3ade770
commit 98182a97c5
4 zmienionych plików z 89 dodań i 40 usunięć

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@ -249,16 +249,15 @@ ESP32 specific ADC class method reference:
Software SPI bus
----------------
There are two SPI drivers. One is implemented in software (bit-banging)
and works on all pins, and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SPI <machine.SPI>`
class::
Software SPI (using bit-banging) works on all pins, and is accessed via the
:ref:`machine.SoftSPI <machine.SoftSPI>` class::
from machine import Pin, SPI
from machine import Pin, SoftSPI
# construct an SPI bus on the given pins
# construct a SoftSPI bus on the given pins
# polarity is the idle state of SCK
# phase=0 means sample on the first edge of SCK, phase=1 means the second
spi = SPI(baudrate=100000, polarity=1, phase=0, sck=Pin(0), mosi=Pin(2), miso=Pin(4))
spi = SoftSPI(baudrate=100000, polarity=1, phase=0, sck=Pin(0), mosi=Pin(2), miso=Pin(4))
spi.init(baudrate=200000) # set the baudrate
@ -298,39 +297,54 @@ mosi 13 23
miso 12 19
===== =========== ============
Hardware SPI has the same methods as Software SPI above::
Hardware SPI is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SPI <machine.SPI>` class and
has the same methods as software SPI above::
from machine import Pin, SPI
hspi = SPI(1, 10000000, sck=Pin(14), mosi=Pin(13), miso=Pin(12))
vspi = SPI(2, baudrate=80000000, polarity=0, phase=0, bits=8, firstbit=0, sck=Pin(18), mosi=Pin(23), miso=Pin(19))
Software I2C bus
----------------
I2C bus
-------
Software I2C (using bit-banging) works on all output-capable pins, and is
accessed via the :ref:`machine.SoftI2C <machine.SoftI2C>` class::
The I2C driver has both software and hardware implementations, and the two
hardware peripherals have identifiers 0 and 1. Any available output-capable
pins can be used for SCL and SDA. The driver is accessed via the
:ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` class::
from machine import Pin, SoftI2C
from machine import Pin, I2C
i2c = SoftI2C(scl=Pin(5), sda=Pin(4), freq=100000)
# construct a software I2C bus
i2c = I2C(scl=Pin(5), sda=Pin(4), freq=100000)
i2c.scan() # scan for devices
# construct a hardware I2C bus
i2c = I2C(0)
i2c = I2C(1, scl=Pin(5), sda=Pin(4), freq=400000)
i2c.scan() # scan for slave devices
i2c.readfrom(0x3a, 4) # read 4 bytes from slave device with address 0x3a
i2c.writeto(0x3a, '12') # write '12' to slave device with address 0x3a
i2c.readfrom(0x3a, 4) # read 4 bytes from device with address 0x3a
i2c.writeto(0x3a, '12') # write '12' to device with address 0x3a
buf = bytearray(10) # create a buffer with 10 bytes
i2c.writeto(0x3a, buf) # write the given buffer to the slave
Hardware I2C bus
----------------
There are two hardware I2C peripherals with identifiers 0 and 1. Any available
output-capable pins can be used for SCL and SDA but the defaults are given
below.
===== =========== ============
\ I2C(0) I2C(1)
===== =========== ============
scl 18 25
sda 19 26
===== =========== ============
The driver is accessed via the :ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` class and
has the same methods as software I2C above::
from machine import Pin, I2C
i2c = I2C(0)
i2c = I2C(1, scl=Pin(5), sda=Pin(4), freq=400000)
Real time clock (RTC)
---------------------

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@ -214,15 +214,15 @@ Software SPI bus
----------------
There are two SPI drivers. One is implemented in software (bit-banging)
and works on all pins, and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SPI <machine.SPI>`
and works on all pins, and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.SoftSPI <machine.SoftSPI>`
class::
from machine import Pin, SPI
from machine import Pin, SoftSPI
# construct an SPI bus on the given pins
# polarity is the idle state of SCK
# phase=0 means sample on the first edge of SCK, phase=1 means the second
spi = SPI(-1, baudrate=100000, polarity=1, phase=0, sck=Pin(0), mosi=Pin(2), miso=Pin(4))
spi = SoftSPI(baudrate=100000, polarity=1, phase=0, sck=Pin(0), mosi=Pin(2), miso=Pin(4))
spi.init(baudrate=200000) # set the baudrate
@ -258,7 +258,8 @@ I2C bus
-------
The I2C driver is implemented in software and works on all pins,
and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` class::
and is accessed via the :ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` class (which is an
alias of :ref:`machine.SoftI2C <machine.SoftI2C>`)::
from machine import Pin, I2C

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@ -12,6 +12,14 @@ when created, or initialised later on.
Printing the I2C object gives you information about its configuration.
Both hardware and software I2C implementations exist via the
:ref:`machine.I2C <machine.I2C>` and `machine.SoftI2C` classes. Hardware I2C uses
underlying hardware support of the system to perform the reads/writes and is
usually efficient and fast but may have restrictions on which pins can be used.
Software I2C is implemented by bit-banging and can be used on any pin but is not
as efficient. These classes have the same methods available and differ primarily
in the way they are constructed.
Example usage::
from machine import I2C
@ -33,22 +41,34 @@ Example usage::
Constructors
------------
.. class:: I2C(id=-1, *, scl, sda, freq=400000)
.. class:: I2C(id, *, scl, sda, freq=400000)
Construct and return a new I2C object using the following parameters:
- *id* identifies a particular I2C peripheral. The default
value of -1 selects a software implementation of I2C which can
work (in most cases) with arbitrary pins for SCL and SDA.
If *id* is -1 then *scl* and *sda* must be specified. Other
allowed values for *id* depend on the particular port/board,
and specifying *scl* and *sda* may or may not be required or
allowed in this case.
- *id* identifies a particular I2C peripheral. Allowed values for
depend on the particular port/board
- *scl* should be a pin object specifying the pin to use for SCL.
- *sda* should be a pin object specifying the pin to use for SDA.
- *freq* should be an integer which sets the maximum frequency
for SCL.
Note that some ports/boards will have default values of *scl* and *sda*
that can be changed in this constructor. Others will have fixed values
of *scl* and *sda* that cannot be changed.
.. _machine.SoftI2C:
.. class:: SoftI2C(scl, sda, *, freq=400000, timeout=255)
Construct a new software I2C object. The parameters are:
- *scl* should be a pin object specifying the pin to use for SCL.
- *sda* should be a pin object specifying the pin to use for SDA.
- *freq* should be an integer which sets the maximum frequency
for SCL.
- *timeout* is the maximum time in microseconds to wait for clock
stretching (SCL held low by another device on the bus), after
which an ``OSError(ETIMEDOUT)`` exception is raised.
General Methods
---------------
@ -79,7 +99,7 @@ The following methods implement the primitive I2C master bus operations and can
be combined to make any I2C transaction. They are provided if you need more
control over the bus, otherwise the standard methods (see below) can be used.
These methods are available on software I2C only.
These methods are only available on the `machine.SoftI2C` class.
.. method:: I2C.start()

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@ -11,21 +11,35 @@ SS (Slave Select), to select a particular device on a bus with which
communication takes place. Management of an SS signal should happen in
user code (via machine.Pin class).
Both hardware and software SPI implementations exist via the
:ref:`machine.SPI <machine.SPI>` and `machine.SoftSPI` classes. Hardware SPI uses underlying
hardware support of the system to perform the reads/writes and is usually
efficient and fast but may have restrictions on which pins can be used.
Software SPI is implemented by bit-banging and can be used on any pin but
is not as efficient. These classes have the same methods available and
differ primarily in the way they are constructed.
Constructors
------------
.. class:: SPI(id, ...)
Construct an SPI object on the given bus, ``id``. Values of ``id`` depend
Construct an SPI object on the given bus, *id*. Values of *id* depend
on a particular port and its hardware. Values 0, 1, etc. are commonly used
to select hardware SPI block #0, #1, etc. Value -1 can be used for
bitbanging (software) implementation of SPI (if supported by a port).
to select hardware SPI block #0, #1, etc.
With no additional parameters, the SPI object is created but not
initialised (it has the settings from the last initialisation of
the bus, if any). If extra arguments are given, the bus is initialised.
See ``init`` for parameters of initialisation.
.. _machine.SoftSPI:
.. class:: SoftSPI(baudrate=500000, *, polarity=0, phase=0, bits=8, firstbit=MSB, sck=None, mosi=None, miso=None)
Construct a new software SPI object. Additional parameters must be
given, usually at least *sck*, *mosi* and *miso*, and these are used
to initialise the bus. See `SPI.init` for a description of the parameters.
Methods
-------