C8051F020DK Silicon Laboratories Inc, C8051F020DK Datasheet - Page 198

DEV KIT FOR F020/F021/F022/F023

C8051F020DK

Manufacturer Part Number
C8051F020DK
Description
DEV KIT FOR F020/F021/F022/F023
Manufacturer
Silicon Laboratories Inc
Type
MCUr
Datasheet

Specifications of C8051F020DK

Contents
Evaluation Board, Power Supply, USB Cables, Adapter and Documentation
Processor To Be Evaluated
C8051F02x
Interface Type
USB
Silicon Manufacturer
Silicon Labs
Core Architecture
8051
Silicon Core Number
C8051F020
Silicon Family Name
C8051F02x
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Contains lead / RoHS non-compliant
For Use With/related Products
Silicon Laboratories C8051 F020/021/022/023
Lead Free Status / Rohs Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
Other names
336-1200

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
C8051F020DK
Manufacturer:
SiliconL
Quantity:
10
C8051F020/1/2/3
19.1. Signal Descriptions
The four signals used by SPI0 (MOSI, MISO, SCK, NSS) are described below.
19.1.1. Master Out, Slave In (MOSI)
The master-out, slave-in (MOSI) signal is an output from a master device and an input to slave devices. It is used to
serially transfer data from the master to the slave. This signal is an output when SPI0 is operating as a master, and an
input when SPI0 is operating as a slave. Data is transferred most-significant bit first.
19.1.2. Master In, Slave Out (MISO)
The master-in, slave-out (MISO) signal is an output from a slave device and an input to the master device. It is used
to serially transfer data from the slave to the master. This signal is an input when SPI0 is operating as a master, and an
output when SPI0 is operating as a slave. Data is transferred most-significant bit first. A SPI slave places the MISO
pin in a high-impedance state when the slave is not selected.
19.1.3. Serial Clock (SCK)
The serial clock (SCK) signal is an output from the master device and an input to slave devices. It is used to synchro-
nize the transfer of data between the master and slave on the MOSI and MISO lines. SPI0 generates this signal when
operating as a master.
19.1.4. Slave Select (NSS)
The slave select (NSS) signal is an input used to select SPI0 as a slave, or to disable SPI0 as a master. Note that the
NSS signal is always an input to SPI0; with SPI0 operating as a master, slave select signals must be output via general
purpose port I/O pins. See Figure 19.2 for a typical configuration; see Section
ority Crossbar
The NSS signal must be low to initiate a transfer with SPI0 as a slave; SPI0 will exit slave mode when NSS is
released high. Note that received data is not latched into the receive buffer until NSS is high. For multiple-byte trans-
fers, NSS must be released high for at least 4 system clocks following each byte that is received by the SPI0 slave.
198
Decoder” on page
Master
Device
GPIO
MISO
MOSI
SCK
Figure 19.2. Typical SPI Interconnection
163
for general purpose port configuration.
Device
Slave
NSS
Rev. 1.4
Device
Slave
NSS
Device
“17.1. Ports 0 through 3 and the Pri-
Slave
NSS
VDD
MISO
MOSI
SCK

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